(fixed image alignment, added captions)
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[[Image:hw2_1_A1_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|frame|left|100px|...caption1...]][[Image:hw2_1_A2_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|frame|right|100px|...caption2...]]
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[[Image:hw2_1_A1_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|thumb|left|300x300px|cos(t) sampled at 5 per unit]]
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[[Image:hw2_1_A2_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|thumb|right|300x300px|The sampling shown based on index]]
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[[Image:hw2_1_A3_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|frame|left|100px|...caption3...]][[Image:hw2_1_A4_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|frame|right|100px|...caption4...]]
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[[Image:hw2_1_A3_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|thumb|left|300x300px|cos(t) shown sampled at pi/2 per unit]]
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[[Image:hw2_1_A4_ECE301Fall2008mboutin.png|thumb|right|300x300px|The sampling shown based on index]]

Revision as of 09:57, 9 September 2008

The function I chose (at random) from homework1 can be found here.

The function x(t) = cos(t) is periodic in CT, as its period is 2$ \pi $. However, it is not periodic in DT.

Here is the function sampled at a frequency of 5 samples/unit:


cos(t) sampled at 5 per unit
The sampling shown based on index













Here is the function sampled at $ {\pi \over 2} $ (as closely as MATLAB is able to approximate pi)


cos(t) shown sampled at pi/2 per unit
The sampling shown based on index

Alumni Liaison

ECE462 Survivor

Seraj Dosenbach