Revision as of 11:01, 11 September 2008 by Eblount (Talk)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

A time invariant system is a system that for any x(t) that goes into the system and has an output y(t) has the same response as a shifted input x(t-T) which has an output of the system of y(t-T).

Time Invariant System

Let the system be: y(t) = e^t * x(t)

Justify: let T = 3 and x(t) = 2t+1 Then the graph of e^t * x(t) = e^3 * (2t+1) is the same as e^(t-3)*x(t-3) = e^(t-3) * (2(t-3)+1) only the second graph is shifted by 3 units.

Time Variant System

Let the system be: y(t) = x(2t)

Justify: Let T=3 again and x(t) = 2t+1 again

Then the graph of x(2t) = 4t+1 And the graph of x(2t-3) = 2(2t-3)+1 = 4t-5 The second graph is a completely different graph, not the original shifted along the horizontal axis. Therefore this system is not time invariant.

go back to : Homework 2_ECE301Fall2008mboutin

Alumni Liaison

Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett