Revision as of 10:54, 10 September 2008 by Kschrems (Talk)

Part A: Periodic Signals Revisited

Periodic Continuous Time Signal

I used the continuous time signal $ x(t) = cos(t) $, as it seemed many people used in Homework 1 for their example of a periodic function. The signal repeats itself at intervals of $ 2\pi $.

HW2 CTfunction ECE301Fall2008mboutin.jpg

Non-Periodic Discrete Time Signal

Using the CT signal $ x(t) = cos(t) $ and converting it to the DT signal $ x[n] = cos[n] $ will create a non-periodic function when n is sampled at every integer.



Periodic Discrete Time Signal

In order to create a discrete time signal $ x[n] = cos[n] $ that was still periodic, the time interval couldn't be integers, as shown previously. Therefore, a time interval of $ \pi/2 $ was selected.

Untitled2 ECE301Fall2008mboutin.jpg

Alumni Liaison

BSEE 2004, current Ph.D. student researching signal and image processing.

Landis Huffman