(New page: For this question, the original signal is a square wave with maximum amplitude one, minimum amplitude zero and period P. The ideal low pas filter is a band that goes from -fc to fc with c...)
 
 
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From here, I am not sure what to do.  I feel as if the amplitude should be adjusted by 1/period, but I am not sure.  Currently, we are in the time domain, but the digital filter is in the frequency domain.  How do you apply this filter?  Any ideas are helpful.  Thanks!
 
From here, I am not sure what to do.  I feel as if the amplitude should be adjusted by 1/period, but I am not sure.  Currently, we are in the time domain, but the digital filter is in the frequency domain.  How do you apply this filter?  Any ideas are helpful.  Thanks!
 
--[[User:Babaumga|Babaumga]] 12:27, 11 February 2009 (UTC)
 
--[[User:Babaumga|Babaumga]] 12:27, 11 February 2009 (UTC)
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I know this is late but this really helped visualize what your sampler is doing
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[[Getting X(w) from X(f)]]

Latest revision as of 18:26, 11 February 2009

For this question, the original signal is a square wave with maximum amplitude one, minimum amplitude zero and period P. The ideal low pas filter is a band that goes from -fc to fc with constant amplitude one. Once filtered (for part a), the signal is once period of the original signal that starts at -1e-4 and goes to 1e-4. The ideal sampler creates a discrete signal with 5 points each 5e-5 apart.

From here, I am not sure what to do. I feel as if the amplitude should be adjusted by 1/period, but I am not sure. Currently, we are in the time domain, but the digital filter is in the frequency domain. How do you apply this filter? Any ideas are helpful. Thanks! --Babaumga 12:27, 11 February 2009 (UTC)

I know this is late but this really helped visualize what your sampler is doing

Getting X(w) from X(f)

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Correspondence Chess Grandmaster and Purdue Alumni

Prof. Dan Fleetwood