(New page: = Lecture 19 Blog, ECE438 Fall 2010, Prof. Boutin = Wednesday October 6, 2010. ---- We continued our discussion of the FFT by presenting the "Radix-two" algorithm fo...)
 
 
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We continued our discussion of the FFT by presenting the "Radix-two" algorithm for computing the DFT of a discrete-time signal with finite duration <math>2^M</math>. (Although technically, the DFT is used to transform periodic signals only, so to be correct, one should write "the DFT of the periodic repetition with period N of a signal with finite duration N"). If you found my diagrams hard to read on the board, I highly recommend reading [http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~ipollak/ee438/FALL03/notes/Section1.4_10_8.pdf Prof. Pollak's notes on the FFT].
 
We continued our discussion of the FFT by presenting the "Radix-two" algorithm for computing the DFT of a discrete-time signal with finite duration <math>2^M</math>. (Although technically, the DFT is used to transform periodic signals only, so to be correct, one should write "the DFT of the periodic repetition with period N of a signal with finite duration N"). If you found my diagrams hard to read on the board, I highly recommend reading [http://cobweb.ecn.purdue.edu/~ipollak/ee438/FALL03/notes/Section1.4_10_8.pdf Prof. Pollak's notes on the FFT].
  
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We finished the lecture by beginning to discuss DT systems (definition and basic properties). Our emphasis this semester will be on "filtering".
  
 
Previous: [[Lecture18ECE438F10|Lecture 18]]; Next: [[Lecture20ECE438F10|Lecture 20]]  
 
Previous: [[Lecture18ECE438F10|Lecture 18]]; Next: [[Lecture20ECE438F10|Lecture 20]]  

Latest revision as of 16:16, 8 October 2010

Lecture 19 Blog, ECE438 Fall 2010, Prof. Boutin

Wednesday October 6, 2010.


We continued our discussion of the FFT by presenting the "Radix-two" algorithm for computing the DFT of a discrete-time signal with finite duration $ 2^M $. (Although technically, the DFT is used to transform periodic signals only, so to be correct, one should write "the DFT of the periodic repetition with period N of a signal with finite duration N"). If you found my diagrams hard to read on the board, I highly recommend reading Prof. Pollak's notes on the FFT.

We finished the lecture by beginning to discuss DT systems (definition and basic properties). Our emphasis this semester will be on "filtering".

Previous: Lecture 18; Next: Lecture 20


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