User:GabrielaV: Difference between revisions

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where
where
::<math>\bold \alpha_k={1/T}\int_{-{T\over 2}}^{{T\over 2}} x(t) e^{-j2\pi kt\over T},dt</math>
::<math>\bold \alpha_k={1/T}\int_{-{T\over 2}}^{{T\over 2}} x(u) e^{-j2\pi ku\over T},du</math>


If we let  
If we let  
Line 59: Line 59:
::<math> {{k\over T}\to\f}</math>
::<math> {{k\over T}\to\f}</math>
::<math> {1/T}\to\df</math>
::<math> {1/T}\to\df</math>
The result is
::<math>\lim_{T\to\infty}=\int_{-\infty}^\infty{\int_{-\infty}^\infty x(u)e^{-j2\pi fu},du}e^{j2\pi ft},df
</math>

Revision as of 22:47, 13 October 2005

Welcome to Gabriela's Wiki page

Introduction

Do you want to know how to contact me or find out some interesting things about me? [[1]]

Signals & Systems

Example

Find the first two orthogonormal polynomials on [-1,1]

1. What is orthogonormal? [2]

2. What is orthogonal? [3]

3. What is a polynomial? [4]

        a
        bt+c

4. Now we can find the values for the unknown variables.

<a|a>=11aadt=1
a=12


<bt+c|a>=11a(bt+c)dt=0
c=0
<bt+c|bt+c>=11(bt+c)2dt=1
b=(32)


5. Now that we know what the first two orthogonormal polynomials!

Fourier Transform

As previously discussed, Fourier series is an expansion of a periodic function therefore we can not use it to transform a non-periodic funciton from time to the frequency domain. Fortunately the Fourier transform allows for the transformation to be done on a non-periodic function.


In order to understand the relationship between a non-periodic function and it's counterpart we must go back to Fourier series. Remember the complex exponential signal? [5]

x(t)=x(t+T)=k=αkej2πktT

where

αk=1/TT2T2x(u)ej2πkuT,du

If we let

T

The summation becomes integration, the harmoinic frequency becomes a continuous frequency, and the incremental spacing becomes a differential separation.

k=
Failed to parse (unknown function "\f"): {\displaystyle {{k\over T}\to\f}}
Failed to parse (unknown function "\df"): {\displaystyle {1/T}\to\df}

The result is

limT=x(u)ej2πfu,duej2πft,df