CDPlayerJEW
How a CD Player Works
A CD player reads a dicrete set of data off a CD. In short, a CD player takes this data and sends it through a digitla to analog converter, then through a low pass filter, and finally is output through speakers. A simple diagram illustrates this below.
When an audio CD is recorded, the music has an infinite amount of data points and can be represented as a continuous function of time . Because a medium, such as a CD, has a finite amount of space, it will not be able to hold since it has an infinite amount of data. Instead, the music is sampled at intervals to create a discrete function of time where is an integer and is the interval between samples.
This discrete signal can be represented mathematically by:
Then, the discrete signal is convolved by the D/A converter with a function :
This convolution, which is the convolution of the discretized signal and , a pulse function, will yield a graph that is no longer discrete, but is stepped. The following is an example:
In the frequency domain, the above stepped signal will look like the following:
- Principle author of this page: Jeffrey Wonoprabowo
- Image of CD Player Diagram and Convolution by Aric Goe or Todd Caswell (not sure which since both of them had it on their pages)