Digital Signal Processing UWO Lecture+4,+January+18th
Digital Signal Processing UWO Lecture+4,+January+18th
Faculty of Engineering
Winter 2017
Schedule: Lectures & Office Hours
Lectures:
Office Hours:
The z-Transform and its Application to the Analysis of LTI Systems: The z-Transform,
Properties of the z-Transform, Rational z-Transforms, Inversion of the z-Transform, Analysis of
LTI Systems in the z-Domain, The One-sided z-Transform
The Discrete Fourier Transform: Frequency-Domain Sampling: The Discrete Fourier Trans-
form (DFT), Properties of the DFT
Discrete-Time Signals
Discrete-Time Systems
Graphical:
Functional:
8
< 1, for n = 1, 3,
x(n) := 4, for n = 2,
:
0, otherwise
Representations of Discrete-Time Signals
Tabular representation:
n ... -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 ...
x(n) ... 0 0 0 1 3 5 -1 ...
x(n) = {. . . , 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 5, 1, . . .}
"
x(n) = {0, 1, 3, 5, 1, . . .} .
"
A finite-duration sequence:
x(n) = {0, 1, 3, 4, 1} .
"
Some Elementary (but Important) Discrete-Time Signals
XN
1
P [x] := lim |x(n)|2 .
N !+1 2N + 1
n= N
XN
1
PN [x] := |x(n)|2 .
2N + 1 n= N
Energy Signals vs Power Signals
Example 2.1.1 (from Proakis & Manolakis, 2007): Determine the energy and the average
power of the unit step sequence.
Energy:
+1
X +1
X
2
E [u(n)] = |u(n)| = 1 = +1.
n= 1 n=0
The smallest N > 0 such that (P) holds is called the fundamental period of x(n).
A signal x(n) is aperiodic (nonperiodic) if there is no N > 0 such that (P) holds.
x(n) = A cos(2f n + )
Example:
Symmetric (Even) Signals vs. Asymmetric (Odd) Signals
Example:
Symmetric (Even) Signals vs. Asymmetric (Odd) Signals
Any discrete-time signal can be represented as a sum of an even and an odd components:
1 1
x(n) = [x(n) + x( n)] + [x(n) x( n)]
2| {z } 2| {z }
even odd
Simple Manipulations of DT Signals
Time shifting: x(n) ! x (n) := x(n k)
The signal x(n k) is equal to x(n) delayed by k steps
Example: x(n) ! x(n 3)
Example:
4 Lab sessions:
Reports are due one week after the lab session. Should be submitted to locker
# 206, 2nd floor of TEB