Lecture Notes Sinc
Lecture Notes Sinc
Sinc Functions
A rectangular pulse in time/frequency corresponds to a sinc function in frequency/time.
Two sinc functions arise: the “ordinary”sinc, essentially sin = , which extends from 1 to
1 and has equally spaced zero crossings, and the Dirichlet sinc, which is periodic and also
has equally spaced zero crossings.
Here, we take:
sin
sinc =
sin x
Note that sometimes the sinc function is de…ned as sinc (x) = x
, as in MATLAB. The
Dirichlet sinc of order N is de…ned as:
sin (N !=2)
DN (!) =
N sin (!=2)
1
Ideal Analog Lowpass Filter
Let H (f ) = 1, jf j fc , H (f ) = 0 otherwise. Then:
sin t=T
h (t) = 2fc
t=T
where T = 1= (2fc ). Observe that:
h (nT ) = (n)
where ( ) is the discrete-time impulse.
We verify the result:
Z fc
h (t) = ej2 ft
df
fc
1
= ej2 fc t e j2 fc t
j2 t
sin (2 fc t)
= 2fc
2 fc t
2
where ( ) is the discrete impulse and ! 0 = 2 =N . In other words, H (!) is zero at all the
DFT bin frequencies, other than DC.
To see this:
X1
N
j!n
H (!) = e
0
1 e j!N
=
1 e j!
e j!N=2 ej!N=2 e j!N=2
=
e j!=2 ej!=2 e j!=2
N 1 sin (N !=2)
= e j ( 2 )!
sin (!=2)
N 1
= e j ( 2 )! N DN (!)
Other cases
Suppose we have a periodic continuous-time pulse train with period T , with x (t) = 1,
0 t 0 , 0 for 0 < t T . Then the line spectrum are samples of a sinc. Which sinc?
Suppose we have a set of DFT coe¢ cients given by X (k) = 1, 0 k M , and X (k) = 0,
M + 1 k N 1. Then x (n) are samples of a sinc. Which sinc?
Impulse Train
Consider a continuous-time periodic impulse train:
X
1
(t nT )
n= 1
Theorem 1 The Fourier transform of a periodic impulse train is a periodic impulse train.
Speci…cally:
X 1 X1
(t nT ) ! fs (f mfs )
n= 1 m= 1
where fs = 1=T .
Now,
P1 consider a discrete-time signal x (n) = 1 for all n. Then its DTFT is X (!) =
j!n
n= 1 e . We know this to be 2 (!) via the IDTFT formula:
Z
1
1= [2 (!)] ej!n d!
2
3
However, let us be more precise about this. On the one hand:
X
1
j!n
e =2 (!) , !
1
On the other hand, we know this function is periodic with period 2 . Thus, the more precise
result is:
X
1 X1
e j!n = 2 (! 2 m) , 1 ! 1
1 m= 1
1 X
1
= 2 (f 2 m=2 T )
2 T m= 1
X
1
= fs (f mfs )
m= 1
with fs = 1=T .
One question we may have is what is the analog signal whose spectrum is periodic. The
answer is an impulse train, scaled by the samples of xa (t). That is:
4
P
Theorem 2 The inverse CTFT of fs 11 Xa (f mfs ), i.e., the analog signal whose spec-
trum is the periodized version of X (f ), is:
X
1
x (n) (t nT )
n= 1
P P
Proof. Consider fs 1 m= 1 (f mfs ). Its ICTFT is 1
n= 1 (t nT ). Multiplying the
impulse train in the time domain by xa (t) yields:
X
1 X
1 X
1
xa (t) (t nT ) = xa (nT ) (t nT ) = x (n) (t nT )
n= 1 n= 1 n= 1
X
1
Xa (f ) = Xa (f mfs ) , fs =2 f fs =2
1
1 jf j fs =2
H (f ) =
0 otherwise
Then:
X
1
Xa (f ) = H (f ) Xa (f mfs ) , 1<f <1
1
X
1
xa (t) = x (n) (t nT )
n= 1
where:
sin ( t=T )
(t) =
t=T