ECE 1100: Introduction to Electrical and Computer Engineering David R. Jackson Professor, ECE Dept. Spring 2008 Notes 9 Sinusoidal Signals t v(t)v(t)
Basic Facts Sinusoidal waveforms (waves that vary sinusoidally in time) are the most important types of waveforms encountered in physics and engineering. Most natural sources of radiation (the sun, etc.) emit sinusoidal waveforms. Most human-made systems produce sinusoidal waveforms (AC generators, microwave oscillators, etc.) Most communications is done via sinusoidal waveforms that have been modulated, either in an analog fashion (such as AM or FM) or digitally.
General Sinusoidal Waveform A = amplitude of sinusoidal waveform = “radian frequency” of sinusoidal waveform [radians/s] = phase of sinusoidal signal [radians] t v (t)v (t) A -A
Period of Sinusoidal Wave T = period (cycle) of wave [s] = time it takes for the waveform to repeat itself. In this example, T = 0.5 [ s ]. t [s] v (t)v (t) T
Frequency of Sinusoidal Wave f = frequency = # cycles (periods) / s Units: Hz = cycle/s In this example, f = 2 Hz f = 1/T [Hz] cycles/s = 1 / (s/cycle) t [s] v (t)v (t) [s] 1.5
Radian Frequency Since the cosine function repeats after 2 , we have t v (t)v (t) T
Radian Frequency (cont.) = 2 f [rad/s] Hence: or
Summary t v(t)v(t) A -A = 2 f [rad/s] f = 1/T [Hz]