Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEgbert French Modified over 9 years ago
2
1 Prof. Nizamettin AYDIN naydin@yildiz.edu.tr http://www.yildiz.edu.tr/~naydin Digital Signal Processing
3
2 Lecture 4 Spectrum Representation Digital Signal Processing
4
3 License Info for SPFirst Slides This work released under a Creative Commons License with the following terms:Creative Commons License Attribution The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work. In return, licensees must give the original authors credit. Non-Commercial The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work. In return, licensees may not use the work for commercial purposes—unless they get the licensor's permission. Share Alike The licensor permits others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the one that governs the licensor's work. Full Text of the License This (hidden) page should be kept with the presentation
5
4 READING ASSIGNMENTS This Lecture: –Chapter 3, Section 3-1 Other Reading: –Appendix A: Complex Numbers –Next Lecture: Ch 3, Sects 3-2, 3-3, 3-7 & 3-8
6
5 LECTURE OBJECTIVES Sinusoids with DIFFERENT Frequencies –SYNTHESIZE by Adding Sinusoids SPECTRUM Representation DIFFERENT –Graphical Form shows DIFFERENT Freqs
7
6 FREQUENCY DIAGRAM Plot Complex Amplitude vs. Freq 0100250–100–250 f (in Hz)
8
7 Another FREQ. Diagram Frequency is the vertical axis Time is the horizontal axis A-440
9
8 MOTIVATION Synthesize Complicated Signals –Musical Notes Piano uses 3 strings for many notes Chords: play several notes simultaneously –Human Speech Vowels have dominant frequencies Application: computer generated speech –Can all signals be generated this way? Sum of sinusoids?
10
9 Fur Elise WAVEFORM Beat Notes
11
10 Speech Signal: BAT PeriodicNearly Periodic in Vowel Region –Period is (Approximately) T = 0.0065 sec
12
11 Euler’s Formula Reversed Solve for cosine (or sine)
13
12 INVERSE Euler’s Formula Solve for cosine (or sine)
14
13 SPECTRUM Interpretation Cosine = sum of 2 complex exponentials: One has a positive frequency The other has negative freq. Amplitude of each is half as big
15
14 NEGATIVE FREQUENCY Is negative frequency real? Doppler Radar provides an example –Police radar measures speed by using the Doppler shift principle –Let’s assume 400Hz 60 mph –+400Hz means towards the radar –-400Hz means away (opposite direction) –Think of a train whistle
16
15 SPECTRUM of SINE Sine = sum of 2 complex exponentials: –Positive freq. has phase = -0.5 –Negative freq. has phase = +0.5
17
16 GRAPHICAL SPECTRUM EXAMPLE of SINE AMPLITUDE, PHASE & FREQUENCY are shown 7-70
18
17 SPECTRUM ---> SINUSOID Add the spectrum components: What is the formula for the signal x(t)? 0100250–100–250 f (in Hz)
19
18 Gather (A, ) information Frequencies: –-250 Hz –-100 Hz –0 Hz –100 Hz –250 Hz Amplitude & Phase –4- /2 –7+ /3 –100 –7- /3 –4+ /2 DC is another name for zero-freq component DC component always has or (for real x(t) ) Note the conjugate phase
20
19 Add Spectrum Components-1 Amplitude & Phase –4 - /2 –7 + /3 –100 –7 - /3 –4 + /2 Frequencies: –-250 Hz –-100 Hz –0 Hz –100 Hz –250 Hz
21
20 Add Spectrum Components-2 0100250–100–250 f (in Hz)
22
21 Use Euler’s Formula to get REAL sinusoids: Simplify Components
23
22 FINAL ANSWER So, we get the general form:
24
23 Summary: GENERAL FORM
25
24 Example: Synthetic Vowel Sum of 5 Frequency Components
26
25 SPECTRUM of VOWEL –Note: Spectrum has 0.5X k (except X DC ) –Conjugates in negative frequency
27
26 SPECTRUM of VOWEL (Polar Format) kk 0.5A k
28
27 Vowel Wavefor (sum of all 5 components)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.