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Work Sheet I

This document contains a worksheet for a digital signal processing course. It includes 6 problems covering topics such as sampling continuous-time signals, determining the periodicity of discrete-time signals, finding even and odd parts, and identifying whether systems are linear, time-invariant, causal, or invertible based on their input-output relationships. The problems involve concepts like sampling, periodicity, even and odd parts, and system properties. Sketches are also required to illustrate some signal manipulations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views3 pages

Work Sheet I

This document contains a worksheet for a digital signal processing course. It includes 6 problems covering topics such as sampling continuous-time signals, determining the periodicity of discrete-time signals, finding even and odd parts, and identifying whether systems are linear, time-invariant, causal, or invertible based on their input-output relationships. The problems involve concepts like sampling, periodicity, even and odd parts, and system properties. Sketches are also required to illustrate some signal manipulations.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Addis Ababa Science and Technology University

College of Electrical & Mechanical Engineering

Electrical & Electronics Engineering Department

Digital Signal Processing (EEEg-3151)

Work Sheet-I

1. Consider a continuous-time signal given by:

xa (t ) sin(100t ) cos(200t )

The above discrete-time signal is sampled with a sampling period Ts to obtain the
discrete-time signal:

n 2n
x(n) sin cos
5 5
Determine two possible values of Ts that would have resulted in the discrete-time signal
x(n)?
2. Consider the discrete-time signal given by:

x(n) cos(0.24n)

Find two different continuous-time signals that would produce the above discrete-time
signal when sampled with a sampling frequency of 4 kHz.

Prepared by: Welelaw Y. Page 1 November 2016


3. Consider two discrete-time signals x1(n) and x2(n) given by:

n, 3 n 3

x1 (n)
0,
otherwise

and

x2 (n) u (n 4) 2u (n) u (n 5)

Sketch and label each of the following signals derived from x1(n) and x2(n) carefully.

a. y (n) x1 (2n) g. y (n) x1 (n 2) x2 (n 2)

b. y (n) x1 (3n 1) h. y (n) x1 (3 n) x2 (n)

c. y (n) x2 (1 n) i. y (n) x1 (n) x2 (n)

d . y ( n ) x 2 ( 2 2n) j. y (n) x1 (n) x2 (2 n)

e. y (n) x1 (n 2) x2 (n 2) k . y (n) x1 (n 2) x2 (6 n)

f . y (n) x1 (2n) x2 (n 4)

4. Find the even and odd parts of a discrete-time signal given by () = 2 ().
5. Determine whether the following discrete-time signals are periodic or not. Find the
fundamental period for the periodic signals.
a. () = cos(0.125)

b. () = 16 ( )
17

c. () = sin(0.2 + )

Prepared by: Welelaw Y. Page 2 November 2016



d. () = ( ) + ( )
12 18

e. () = 2 ( )
8

f. () = 2 (2)
6. Determine whether the systems given by the following input-output relationship are
linear, time-invariant, causal, BIBO stable, memoryless, invertible or not.
a. () = cos[()]
b. () = +1
= ()

c. () = ( + 2)
d. () = |(2)|
e. () = ()()
f. () = () + ( + 1)

Prepared by: Welelaw Y. Page 3 November 2016

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