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Examples of Aliasing in Real Life: by Dr. Wajih A. Abu-Al-Saud Modified by Dr. Muqaibel

1) Aliasing occurs when the sampling frequency is less than twice the bandwidth of the input signal. This causes distortions like black lines moving across screens or objects appearing to rotate the opposite direction. 2) An anti-aliasing filter can be used before sampling to cut off frequencies above half the sampling rate. This prevents aliasing and saves half the original signal. 3) In a sampling system, the input signal passes through an anti-aliasing filter before sampling. The sampled signal can then pass through a reconstruction filter, but the original signal cannot be perfectly reconstructed if it was altered by the anti-aliasing filter.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
109 views3 pages

Examples of Aliasing in Real Life: by Dr. Wajih A. Abu-Al-Saud Modified by Dr. Muqaibel

1) Aliasing occurs when the sampling frequency is less than twice the bandwidth of the input signal. This causes distortions like black lines moving across screens or objects appearing to rotate the opposite direction. 2) An anti-aliasing filter can be used before sampling to cut off frequencies above half the sampling rate. This prevents aliasing and saves half the original signal. 3) In a sampling system, the input signal passes through an anti-aliasing filter before sampling. The sampled signal can then pass through a reconstruction filter, but the original signal cannot be perfectly reconstructed if it was altered by the anti-aliasing filter.

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sayed Tamir jan
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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EE 370 Chap. VI: Sampling & Pulse Code Mod. ver. 1.0 Lect.

27

Examples of Aliasing in Real Life

There are many real–life phenomena that result from aliasing, but many do not know that
these are actually caused by aliasing. Here we will give two examples.
1. When video taping a TV or a PC monitor, sometimes wide black lines
appear moving at some constant speed from top to bottom or vice versa across the
screen. This results because of the difference in sampling (number of pictures per
second) of the video camera and the number of frames the TV or PC monitor display
per second.
2. When looking at something that rotates at high speed (such as a fan or a
car’s wheel), you sometimes see that it is rotating in the opposite direction. This also
happens because the human eye works like a video camera where it also takes
pictures at a rate close to 24 pictures per second. If the rotating object rotates at a
high speed that by the time the eye takes the next picture that object has revolved
slightly less than one rotations, this object will appear as if it is rotating in the
opposite direction.

Anti–Aliasing Filters

So now we know that when the whenever the bandwidth of the input signal to a sampler is
greater than half the sampling frequency (in other words, the sampling frequency is less
than twice the bandwidth of the input signal), aliasing will occur. Unfortunately, aliasing
does not only destroy the part of the input signal that has frequency greater than half the
sampling frequency, but also an equal part of input signal that is below half the sampling
frequency. This is illustrated in the figure below.

By Dr. Wajih A. Abu-Al-Saud modified by Dr. Muqaibel


EE 370 Chap. VI: Sampling & Pulse Code Mod. ver. 1.0 Lect. 27

So, it is clear that not only the range of the input signal [s/2 , 2B] gets affected by
aliasing, but all the range from [s–2B , 2B] is affected by aliasing.

To SAVE HALF of the signal in the frequency range [s–2B , 2B], we can pass the
input signal before sampling into a LPF that will cut all the part that is above s/2 so that
the input signal to the sampling device has a bandwidth of exactly s/2. This means that a
LPF with bandwidth s/2 called ANTI–ALIASING filter must be used. If the input signal
to the sampler (which was produced by the anti–aliasing filter) has exactly half the
sampling frequency, there will be no aliasing at all (but we will require an ideal LPF with
bandwidth s/2 to reconstruct the continuous–time signal from the samples). Notice that
the original input signal cannot be reconstructed back exactly because we removed part of
it to avoid aliasing. Therefore, the block diagram of a practical sampling system is shown
below.

The signals in the above block diagram will be as follows.

By Dr. Wajih A. Abu-Al-Saud modified by Dr. Muqaibel


EE 370 Chap. VI: Sampling & Pulse Code Mod. ver. 1.0 Lect. 27

So, in conclusion, we can perform sampling with or without using an Antialiasing filter.
Case 1: without using an antialiasing filter: if the sampling frequency is greater than
twice the bandwidth of the continuous-time signal, the original continuous-time
signal can be reconstructed back from the sampled signal using a suitable
reconstruction LPF and no loss of information occurs. If the sampling frequency
is less than twice the bandwidth of signal to be sampled, part of the information
will be lost (or damaged). This part has the frequency range of ω > ωs – 2πB.

By Dr. Wajih A. Abu-Al-Saud modified by Dr. Muqaibel

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