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Topic 2 Classification of Signals

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to signal classification and properties in a Signals and Systems course. It defines periodic, aperiodic, right-sided, left-sided, two-sided, bounded, and absolutely integrable signals. It also discusses the differences between energy signals, which have finite energy, and power signals, which have finite nonzero average power. Examples are provided to illustrate these concepts for both continuous-time and discrete-time signals. Popular elementary signals like sinusoidal waves are also introduced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views12 pages

Topic 2 Classification of Signals

This document provides an overview of key concepts related to signal classification and properties in a Signals and Systems course. It defines periodic, aperiodic, right-sided, left-sided, two-sided, bounded, and absolutely integrable signals. It also discusses the differences between energy signals, which have finite energy, and power signals, which have finite nonzero average power. Examples are provided to illustrate these concepts for both continuous-time and discrete-time signals. Popular elementary signals like sinusoidal waves are also introduced.

Uploaded by

Rona Sharma
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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EE 220 : Signals and Systems

Department of Electronics and Electrical Engineerng


Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati
Monsoon 2022

Topic 2 : Classifications of signals


Instruction and notes by : Manish

1 Periodic functions
A continuous signal x(t) is called periodic if there is a strictly-positive real constant T such that

x(t) = x(t + T ) , for all t. Such a T is called the period of the signal.

- For sequences, similar periodicity condition can be written as (for strictly-positive integer
N ) x(n) = x(n + N ) for all n (where n is an integer)

• A function/sequence that is not periodic is said to be aperiodic.

• A T-periodic function x is said to have frequency 1/T and angular frequency ω = 2πf =
2π/T

• An N-periodic function x is said to have frequency 1/N and angular frequency Ω = 2πf =
2π/N

• The period of a periodic signal is not unique. A signal that is periodic with period T is
also periodic with period kT , for every strictly positive integer k.

• The smallest period with which a signal is periodic is called the fundamental period and
its corresponding frequency is called the fundamental frequency.

• For two periodic functions x1 and x2 with fundamental periods T1 and T2 : the sum
y = x1 + x2 is periodic if and only if the ratio T 1/T 2(= q/r) is a rational number. The
fundamental period will be T0 = rT1 = qT2

• For periodicity of a signal which is summation of of k signals (where k > 2) can be


handled by applying the above point repeatedly (k-1) times

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2 Right and Left sided signals
Right sided function:

A function x is said to be right sided if, for some (finite) real constant T , the following
condition holds:
x(t) = 0 for all t < T
(i.e., x is only potentially nonzero to the right of T ).

A signal x is said to be causal if x(t) = 0 for all t < 0. A causal signal is a special case of a
right-sided function. A causal signal is not to be confused with a causal system. In these two
contexts, the word “causal” has very different meanings.

Figure: Example of (a) right sided (continuous time) and (b) left sided (discrete time) signals

Left sided functions::

A function x is said to be left sided if, for some (finite) real constant t0 , the following
condition holds:
x(t) = 0 for all t > t0
A signal x is said to be anticausal if x(t) = 0 for all t > 0. An anticausal signal is a special
case of a left-sided signal. An anticausal signal is not to be confused with an anticausal system.

Finite duration and two sided functions:

A function that is both left sided and right sided is said to be finite duration (or time
limited).
A function that is neither left sided nor right sided is said to be two sided.

Figure: Example of (a) right sided (continuous time) and (b) left sided (discrete time) signals

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3 Elementary Operations on the Independent Variable
t
Time scaling:

Suppose an original signal is y = x(t). Yesterday, we have seen scaling it to y = ax(t).


Today, we are going to do similar operations but inside the brackets i.e. with t. Examples:
Time scaling: y = x(at); where a is a strictly positive real number

• If a > 1, y is compressed along the horizontal axis by a factor of a, relative to x.

• If a < 1, y is expanded (i.e., stretched) along the horizontal axis by a factor of 1/a ,
relative to x.

Time Shift:

Suppose y(t) = x(t − b) where b is a real constant.

• If b > 0 , the shift is a right shift in time, or a time delay.

• If b < 0, we have a left shift, or a time advance.

Time reversal:

This operation is defined as:


y(t) = x(−t).
Geometrically, the output y is a reflection of the input about the vertical axis (or line t = 0).

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Figure: Time shifting properties of a signal

Combination of Scale and Shift:

Suppose y(t) = x(at − b). It is tempting to think about this as two operations in sequence
– a scale followed by a shift, or a shift followed by a scale. This is dangerous in that a wrong
choice leads to incorrect answers. The recommended approach is to ignore shortcuts, and fig-
ure out the result by brute-force graphical methods: substitute various values of t until y(t)
becomes clear.

Homework: For the x(t) signal drawn in previous figure; draw the sketch for the following
new operation: y(t) = x(2t − 1).
Time scaling and time shifting do not commute, and we must be particularly careful about
the order in which these transformations are applied. y(t) = x(at − b) has two distinct but
equivalent interpretations:

• first, time shifting x by b, and then time scaling the result by a. Or:

• first, time scaling x by a, and then time shifting the result by b/a.

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Figure: Time shifting and scaling together

4 Bounded functions
A function x is said to be bounded if there exists some (finite) positive real constant A such
that
|x(t)| ≤ A for all t
(i.e., x(t) is finite for all t).

For example, the sine and cosine functions are bounded as | sin t| ≤ 1 for all t and | cos t| ≤ 1
for all t.

The tangent function is unbounded since

lim | tan t| = ∞
t→π/2

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4.1 Absolute integrability
An absolutely integrable function is a function whose absolute value is integrable (i.e. the
integral is finite) : Z ∞
|x(t)|dt < ∞
−∞

Clearly,

• Absolutely integrable function has finite area under the curve

• Unbounded signals can never be absolutely integrable. Example x(t) = t

• Some bounded signals maynot be absolutely integrable. Example x(t) = sin(t)

Homework:
Is x(t) = e−|t| absolutely integrable?

5 Energy and power signals


5.1 Total Energy:
The total energy of a continuous-time signal x(t) , where x(t) is defined for −∞ < t < ∞, is
given as:
Z ∞ Z T
2
E= x (t)dt = lim x2 (t)dt (1)
−∞ T →∞ −T

This quantity is proportional to a physical notion of energy. (Amplitude square).

If a signal has finite energy, then the signal values must approach zero as t approaches
positive and negative infinity. (commonly also described as area under the curve be finite)

Energy signal:
An energy signal is a signal with finite energy. Examples: x(t) = e−|t| ; x(t) = 0 etc.
We also say that any energy signal has 0 average power (we will see later why).

5.2 Average Power:


The average power (or time-average power) of a signal is
Z T
1
Pavg = lim x2 (t)dt (2)
T →∞ 2T −T

For example a constant signal x(t) = 1 (for all t) has average power = 1.

Power signal:
A power signal is a signal with finite, nonzero average power. For a power signal, the
total energy tends to be infinite. Example: x(t) = sin t;

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Example: Find total energy and average power of a rectangular pulse limited between
[-1,1]. Is it an energy signal? If it is an energy signal, is the average power 0? Verify!

Homework:
Find average power of x(t) = tan(t). Is it a power signal? What is the energy? Is it infinite?
Verify!

5.3 Discrete time Energy and Power Signals


The total energy of a discrete-time signal is defined by

X N
X
2
E= x [n] = lim x2 [n] (3)
N →∞
N =−∞ n=−N

The average power is defined by


N
1 X
Pavg = lim x2 [n] (4)
N →∞ 2N + 1
n=−N

Energy signal and power signals are defined in the same way as continuous case.

Examples
Q1. The unit step function defined as u[n] = 1 for n > 0; and u[n] = 0 for n < 0. Is it an
energy signal or power signal?
Answer: Power signal, since average power is finite (Pavg = 1/2) and E = ∞.

Q2. A signal is defined as x(t) = t(−1/2) for t ≥ 1 and x(t) = 0 for t < 1. What is the total
energy and average power? Is it neither energy nor power signal?
Answer. Yup. E = ∞ and Pavg = 0.


Remark: A discrete sinusoidal signal is periodic only if Ω
is rational.

6 Some popular elementary signals


Let’s see some popular signals that we use commonly in this course:

6.1 Sinusoidal signal


x(t) = A cos(ωt + ϕ)
all continuous time sinusoids are periodic with fundamental period = T = 2π/ω

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Q3. What is the fundamental period of sin(3t)?
Answer:
sin 3(t + T ) = sin 3t
3T = 2kπ ∀k ∈ Z; (T should be +ve)
T = 2kπ/3

Thus, fundamental period = 2π/3

Discrete version of sinusoidal signal


Unlike continuous time sinusoidal signals, not all discrete time sinusoidal signals are periodic.

For sin[Ωn] to be periodic: 2π/Ω must be rational. Period N = 2πm



N, m ∈ Z.
Fundamental period No = smallest value of m that makes N an integer. Let’s see this with
an example:

Q4. What is the fundamental period of x[n] = sin [3n]?


Answer: Not periodic.

sin 3[n + N [ = sin 3n


3N = 2kπ ∀k, N ∈ Z
but N = 2kπ/3

which is not integer, which is contradictory with N ∈ Z. Hence, not periodic.

6.2 Exponential signal


x(t) = ejωt
or in more general form we can write as

x(t) = ceat where c, a ∈ C

A convenient way to write this can be

c = |c|ejϕ0

This is called polar form of c; where ϕ0 = ∠c

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Remarks: Period of an exponential signal = 2π/ω.
Sum of two exponential signal is periodic iff the ratio ω1 and ω2 is rational. i.e.
ω1 k
=
ω2 l
and fundamental frequency = ω0 = ω1 /k = ω2 /l.

6.3 Step signal


(
1, ∀t ≥ 0
u(t) =
0 otherwise
Since there is a discontinuity at t = 0, sometimes at t = 0, u(t) value is also given as either
0 or 1/2. Any such convention is fine, as long as we follow it uniformly in our context.

9
Example
Q. (
1, 0 ≤ n ≤ 9
x[n] =
0 otherwise
Write x[n] in forms of u[n].
Answer: x[n] = u[n] − u[n − 10].

Q. A rectangular pulse x(t) is defined as


(
A, 0 ≤ |t| < 0.5
x(t) =
0 |t| > 0.5

Draw the pulse and write in the form of u(t).


Answer: x(t) = A[u(t + 0.5) − u(t − 0.5)].

6.4 Impulse signal


In continuous time, the delta function (also known as the Dirac delta function or unit-
impulse function), denoted δ, is defined as the function with the following two properties:

δ(t) = 0, ∀t ̸= 0
and Z ∞
δ(t)dt = 1
−∞

In discrete time, the definition is shown in the figure.

Remarks:

• δ[n] = u[n] − u[n − 1].

• In continuous time, δ(t) = dtd u(t)


Rt
• Conversely, u(t) = −∞ δ(τ )dτ

• And, u[n] = ∞
P
k=0 δ[n − k]

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6.4.1 Properties of delta function
The equivalence property:

x(t)δ(t − t0 ) = x(t0 )δ(t − t0 )


The shifting property:
Z ∞
g(t)δ(t − t0 )dt = g(t0 )
−∞

The scaling property:


1
δ(at)dt = δ(t)
|a|
Hint: We can notice that
Z ∞
1
x(t)δ(at)dt = x(0); a ̸= 0
−∞ |a|

From shifting property Z ∞


1 1
x(0) = x(t)δ(t)dt
|a| |a| −∞

Comparing the above two equation will get you the desired result.

The replication property:

g(t) ∗ δ(t) = g(t)

⋆ The unit impulse function is also called as basic singularity function. Because:
Z ∞
x(t)δ(t)dt = x(0)
−∞

It is because of this property, we invented δ(t) function.

6.5 Ramp signal


Integral of the step function u(t) is a ramp function, defined as: r(t) = tu(t)

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Reference material
1. Textbook: Signals and Systems by Simon Haykin
2. Lecture notes are inspired from the course materials of JHU 520.214; MIT 6.003; Purdue
ECE-301; UVic ECE-260; and Imperial College E2.5

[Please report any typos in the notes by sending an email to the instructor.]

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