Introduction To Signal
Introduction To Signal
Signal: A signal is defined as any physical quantity that varies with time, space, or any other
independent variable or variables. Mathematically, we describe a signal as a function of one or
more independent variables. For example, the functions
( )
( )
( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
( )
The function describes a signal of two independent variables x and y that could represent the two
spatial coordinates in a plan.
value value
Time Time
value value
Time Time
and
1s
Time
𝑇
Period= 6s
The phase describes the position of the waveform relative to the time zero.
If we think of the wave as something that can be shifted backward or forward along the time
axis, phase describes the amount of that shift.
5
Time
1s
Frequency
6𝑓 a. A signal with frequency 6
A signal, in which more than one frequency exists, called composite signal.
The description of a signal using the frequency domain and containing all its
components is called frequency spectrum of that signal. For example, figure 09 shows the
frequency spectrum of a square wave;
…….
The range of frequencies that a medium can pass is called its bandwidth.
The bandwidth is a property of medium. It is the difference between the highest and the lowest
frequencies that the medium can satisfactorily pass.
Where, = bandwidth
= highest frequency, and
= lowest frequency
Example:
If a periodic signal is decomposed into five sine waves with frequencies of
100, 300, 500, 700, and 900 Hz, what is the bandwidth? Draw the spectrum. Assuming all
components have a maximum amplitude of 10 V.
Solution:
Let be the highest frequency, the lowest frequency, and the
bandwidth. Then
The spectrum has only five spikes, at 100, 300, 500, 700 and 900. As shown
in figure 10;
amplitude
10 V
The bit interval is the time required to send one single bit.
The bit rate is the number of bit intervals per second, usually expressed in
bit per second (bps).
amplitude
1s = 8 bit intervals
Bit rate = 8 bps
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
……….
Time
Bit interval
Solution:
The bit interval is the inverse of the bit rate.
Bit interval =
What do you mean by low-pass and band-pass channel?
Amplitude
0 𝑓
Low-pass channel
Frequency
Amplitude
𝑓 𝑓 Frequency
Band-pass channel
Figure 12. Low-pass and Band-pass
Multichannel and Multidimensional Signals
Stationary and Non-stationary Signal
Stationary signals consist of spectral components that do not change in time
All spectral components exist at all time
No need to know any time information
FT works well for stationary signals
(b) Suppose that the signal is sampled at the rate . What is the discrete-time signal
obtained after sampling?
(c) Suppose that the signal is sampled at the rate . W hat is the discretetime signal
obtained after sampling?
Example 2: Consider the analog signal
( )
What is the Nvquist rate for this signal?
Thus ,
(b) Here