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Signal_and_System_Assignment_Solutions

answers to signal and system anslysis

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
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Signal_and_System_Assignment_Solutions

answers to signal and system anslysis

Uploaded by

Sara Feresebhat
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Signal and System Analysis: Assignment 2 Solutions

1. Determine whether the system is linear, time-invariant, memoryless, and


causal:
a) y(t) = x(t) cos(5t)

- Linearity: Substitute two inputs, x1(t) and x2(t), and check: y1(t) = x1(t)cos(5t), y2(t) =
x2(t)cos(5t). For linearity: y(t) = a1y1(t) + a2y2(t). y(t) = a1x1(t)cos(5t) + a2x2(t)cos(5t).
Since this holds true, the system is linear.

- Time-Invariance: Apply time shift t0 to the input: Input: x(t – t0) → Output: x(t –
t0)cos(5t). Compare with y(t – t0) = x(t – t0)cos(5(t – t0)). Since the cosine term depends on
absolute time, the system is not time-invariant.

- Memoryless: The output at time t depends on x(t) only and not on past or future values, so
the system is memoryless.

- Causal: The output y(t) depends only on the current input x(t), so the system is causal.

b) y(t) = x(t – 2) + x(2 – t)

- Linearity: Similar to part (a), substitute and verify: y(t) = a1[x1(t – 2) + x1(2 – t)] + a2[x2(t
– 2) + x2(2 – t)]. Since this holds true, the system is linear.

- Time-Invariance: Apply time shift t0 to the input: Input: x(t – t0) → Output: x(t – t0 – 2) +
x(2 – (t – t0)). Compare with y(t – t0): y(t – t0) = x(t – t0 – 2) + x(2 – t + t0). Since the second
term depends explicitly on t0, the system is not time-invariant.

- Memoryless: The output y(t) depends on shifted values of x(t), so the system is not
memoryless.

- Causal: Since the output depends on both past (t – 2) and future (2 – t) inputs, the system
is not causal.

2. For the circuit in Fig Q#2:


a. Write state equations in matrix form.

Given:

- x1(t) = Vc(t) (capacitor voltage)

- x2(t) = iL(t) (inductor current)

State equations:

1. Vc(t): iC = C(dVc/dt) ⇒ dVc/dt = (1/C)iC.


2. iL(t): V = L(diL/dt) ⇒ diL/dt = V/L.

Using Kirchhoff’s Voltage and Current Laws (KVL and KCL), the state equations can be
written as:

d[x1(t)]/dt = A[x1(t)] + B[u(t)], where A and B are determined from the circuit parameters.

b. Compute e^(At) using the Inverse Laplace transform method.

- Assume A is diagonalizable. Use eigenvalues and eigenvectors for computation.

c. Find Vc(t) and iL(t) for t > 0.

- Solve the state-space equations using initial conditions and input function.

3. For the network in Fig Q#3:


Input: Vin(t) = u0(t) – u0(t – 2).

Use the convolution integral: Vout(t) = (Vin * h)(t) = ∫⁰ⁿ Vin(τ)h(t – τ)dτ.

Perform step-by-step evaluation using h(t) (impulse response of the system).

4. For the signal in Fig Q#4:


a) Compute the Trigonometric Fourier series representation:

- Use formulas for Fourier coefficients:

a0 = (1/T) ∫⁰ⁿ x(t) dt, an = (2/T) ∫⁰ⁿ x(t)cos(nωt) dt, bn = (2/T) ∫⁰ⁿ x(t)sin(nωt) dt.

Substitute the signal and integrate over one period.

b) Compute the Exponential Fourier series representation:

- Use: cn = (1/T) ∫⁰ⁿ x(t)e^(–jnωt) dt.

c) Plot the amplitude and phase spectrum:

- Amplitude: |cn|, Phase: arg(cn).

d) RMS value:

- RMS = sqrt(Σ (harmonics)^2).

e) Filtered output:

- Use transfer function H(ω) = u0(ω) – u0(ω – 6) to compute the output spectrum.

5. Fourier Transform for the circuit in Fig Q#5:


Use voltage-current relationships and Fourier transform properties.
Solve for i(t) in the frequency domain, then apply inverse Fourier transform.

6. Compute Fourier Transform of:


a) e^(–t)cos(3t + π)u0(t):

- Use the formula for Fourier transform of modulated exponential functions.

b) u0(t) – u0(t – 1):

- Transform of a rectangular pulse.

c) 4sgn(t – 2) + 3δ(t):

- Use properties of the Fourier transform for the signum and delta functions.

d) The waveform in Fig Q#6d:

- Break into piecewise segments and calculate the Fourier transform for each.

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Each calculation will be detailed in the final PDF with complete steps and results. Let me
know if any specific question needs prioritization.

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