Signals and Systems: Dr. Mohammed Refaey
Signals and Systems: Dr. Mohammed Refaey
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Introduction
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Lecture # 2
Introduction
Are you interested to study Signals and Systems? Do not answer now! Let us first know the applications of signals and Systems: 1- Communications. (e.g. the internet carrier signal, the mobile communicationsetc) 2- Aeronautics. (Study, design, and manufacturing of air flight-capable machines.) 3- Astronautics. (The science and technology of space flight.)
Introduction
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Aeronautics example
Astronautics example
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Introduction
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Before Enhancement
After Enhancement
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Introduction
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The Signal:
It is a mean to convey information that is usually have some form of variations. The contained information point to the behavior or nature of some phenomena.
Mathematically: The signal is a function of one or more independent variable that maps a domain, often time or space, into a range, often a physical measure such as air pressure or light intensity.
The System:
It is a tool that transform a signal to get another signal or process a signal to obtain a desired behavior or extracting a piece of information. Mathematically: A system is a function that maps signals from its domainits input signalsinto signals in its rangeits output signals. The domain and the range are both sets of signals; we call a set of signals a signal space. Thus, systems are functions whose domains and ranges are signal spaces.
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Sound
Automobile
Motivations
What are the types of problems that signals and systems techniques try to answer? 1- System Characterization in detail to understand how it will respond to different inputs. (e.g. aircraft/ electrical circuit) 2- System design to react to inputs in a specific way. This usually involves a signal enhancement or restoration. (e.g. air traffic control tower in airport) 3- Extracting specific pieces of information. (e.g. electrocardiogram estimation of heart rates)
4- Design of Signals with particular properties. (e.g. the carrier signal in long distance communications)
5- Modification and control the characteristics of a given system. (e.g. chemical process control through sensors)
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Continuous-Time
Discrete-Time
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in electrical circuit, the power consumed : 1 2 Pt V t .I t V t , V is the voltage R in autombile, the power consumed through friction: Pt b.V 2 t , V is the automobilespeed
In the above two examples, though they are different they have something in common, that is the power is a constant (that could be ignored for analysis purposes) times a square of the system variable.
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