Signals and Systems Fall 2003 Lecture #1 Prof. Alan S. Willsky 4

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Transcript Signals and Systems Fall 2003 Lecture #1 Prof. Alan S. Willsky 4

Introduction to Signal Processing
Summer 2007
Basics: Signals and Systems
Keyur Desai
(Slides: Courtesy of Prof. Alan S. Willsky)
16 May 2007
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Signals
Systems
For example ...
“Figures and images used in these lecture notes by permission,
copyright 1997 by Alan V. Oppenheim and Alan S. Willsky”
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SIGNALS
Signals are functions of independent variables that carry
information. For example:
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Electrical signals --- voltages and currents in a circuit
Acoustic signals --- audio or speech signals (analog or
digital)
Spectrogram
Time-domain
Speech signal
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SIGNALS
Video signals --- intensity variations in an image (e.g. a
CAT scan)
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Biological signals --- sequence of bases in a gene
DNA
Its signal
representation
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THE INDEPENDENT VARIABLES
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For electrical signal the value of voltage or current changes with
time, hence time is called independent variable and voltage or
current is called dependent variable
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Independent variable can be continuous
— Trajectory of a space shuttle
— Mass density in a cross-section of a brain
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Independent variable can be discrete
— DNA base sequence
— Digital image pixels
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Independent variable can be 1-D, 2-D, ••• N-D
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THE INDEPENDENT VARIABLES
What are the independent variables in these signals?
(i) Speech (ii) CAT scan image (iii) DNA sequence
(i) Time (ii) Spatial Location (iii) Location on DNA molecule
For this course: Focus on a single (1-D) independent variable which we
call “time”.
Continuous-Time (CT) signals: x(t), t — continuous values
Discrete-Time (DT) signals: x[n], n — integer values only
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CT Signals
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Most of the signals in the physical world are CT
signals—E.g. voltage & current, pressure,
temperature, velocity, etc.
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DT Signals
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x[n], n — integer, time varies discretely
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Examples of DT signals in nature:
— DNA base sequence
— Population of the nth generation of certain
species
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Many human-made DT Signals
Ex.#1 Weekly Dow-Jones
industrial average
Ex.#2 digital image
Why DT? —
Can be processed by modern digital computers
and digital signal processors (DSPs).
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SYSTEMS
For the most part, our view of systems will be from an
input-output perspective:
A system responds to applied input signals, and its response
is described in terms of one or more output signals
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EXAMPLES OF SYSTEMS
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An RLC circuit
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What is the input signal?
•x(t) (the D.C. source)
What is the output signal?
•y(t) (the signal across capacitor)
What is the system?
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•The whole RLC network
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EXAMPLES OF SYSTEMS
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Dynamics of an aircraft or space vehicle
An algorithm for analyzing financial and economic
factors to predict bond prices
An algorithm for post-flight analysis of a space launch
An edge detection algorithm for medical images
What are the inputs and what are the outputs in above
examples?
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SYSTEM INTERCONNECTIONS
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An important concept is that of interconnecting systems
— To build more complex systems by interconnecting
simpler subsystems
— To modify response of a system
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Signal flow (Block) diagram
Cascade
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Parallel
Feedback
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