0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views3 pages

Book Answers ch2

This document contains answers to analysis questions in the time domain, including: 1) Representing signals as sums of weighted and shifted pulses. 2) Determining if systems are causal and stable based on impulse responses. 3) Computing impulse responses from recurrent formulas or system descriptions and sketching the first few terms. 4) Computing step responses from impulse responses and sketching the signals. 5) Computing outputs as convolutions of inputs with impulse responses.

Uploaded by

Abdul Alsomali
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
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views3 pages

Book Answers ch2

This document contains answers to analysis questions in the time domain, including: 1) Representing signals as sums of weighted and shifted pulses. 2) Determining if systems are causal and stable based on impulse responses. 3) Computing impulse responses from recurrent formulas or system descriptions and sketching the first few terms. 4) Computing step responses from impulse responses and sketching the signals. 5) Computing outputs as convolutions of inputs with impulse responses.

Uploaded by

Abdul Alsomali
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
You are on page 1/ 3

Answers Week 2 - Analysis in the time domain

April 29, 2017

2.1 Idea: write the signals as a sum of weighted and shifted pulses.

a) x[n] = δ[n] + 2δ[n − 1] + δ[n − 2].


b) x[n] = 2δ[n + 2] + 2δ[n] − 0.5δ[n − 1] + δ[n + 4].
2.2 Idea: indicate if the system is causal and stable.

a) Causal and stable.


b) Not causal, but stable.
c) Causal and stable.
d) Causal and stable.
e) Causal, but not stable.

2.4 Idea: first compute the impulse response from the recurrent formula and then sketch the
first 10 terms of the response.

(
1 if n = 0, 4, 8
a) h[n] =
0 else

(
r[n] if 0 ≤ n ≤ 6
b) h[n] =
0 else

(
1 if 0 ≤ n < 8
c) h[n] =
0 else

h[0] = 1, h[1] = 1, h[2] = 0.5,


h[3] = 0, h[4] = −0.25, h[5] = −0.25,
d)
h[6] = −0.125, h[7] = 0, h[8] = 0.0625,
h[9] = 0.0625, h[10] = 0.03125

1
2.8 Idea: first compute the impulse response from the system description, then compute the
step response from the impulse response and finally, sketch the signals

a) s[n] = u[n] + u[n − 4] + u[n − 8]

b) s[n] = r[n + 1] − r[n − 7]

2.9 Idea: first compute the impulse response from the system description, then compute the
step response from the impulse response and finally, sketch the signals.

s[0] = 1, s[1] = 1.5, s[2] = 1.75,


a)
s[3] = 1.875, s[4] = 1.9375

s[0] = 1, s[1] = 0.5, s[2] = 0.75,


b)
s[3] = 0.625, s[4] = 0.6875

2.10 Idea: compute the output signal as a convolution of the given x[n] and h[n] and sketch the
result.

a) y[n] = x[n] + x[n − 1] + x[n − 2]

b) y[n] = x[n] − x[n − 1]

Pn
c) y[n] = k=0 β k αn−k

2.11 Idea: the range of k is determined by the elements of h[k] and x[n − k] that are not equal
to zero.
Answer: k should range from 0 upto and including 2.

2
2.13 Idea: compute the impulse response from the block diagram first and next compute the step
response from the impulse response.

1 1
h[0] = s[0] =
10 10
3 1
h[1] = − s[1] = −
20 20
1 1
h[2] = s[2] =
4 5
1 1
h[3] = − s[3] = −
4 20
3 1
h[4] = s[4] =
20 10
1
h[5] = − s[5] = 0
10
h[6] = 0 s[6] = 0

The filter is a running weighted average filter.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy