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Signals and Systems: Dr. Shurjeel Wyne

This document provides information about the course EEE 223 - Signals and Systems. The course is worth 4 credits and has a prerequisite of calculus, differential equations, and basic complex number manipulation. The course introduces concepts of signals and systems in both the time and frequency domains. Lecture slides and other materials are available online, and students must join the online group to access course materials. The course covers topics like linear time invariant systems, Fourier series, Fourier transforms, Laplace transforms, and z-transforms. Assessment includes exams, quizzes, assignments, and a lab project.

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marryam nawaz
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views

Signals and Systems: Dr. Shurjeel Wyne

This document provides information about the course EEE 223 - Signals and Systems. The course is worth 4 credits and has a prerequisite of calculus, differential equations, and basic complex number manipulation. The course introduces concepts of signals and systems in both the time and frequency domains. Lecture slides and other materials are available online, and students must join the online group to access course materials. The course covers topics like linear time invariant systems, Fourier series, Fourier transforms, Laplace transforms, and z-transforms. Assessment includes exams, quizzes, assignments, and a lab project.

Uploaded by

marryam nawaz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Course information

 Title: EEE 223 – Signals and Systems

 Credits: 4 (3, 1)

Signals and Systems 



Required background knowledge
Calculus, differential equations, basic manipulation of complex numbers
 Scope of the course
 Introduce basic concepts of signals and systems and the time-domain and
Dr. Shurjeel Wyne frequency-domain methods for modelling and analyzing continuous-time and
discrete-time signals and systems.

Lecture 1 


Practical information
Course lecture slides and other information available at:
 http://groups.yahoo.com/groups/CIIT-SS-FA13/
 Please join the group in next 3-4 days to get access
You must provide the following info in your membership-request :
(i) Name
(ii) CIIT registration #
2

Staff
Course Material
 Lectures
 Course text book:
 Dr Shurjeel Wyne
 A. V. Oppenheim & A. S. Willsky with S. H. Nawab, Signals and
Systems, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle, NJ: Pearson Education, 2012 (reprint).  Office: Room # 409, Academic Block I
 Email: [email protected]
 Additional reference books:
 S. Haykin and B. Van Veen, Signals and Systems, 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ:  Laboratory Work
John Wiley & Sons, 2003.
 B.P. Lathi, Signal Processing and Linear Systems. Berkeley Cambridge  Mr Ali Ajwad
Press, 1998.
 Office: Room # 328, Academic Block I
 Email: [email protected]

3 4

1
Exams and Grading Course Overview
Theory Assessment 80 % Lecture Attendance Mandatory
(Oppenheim Textbook…)
Sessional I 10 Marks
 Signals and Systems (CH1)
Sessional II 15 Marks
 Linear Time Invariant Systems (CH2)
Quizzes (4) 15 Marks
 Fourier Series Representation of Periodic Signals (CH3)
Assignments (4) 10 Marks

Terminal Exam 50 Marks


 The Continuous-Time Fourier Transform (CH4)
Total 100 Marks  The Discrete-Time Fourier Transform (CH5)

Lab Work Assessment 100 % Lab Attendance Mandatory


 The Laplace Transform (CH9)
Labs: (Attendance + Lab Performance + Report) 70 Marks  The z-Transform (CH10) – time permitting
Lab Semester Project 30 Marks

Total 100 Marks


5 6
Final Grade: 75% Theory 25% Lab work

Course Objectives What is a Signal?


 A signal is an abstraction of any measurable quantity
 Introduce the concept of signal and systems that is a function of one or more independent
variables such as time or space.
 Provide mathematical tools for analyzing signals and
systems in time and frequency domains  Examples of Signals:
 Electrical signals
 Develop understanding of material based on
 Voltage/Current in a circuit over time
mathematics and Matlab/Simulink.
 Acoustic signals
 Acoustic pressure (sound) over time
 Develop a knowledge-base for applications in
 Mechanical signals
communications and control engineering.
 Force exerted on a shock absorber over time
7  Intensity of Earth-quake jolt over a geographical area 8

2
How is a Signal Represented? Example: Speech Signal
 Mathematically, signals are represented as
functions of one or more independent variables.
 For example, a black & white video signal
intensity is dependent on time t and the x, y
coordinates, i.e., f(x,y,t)
 On this course, we shall mainly deal with signals
that are a function of a single variable, t
f(t)

t 9 10

Example: Arterial Blood Pressure (ABP) Continuous & Discrete-Time Signals


 Continuous-Time Signals
 Most real-world signals are continuous
time, e.g., voltage, velocity x(t)
 Treated as function of t, where t is an
independent continuous variable
 Parentheses used to denote
continuous-time signals, e.g., x(t) t

 Discrete-Time Signals
 Some real world and many digital
(sampled) signals are discrete time,
e.g., pixels in a digital picture, daily
stock price, anything processed by a x[n]
computer
 Treated as function of n, where n is an
independent integer variable
 Square brackets used to denote n
discrete-time signals, e.g., x[n]
11 12

3
Signal Properties What is a System?
On this course, we shall deal with signals that may have certain
properties:

 Periodic signals: a signal is periodic if it repeats itself after a  Systems process input signals to produce output signals
fixed period T, i.e. x(t) = x(t+T), for all t. Example: Asin(t)
 Even and odd signals: a signal is even if x(-t) = x(t), i.e., x(t)
can be reflected in the axis at t = 0, without affecting the signal.  Examples of Systems:
A signal is odd if x(-t) = -x(t). Example: cos(t) is an ------- and
sin(t) is an ------- signal, respectively.  A circuit involving a capacitor can be viewed as a
 Exponential and sinusoidal signals: a signal is (real) system that transforms the source voltage (signal) to
exponential if it can be represented as x(t) = Ceat. A signal is
(complex) exponential if it can be represented in the same form the voltage (signal) across the capacitor
but C and a are, in general, complex numbers.
 A communication system is generally composed of
 Step and pulse signals: A pulse signal is one which is zero,
apart from a short spike, (t). A step signal is zero up to a three sub-systems, the transmitter, the channel and the
certain time, and then a constant value after that time, u(t). receiver. The channel typically attenuates and adds
These properties define a large class of useful signals, which shall noise to the transmitted signal which must be processed
be studied further in the coming lectures by the receiver
13 14

How is a System Represented? Example: An RC Circuit System


 A system takes a signal as an input and
transforms it into another signal

R
Input signal Output signal vs (t )  vc (t )
i (t ) 
System R
x(t) y(t) i (t )  C c
dv (t )
vs + i vc dt
- C
dvc (t ) 1 1
 vc (t )  vs (t )
dt RC RC
 A system can be represented as the ratio of the
output signal over the input signal

 So when we “multiply” the system,, by the


input signal, we get the output signal

This concept will studied in the coming lectures 15 16

4
Properties of a System
 On this course, we shall deal with systems that
have certain properties:
 Causal: a system is causal if the output at a time,
only depends on input values up to that time.
 Linear: a system is linear if the output of the scaled
sum of two input signals is the equivalent scaled
sum of outputs
 Time-invariance: a system is time invariant if the
system’s output is the same, given the same input
signal, regardless of time.

These properties define a large class of useful


systems that we will study in this course 17

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