Signals and Systems: Dr. Shurjeel Wyne
Signals and Systems: Dr. Shurjeel Wyne
Credits: 4 (3, 1)
Lecture 1
Practical information
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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]
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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
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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
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]
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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
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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
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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.