ECE212-ESA-Lecture3 - Part2 - System Properties
ECE212-ESA-Lecture3 - Part2 - System Properties
Causal
Remark: All memoryless systems are causal, since the output responds only to the current
value of the input.
• In this system, the output at any time t equals the input at the same time multiplied by
• a number that varies with time. Therefore, we can rewrite the equation as
• where g(t) is a time-varying function, namely g(t) = cos(t + 1). Thus, only the current value of
the input x(t) influences the current value of the output y(t), and we conclude that this system
is causal.
Stable system
The input is the applied force x(t) and the output is the angular deviation y(t) from the vertical.
In this case, gravity applies a restoring force that tends to return the pendulum to the vertical
position, and frictional losses due to drag tend to slow it down.
Unstable system
The effect of gravity is to apply a force that tends to increase the deviation from vertical. Thus,
a small applied force leads to a large vertical deflection causing the pendulum to topple over,
despite any retarding forces due to friction.
y(n) +3
y(t) ( )
Stable Systems
y(t)
• Remarks: if the input to a stable system is bounded (i.e., if its magnitude does not grow
without bound), then the output must also be bounded and therefore can not diverge.
y(n)
y(t)
Unstable Systems
y(t)
• Remarks: if the input to a unstable system is bounded (i.e., if its magnitude does not grow
without bound), then the output will be unbounded and therefore diverge.
• A system is time-invariant if a time shift in the input signal results in an identical time shift in
the output signal.
• In discrete-time, let us consider y[n] is the output when the input is x[n], a time-invariant
system will have y [n- n0] as the output when x [n- n0] is the input.
• In continuous time, let us consider y(t) is the output when the input is x(t), a time-invariant
system will have y (t- t0) as the output when x (t – t0) is the input.
y[n] +3
y(t) ( ) Time-Invariant
Systems
y(t)
y(n)
y(n) Time-varying
y(t)
Systems
(Not Time-Invariant)
y(t)
Additivity property
Homogeneity property
• Remark: a system can be linear without being time invariant, and it can be time invariant
without being linear.
14 Signals and Systems chapter 1 14
• Are the following systems Linear?
y(n)
y(t) Linear
Systems
y(t)
y(n) +3
y(t) ( )
Non-Linear
y(t)
Systems
y(t)