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IIR Filter Simulation

IIR Filter & Feedback Lab IIR Filter & Feedback Lab Exploring Recursive Systems: Where Output depends on Output 1 Input Signal $x[n]$ Signal Type Unit Impulse ฮด[n] Sine Wave Unit Step u[n] Frequency (for Sine) Notice: With an Impulse input, the output of an IIR filter can ring forever (Infinite response). 2 Feedback Coefficients Numerator $b$ (Feed-forward) Denominator $a$ (Feedback - $a_0$ is always 1) System Stable Try setting $a$ to 1.0, -1.1 to see an unstable system! ...

FIR Filter Simulation

Ultimate FIR Filter Interactive Lab FIR Filter & LTI System Lab A visual workflow for understanding Discrete-Time Convolution 1 Define Input Signal $x[n]$ Signal Type Clean Sine Wave Sine Wave + White Noise Unit Impulse ฮด[n] Square Wave Frequency (Hz) This is your raw data. In an LTI system, we want to modify this signal's characteristics. 2 Define Filter $h[k]$ Filter Presets (Coefficients) Moving Average (Low Pass) Simple Differentiator (High Pass) Gaussian-like (Smooth LP) ...

Relationship Between Wide-Sense Stationary (WSS) Processes and the Yule-Walker Equations

  The Yule-Walker equations are fundamentally derived using the properties of a Wide-Sense Stationary (WSS) random process. Without the WSS assumption, the classical Yule-Walker equations cannot be obtained in their standard form. What is a Wide-Sense Stationary (WSS) Process? A random process \(X(t)\) is said to be Wide-Sense Stationary (WSS) if it satisfies three important conditions. 1. Constant Mean $$ E[X(t)] = \mu $$ where the mean \(\mu\) does not depend on time. 2. Constant Variance $$ Var(X(t))=\sigma^2 $$ The variance remains unchanged over time. 3. Autocovariance Depends Only on Lag Instead of depending on two different time instants, $$ C_X(t_1,t_2), $$ the covariance depends only on their difference, $$ C_X(\tau) = C_X(t_1-t_2). $$ Similarly, the autocorrelation function becomes $$ R_X(\tau) = E[X(t)X(t+\tau)]. $$ This property is the key assumption used in deriving the Yule-Walker equations. What are the Yule-Walker Equa...

LTI System Simulation

Advanced LTI Research Simulator LTI System Analysis & Stochastic Signal Processing Simulation with Exact Spectral Estimation & Statistical Verification 1. Signal Source (x[n]) Define the input stochastic process or deterministic signal. Gaussian White Noise (WGN) Sine Wave (Normalized f=0.05) Unit Impulse ฮด[n] Analysis Window (N) 512 Samples 1024 Samples 2. System Impulse Response (h[n]) Enter coefficients separated by commas (FIR Filter). 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.2, 0.1 3. Statistical Estimator Toggle ACF bias and variance behavior. Unbiased (1/(N-|k|)) Biased (1/N) ...

Effect of an LTI Filter on Signal Mean and Variance

Effect of an LTI Filter on Signal Mean and Variance | Complete Guide Why Do Mean and Variance Change After Passing Through an LTI Filter? One of the most common questions in Digital Signal Processing (DSP) is: "Why does the mean or variance of a random signal change after passing through a Linear Time-Invariant (LTI) filter?" Understanding this concept is essential for topics such as random processes, communication systems, estimation theory, adaptive filtering, and noise analysis. This article explains the mathematics, intuition, and physical interpretation behind the change in signal statistics after LTI filtering. What is an LTI Filter? A Linear Time-Invariant (LTI) filter is completely characterized by its impulse response h[n] . If the input signal is x[n] then the output is obtained using convolution: y[n] = h[n] * x[n] Every output sample is a weighted combination of several input samples. Therefore, the st...

Consider a system of linear equations Ax = b, where ...

Question Consider a system of linear equations Ax = b, where A = [ 1   -√2   3 -1   √2   -3 ] b = [ 1 3 ] This system of equations admits Option Description (A) a unique solution for x (B) infinitely many solutions for x (C) no solutions for x (D) exactly two solutions for x Solution Step 1: Write the System The given matrix equation is A = [ 1   -√2   3 -1   √2   -3 ] b = [ 1 3 ] Therefore, the system of equations is x₁ − √2 x₂ + 3x₃ = 1 −x₁ + √2 x₂ − 3x₃ = 3 Step 2: Compare the Two Rows of A Observe that (-1, √2, -3) = -(1, -√2, 3). Thus, the second row of the coefficient matrix is exactly the negative of the first row. Therefore, rank(A) = 1. Step 3: Check Whether the System is Consistent If the second row is the negative of the first row, then the second entry of the vector b should also be the negative of the ...

Consider the two-dimensional vector field ๐น⃗(๐‘ฅ,๐‘ฆ)=๐‘ฅ ๐šค⃗+๐‘ฆ ๐šฅ⃗, where ๐šค⃗ and ๐šฅ⃗ denote the unit vectors along the ๐‘ฅ-axis and the ๐‘ฆ-axis, respectively.

Question Consider the two-dimensional vector field F(x, y) = x i + y j , where i and j denote the unit vectors along the x-axis and y-axis respectively. The contour C in the x-y plane is composed of two horizontal line segments connected at the two ends by semicircular arcs of unit radius. The contour is traversed in the counter-clockwise direction. Evaluate ∮ C F(x,y) · (dx i + dy j) Contour (Approximate) x y (0,0) (0,2) (4,0) Solution The given vector field is F(x,y) = x i + y j. The required line integral is ∮ C (x dx + y dy). Observe that x dx + y dy = d((x² + y²)/2). Hence the vector field is conservative with potential function ฯ†(x,y) = (x² + y²)/2. For any conservative vector field, the line integral over a closed curve is equal to the change in the potential ...

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