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Online Signal Processing Simulations

Virtual DSP Lab Explore signals, systems, filters, transforms, and real-world DSP concepts through interactive simulations designed for students, engineers, and researchers. 🚀 Start Free DSP Lab ⭐ Enter Premium DSP Lab 🟢 Free DSP Lab Start learning DSP instantly. No account or registration required. Practice fundamental concepts with interactive experiments. Signal generation Sampling demonstration Basic convolution Basic Modulation Techniques Waveform analysis Nyquist Demo: See aliasing in real-time Basic Transforms: FFT and Fourier series Circuit Basics: RLC and Ohm's Law simulators, etc. ⭐ Premium DSP Lab A complete virtual laboratory experience for serious learners. Login required for advanced experiments and professional tools. Advanced FFT analysis FIR and IIR filter design Pole-zero visualization Digital communication experiments 5G N...

PAM vs PCM Explained

PAM vs PCM: Mathematical Comparison, Bandwidth, Noise & SNR PAM vs PCM: Mathematical Comparison, Bandwidth, Noise & SNR Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) and Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) are two important pulse modulation techniques used in communication systems. While PAM is simpler and requires less bandwidth, PCM provides superior noise immunity and is the standard for digital communication and audio systems. What is PAM? Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) represents information by varying the amplitude of uniformly spaced pulses while keeping pulse width and pulse position constant. What is PCM? Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) converts an analog signal into binary data through three steps: Sampling Quantization Binary Encoding Mathematical Comparison of PAM and PCM 1. Bandwidth Analysis Let fm = Maximum message frequency fs = Sampling frequency n = Number of bits/sample PAM Bandwidth B PAM ≈ f s /2 Using Nyquist ...

GATE Mathematics Tutorial

GATE Differential Equation Tutorial GATE Mathematics Tutorial PART 1: Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE) Example 1: First Order ODE (No CF) Question: \[ \frac{dy}{dx}=3x^2 \] Solution: Integrate both sides: \[ y=\int 3x^2 dx \] \[ y=x^3+C \] Final Answer: \[ \boxed{y=x^3+C} \] This is a simple ODE. CF and PI concepts are not used. Example 2: Second Order Homogeneous ODE (CF only) Question: \[ \frac{d^2y}{dx^2}-5\frac{dy}{dx}+6y=0 \] Step 1: Auxiliary equation \[ m^2-5m+6=0 \] Factor: \[ (m-2)(m-3)=0 \] Roots: \[ m=2,3 \] Step 2: CF \[ y_c=C_1e^{2x}+C_2e^{3x} \] \[ \boxed{y=C_1e^{2x}+C_2e^{3x}} \] Example 3: Non-Homogeneous ODE (CF + PI) Question: \[ y''-3y'+2y=e^x \] Step 1: CF Auxiliary equation: \[ m^2-3m+2=0 \] \[ (m-1)(m-2)=0 \] Therefore: \[ CF=C_1e^x+C_2e^{2x} \] Step 2: PI RHS is \(e^x\). Since \(e^x\) already exists in CF, failure case. Multiply t...

Consider the following partial differential equation (PDE) ... where 𝑎 and 𝑏 are distinct positive real numbers. Select the combination(s) ...

Given PDE: \(a\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x^2} + b\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial y^2} = f(x,y)\) Assume: \(f=e^{\xi x+\eta y}\) Step 1: Calculate derivatives \[ \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x^2}=\xi^2 f \] \[ \frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial y^2}=\eta^2 f \] Step 2: Substitute into PDE \[ a(\xi^2 f)+b(\eta^2 f)=f \] Step 3: Take \(f\) common \[ (a\xi^2+b\eta^2)f=f \] Step 4: Cancel \(f\) \[ \boxed{a\xi^2+b\eta^2=1} \] Answer: Option A & B GATE EC Previous Year Papers with Solutions → Electronics and Communication Study Material →

In a circuit, there is a series connection of an ideal resistor and an ideal capacitor. The conduction current ...

  In a circuit, there is a series connection of an ideal resistor and an ideal capacitor. The conduction current (in Amperes) through the resistor is 2sin(𝑡 + 𝜋/2). The displacement current (in Amperes) through the capacitor is _________. Answer: Option C ( 2sin(𝑡 + 𝜋/2) Solution: The displacement current through the capacitor In a series circuit containing an ideal resistor and an ideal capacitor, the displacement current through the capacitor is equal to the conduction current through the resistor at every instant. No actual charge carriers move through the dielectric between the capacitor plates. Instead, the changing electric field in the dielectric gives rise to the displacement current. For an ideal capacitor, the displacement current through the dielectric is exactly equal to the conduction current in the connecting wires and through the resistor. Consequently, if the conduction current is sinusoidal, the displacement current is also sinusoidal with the...

The frequency response 𝐻(𝑓) of a linear time-invariant system has magnitude as shown in the figure...

  The frequency response 𝐻(𝑓) of a linear time-invariant system has magnitude as shown in the figure.   Statement I: The system is necessarily a pure delay system for inputs which are bandlimited to −𝛼≤𝑓≤𝛼. Statement II : For any wide-sense stationary input process with power spectral density 𝑆H(𝑓), the output power spectral density 𝑆x(𝑓) obeys 𝑆y(𝑓)=𝑆x(𝑓) for −𝛼≤𝑓≤𝛼. Which one of the following combinations is true?  Answer: Option 1. Both Statements are correct Solution: System has magnitude 1 and bandlimited, so statement 1 is true. 𝑆y(𝑓)=𝑆x(𝑓) is true as System has magnitude 1 GATE EC Previous Year Papers with Solutions → Electronics and Communication Study Material →

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