Incorporating new problems and examples, the second edition of Linear Systems and Signals features MATLABยฎ material in each chapter and at the back of the book. It gives clear descriptions of linear systems and uses mathematics not only to prove axiomatic theory, but also to enhance physical and int
Linear systems and signals
โ Scribed by Green, Roger A.; Lathi, B. P
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 1009
- Series
- The Oxford series in electrical and computer engineering
- Edition
- Third edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Cover......Page 1
Half title......Page 2
Series page......Page 3
Title page......Page 4
Copyright page......Page 5
CONTENTS......Page 6
PREFACE......Page 16
B.1-1 A Historical Note......Page 20
B.1-2 Algebra of Complex Numbers......Page 24
B.2 SINUSOIDS......Page 35
B.2-1 Addition of Sinusoids......Page 37
B.3-1 Monotonic Exponentials......Page 39
B.3-2 The Exponentially Varying Sinusoid......Page 41
B.4 CRAMERโS RULE......Page 42
B.5 PARTIAL FRACTION EXPANSION......Page 44
B.5-1 Method of Clearing Fractions......Page 45
B.5-2 The Heaviside โCover-Upโ Method......Page 46
B.5-3 Repeated Factors of Q(x)......Page 50
B.5-4 A Combination of Heaviside โCover-Upโ and Clearing Fractions......Page 51
B.5-5 Improper F(x) with m = n......Page 53
B.5-6 Modified Partial Fractions......Page 54
B.6 VECTORS AND MATRICES......Page 55
B.6-1 Some Definitions and Properties......Page 56
B.6-2 Matrix Algebra......Page 57
B.7-1 MATLAB Overview......Page 61
B.7-2 Calculator Operations......Page 62
B.7-3 Vector Operations......Page 64
B.7-4 Simple Plotting......Page 65
B.7-5 Element-by-Element Operations......Page 67
B.7-6 Matrix Operations......Page 68
B.7-7 Partial Fraction Expansions......Page 72
B.8-3 Sums......Page 73
B.8-6 Trigonometric Identities......Page 74
B.8-7 Common Derivative Formulas......Page 75
B.8-8 Indefinite Integrals......Page 76
REFERENCES......Page 77
PROBLEMS......Page 78
1.1 SIZE OF A SIGNAL......Page 83
1.1-2 Signal Power......Page 84
1.2-1 Time Shifting......Page 90
1.2-2 Time Scaling......Page 92
1.2-3 Time Reversal......Page 95
1.2-4 Combined Operations......Page 96
1.3-2 Analog and Digital Signals......Page 97
1.3-3 Periodic and Aperiodic Signals......Page 98
1.4 SOME USEFUL SIGNAL MODELS......Page 101
1.4-1 The Unit Step Function u(t)......Page 102
1.4-2 The Unit Impulse Function ฮด(t)......Page 105
1.4-3 The Exponential Function e^{st}......Page 108
1.5-1 Some Properties of Even and Odd Functions......Page 111
1.5-2 Even and Odd Components of a Signal......Page 112
1.6 SYSTEMS......Page 114
1.7-1 Linear and Nonlinear Systems......Page 116
1.7-2 Time-Invariant and Time-Varying Systems......Page 121
1.7-3 Instantaneous and Dynamic Systems......Page 122
1.7-4 Causal and Noncausal Systems......Page 123
1.7-5 Continuous-Time and Discrete-Time Systems......Page 126
1.7-7 Invertible and Noninvertible Systems......Page 128
1.7-8 Stable and Unstable Systems......Page 129
1.8-1 Electrical Systems......Page 130
1.8-2 Mechanical Systems......Page 133
1.8-3 Electromechanical Systems......Page 137
1.9 INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL DESCRIPTIONS OF A SYSTEM......Page 138
1.10 INTERNAL DESCRIPTION: THE STATE-SPACE DESCRIPTION......Page 140
1.11-1 Anonymous Functions......Page 145
1.11-2 Relational Operators and the Unit Step Function......Page 147
1.11-3 Visualizing Operations on the Independent Variable......Page 149
1.11-4 Numerical Integration and Estimating Signal Energy......Page 150
1.12 SUMMARY......Page 152
REFERENCES......Page 154
PROBLEMS......Page 155
2.1 INTRODUCTION......Page 169
2.2 SYSTEM RESPONSE TO INTERNAL CONDITIONS: THE ZERO-INPUT RESPONSE......Page 170
2.2-1 Some Insights into the Zero-Input Behavior of a System......Page 180
2.3 THE UNIT IMPULSE RESPONSE h(t)......Page 182
2.4 SYSTEM RESPONSE TO EXTERNAL INPUT: THE ZERO-STATE RESPONSE......Page 187
2.4-1 The Convolution Integral......Page 189
2.4-2 Graphical Understanding of Convolution Operation......Page 197
2.4-3 Interconnected Systems......Page 209
2.4-4 A Very Special Function for LTIC Systems: The Everlasting Exponential e^{st}......Page 212
2.4-5 Total Response......Page 214
2.5-1 External (BIBO) Stability......Page 215
2.5-2 Internal (Asymptotic) Stability......Page 217
2.5-3 Relationship Between BIBO and Asymptotic Stability......Page 218
2.6-1 Dependence of System Behavior on Characteristic Modes......Page 222
2.6-2 Response Time of a System: The System Time Constant......Page 224
2.6-3 Time Constant and Rise Time of a System......Page 225
2.6-4 Time Constant and Filtering......Page 226
2.6-6 Time Constant and Rate of Information Transmission......Page 228
2.6-7 The Resonance Phenomenon......Page 229
2.7 MATLAB: M-FILES......Page 231
2.7-1 Script M-Files......Page 232
2.7-2 Function M-Files......Page 233
2.7-3 For-Loops......Page 234
2.7-4 Graphical Understanding of Convolution......Page 236
2.8 APPENDIX: DETERMINING THE IMPULSE RESPONSE......Page 239
2.9 SUMMARY......Page 240
PROBLEMS......Page 242
3.1 INTRODUCTION......Page 256
3.1-1 Size of a Discrete-Time Signal......Page 257
3.2 USEFUL SIGNAL OPERATIONS......Page 259
3.3-1 Discrete-Time Impulse Function ฮด[n]......Page 264
3.3-2 Discrete-Time Unit Step Function u[n]......Page 265
3.3-3 Discrete-Time Exponential ฮณ^n......Page 266
3.3-4 Discrete-Time Sinusoid cos(Omega n+ฮธ)......Page 270
3.3-5 Discrete-Time Complex Exponential e^{jOmega n}......Page 271
3.4 EXAMPLES OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS......Page 272
3.4-1 Classification of Discrete-Time Systems......Page 281
3.5 DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEM EQUATIONS......Page 284
3.5-1 Recursive (Iterative) Solution of Difference Equation......Page 285
3.6 SYSTEM RESPONSE TO INTERNAL CONDITIONS: THE ZERO-INPUT RESPONSE......Page 289
3.7 THE UNIT IMPULSE RESPONSE h[n]......Page 296
3.7-1 The Closed-Form Solution of h[n]......Page 297
3.8 SYSTEM RESPONSE TO EXTERNAL INPUT: THE ZERO-STATE RESPONSE......Page 299
3.8-1 Graphical Procedure for the Convolution Sum......Page 307
3.8-2 Interconnected Systems......Page 313
3.8-3 Total Response......Page 316
3.9-1 External (BIBO) Stability......Page 317
3.9-2 Internal (Asymptotic) Stability......Page 318
3.9-3 Relationship Between BIBO and Asymptotic Stability......Page 320
3.10 INTUITIVE INSIGHTS INTO SYSTEM BEHAVIOR......Page 324
3.11-1 Discrete-Time Functions and Stem Plots......Page 325
3.11-2 System Responses Through Filtering......Page 327
3.11-3 A Custom Filter Function......Page 329
3.11-4 Discrete-Time Convolution......Page 330
3.13 SUMMARY......Page 332
PROBLEMS......Page 333
4.1 THE LAPLACE TRANSFORM......Page 349
4.1-1 Finding the Inverse Transform......Page 357
4.2-1 Time Shifting......Page 368
4.2-2 Frequency Shifting......Page 372
4.2-3 The Time-Differentiation Property......Page 373
4.2-4 The Time-Integration Property......Page 375
4.2-6 Time Convolution and Frequency Convolution......Page 376
4.3 SOLUTION OF DIFFERENTIAL AND INTEGRO-DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS......Page 379
4.3-1 Comments on Initial Conditions at 0^โ and at 0^+......Page 382
4.3-2 Zero-State Response......Page 385
4.3-3 Stability......Page 390
4.4 ANALYSIS OF ELECTRICAL NETWORKS: THE TRANSFORMED NETWORK......Page 392
4.4-1 Analysis of Active Circuits......Page 401
4.5 BLOCK DIAGRAMS......Page 405
4.6 SYSTEM REALIZATION......Page 407
4.6-1 Direct Form I Realization......Page 408
4.6-2 Direct Form II Realization......Page 409
4.6-3 Cascade and Parallel Realizations......Page 412
4.6-4 Transposed Realization......Page 415
4.6-5 Using Operational Amplifiers for System Realization......Page 418
4.7 APPLICATION TO FEEDBACK AND CONTROLS......Page 423
4.7-1 Analysis of a Simple Control System......Page 425
4.8 FREQUENCY RESPONSE OF AN LTIC SYSTEM......Page 431
4.8-1 Steady-State Response to Causal Sinusoidal Inputs......Page 437
4.9 BODE PLOTS......Page 438
4.9-2 Pole (or Zero) at the Origin......Page 441
4.9-3 First-Order Pole (or Zero)......Page 443
4.9-4 Second-Order Pole (or Zero)......Page 445
4.9-5 The Transfer Function from the Frequency Response......Page 454
4.10-1 Dependence of Frequency Response on Poles and Zeros of H(s)......Page 455
4.10-2 Lowpass Filters......Page 458
4.10-4 Notch (Bandstop) Filters......Page 460
4.10-5 Practical Filters and Their Specifications......Page 463
4.11 THE BILATERAL LAPLACE TRANSFORM......Page 464
4.11-1 Properties of the Bilateral Laplace Transform......Page 470
4.11-2 Using the Bilateral Transform for Linear System Analysis......Page 471
4.12 MATLAB: CONTINUOUS-TIME FILTERS......Page 474
4.12-1 Frequency Response and Polynomial Evaluation......Page 475
4.12-2 Butterworth Filters and the Find Command......Page 478
4.12-3 Using Cascaded Second-Order Sections for Butterworth Filter Realization......Page 480
4.12-4 Chebyshev Filters......Page 482
4.13 SUMMARY......Page 485
PROBLEMS......Page 487
5.1 THE z-TRANSFORM......Page 507
5.1-1 Inverse Transform by Partial Fraction Expansion and Tables......Page 514
5.1-2 Inverse z-Transform by Power Series Expansion......Page 518
5.2-1 Time-Shifting Properties......Page 520
5.2-2 z-Domain Scaling Property (Multiplication by ฮณ^n)......Page 524
5.2-4 Time-Reversal Property......Page 525
5.2-5 Convolution Property......Page 526
5.3 z-TRANSFORM SOLUTION OF LINEAR DIFFERENCE EQUATIONS......Page 529
5.3-1 Zero-State Response of LTID Systems: The Transfer Function......Page 533
5.3-2 Stability......Page 537
5.4 SYSTEM REALIZATION......Page 538
5.5 FREQUENCY RESPONSE OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS......Page 545
5.5-1 The Periodic Nature of Frequency Response......Page 551
5.5-2 Aliasing and Sampling Rate......Page 555
5.6 FREQUENCY RESPONSE FROM POLE-ZERO LOCATIONS......Page 557
5.7 DIGITAL PROCESSING OF ANALOG SIGNALS......Page 566
5.8 THE BILATERAL z-TRANSFORM......Page 573
5.8-1 Properties of the Bilateral z-Transform......Page 578
5.8-2 Using the Bilateral z-Transform for Analysis of LTID Systems......Page 579
5.9 CONNECTING THE LAPLACE AND z-TRANSFORMS......Page 582
5.10 MATLAB: DISCRETE-TIME IIR FILTERS......Page 584
5.10-1 Frequency Response and Pole-Zero Plots......Page 585
5.10-2 Transformation Basics......Page 586
5.10-3 Transformation by First-Order Backward Difference......Page 587
5.10-4 Bilinear Transformation......Page 588
5.10-5 Bilinear Transformation with Prewarping......Page 589
5.10-6 Example: Butterworth Filter Transformation......Page 590
5.10-8 Using Cascaded Second-Order Sections to Improve Design......Page 591
5.11 SUMMARY......Page 593
PROBLEMS......Page 594
6.1 PERIODIC SIGNAL REPRESENTATION BY TRIGONOMETRIC FOURIER SERIES......Page 612
6.1-1 The Fourier Spectrum......Page 617
6.1-2 The Effect of Symmetry......Page 626
6.1-3 Determining the Fundamental Frequency and Period......Page 628
6.2 EXISTENCE AND CONVERGENCE OF THE FOURIER SERIES......Page 631
6.2-1 Convergence of a Series......Page 632
6.2-2 The Role of Amplitude and Phase Spectra in Waveshaping......Page 634
6.3 EXPONENTIAL FOURIER SERIES......Page 640
6.3-1 Exponential Fourier Spectra......Page 643
6.3-2 Parsevalโs Theorem......Page 651
6.3-3 Properties of the Fourier Series......Page 654
6.4 LTIC SYSTEM RESPONSE TO PERIODIC INPUTS......Page 656
6.5 GENERALIZED FOURIER SERIES:SIGNALS AS VECTORS......Page 660
6.5-1 Component of a Vector......Page 661
6.5-2 Signal Comparison and Component of a Signal......Page 662
6.5-3 Extension to Complex Signals......Page 664
6.5-4 Signal Representation by an Orthogonal Signal Set......Page 666
6.6 NUMERICAL COMPUTATION OF D_n......Page 678
6.7-1 Periodic Functions and the Gibbs Phenomenon......Page 680
6.7-2 Optimization and Phase Spectra......Page 683
6.8 SUMMARY......Page 686
REFERENCES......Page 687
PROBLEMS......Page 688
7.1 APERIODIC SIGNAL REPRESENTATION BY THE FOURIER INTEGRAL......Page 699
7.1-1 Physical Appreciation of the Fourier Transform......Page 706
7.2 TRANSFORMS OF SOME USEFUL FUNCTIONS......Page 708
7.2-1 Connection Between the Fourier and Laplace Transforms......Page 719
7.3 SOME PROPERTIES OF THE FOURIER TRANSFORM......Page 720
7.4 SIGNAL TRANSMISSION THROUGH LTIC SYSTEMS......Page 740
7.4-1 Signal Distortion During Transmission......Page 742
7.4-2 Bandpass Systems and Group Delay......Page 745
7.5 IDEAL AND PRACTICAL FILTERS......Page 749
7.6 SIGNAL ENERGY......Page 752
7.7 APPLICATION TO COMMUNICATIONS: AMPLITUDE MODULATION......Page 755
7.7-1 Double-Sideband, Suppressed-Carrier (DSB-SC) Modulation......Page 756
7.7-2 Amplitude Modulation (AM)......Page 761
7.7-3 Single-Sideband Modulation (SSB)......Page 765
7.8 DATA TRUNCATION: WINDOW FUNCTIONS......Page 768
7.9 MATLAB: FOURIER TRANSFORM TOPICS......Page 774
7.9-1 The Sinc Function and the Scaling Property......Page 776
7.9-2 Parsevalโs Theorem and Essential Bandwidth......Page 777
7.9-3 Spectral Sampling......Page 778
7.9-4 Kaiser Window Functions......Page 779
7.10 SUMMARY......Page 781
REFERENCES......Page 782
PROBLEMS......Page 783
8.1 THE SAMPLING THEOREM......Page 795
8.1-1 Practical Sampling......Page 800
8.2 SIGNAL RECONSTRUCTION......Page 804
8.2-1 Practical Difficulties in Signal Reconstruction......Page 807
8.2-2 Some Applications of the Sampling Theorem......Page 815
8.3 ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL (A/D) CONVERSION......Page 818
8.4 DUAL OF TIME SAMPLING: SPECTRAL SAMPLING......Page 821
8.5 NUMERICAL COMPUTATION OF THE FOURIER TRANSFORM: THE DISCRETE FOURIER TRANSFORM......Page 824
8.5-1 Some Properties of the DFT......Page 837
8.5-2 Some Applications of the DFT......Page 839
8.6 THE FAST FOURIER TRANSFORM (FFT)......Page 843
8.7-1 Computing the Discrete Fourier Transform......Page 846
8.7-2 Improving the Picture with Zero Padding......Page 848
8.7-3 Quantization......Page 850
8.8 SUMMARY......Page 853
PROBLEMS......Page 854
9.1 DISCRETE-TIME FOURIER SERIES (DTFS)......Page 864
9.1-1 Periodic Signal Representation by Discrete-Time Fourier Series......Page 865
9.1-2 Fourier Spectra of a Periodic Signal x[n]......Page 867
9.2 APERIODIC SIGNAL REPRESENTATION BY FOURIER INTEGRAL......Page 874
9.2-1 Nature of Fourier Spectra......Page 877
9.2-2 Connection Between the DTFT and the z-Transform......Page 885
9.3 PROPERTIES OF THE DTFT......Page 886
9.4 LTI DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEM ANALYSIS BY DTFT......Page 897
9.4-1 Distortionless Transmission......Page 899
9.4-2 Ideal and Practical Filters......Page 901
9.5 DTFT CONNECTION WITH THE CTFT......Page 902
9.5-1 Use of DFT and FFT for Numerical Computation of the DTFT......Page 904
9.6 GENERALIZATION OF THE DTFT TO THE z-TRANSFORM......Page 905
9.7-1 Computing the Discrete-Time Fourier Series......Page 908
9.7-2 Measuring Code Performance......Page 910
9.7-3 FIR Filter Design by Frequency Sampling......Page 911
REFERENCE......Page 917
PROBLEMS......Page 918
10 STATE-SPACE ANALYSIS......Page 927
10.1-1 Derivatives and Integrals of aMatrix......Page 928
10.1-2 The Characteristic Equation of a Matrix: The CayleyโHamilton Theorem......Page 929
10.1-3 Computation of an Exponential and a Power of aMatrix......Page 931
10.2 INTRODUCTION TO STATE SPACE......Page 932
10.3-1 Electrical Circuits......Page 935
10.3-2 State Equations from a Transfer Function......Page 938
10.4 SOLUTION OF STATE EQUATIONS......Page 945
10.4-1 Laplace Transform Solution of State Equations......Page 946
10.4-2 Time-Domain Solution of State Equations......Page 952
10.5 LINEAR TRANSFORMATION OF A STATE VECTOR......Page 958
10.5-1 Diagonalization of Matrix A......Page 962
10.6 CONTROLLABILITY AND OBSERVABILITY......Page 966
10.7 STATE-SPACE ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE-TIME SYSTEMS......Page 972
10.7-1 Solution in State Space......Page 974
10.7-2 The z-Transform Solution......Page 978
10.8-1 z-Transform Solutions to Discrete-Time, State-Space Systems......Page 980
10.8-2 Transfer Functions from State-Space Representations......Page 983
10.8-3 Controllability and Observability of Discrete-Time Systems......Page 984
10.8-4 Matrix Exponentiation and the Matrix Exponential......Page 987
10.9 SUMMARY......Page 988
PROBLEMS......Page 989
INDEX......Page 994
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Unifies the various approaches used to characterize the interaction of signals with systems. Stresses their commonality, and contrasts difference/differential equation models, convolution, and state variable formulations in presenting continuous- and discrete-time systems. Transform methods are also