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Periodicity of Continuous and Discrete Signals

Understanding Periodicity of Sinusoidal Signals: Continuous-Time vs Discrete-Time Signals Periodicity is one of the most important concepts in Signals and Systems, and Digital Signal Processing (DSP). Many students know the formula \(T=\frac{2\pi}{\omega}\), but often get confused when similar questions appear in the context of discrete-time signals. In this article, we will clearly understand the difference between periodicity in continuous-time (analog) signals and discrete-time (digital) signals with examples and exam-oriented shortcuts. What is a Periodic Signal? A signal is said to be periodic if it repeats itself after a fixed interval. Continuous-Time (Analog) Signal A continuous-time signal \(x(t)\) is periodic if there exists a positive number \(T\) such that: \[ x(t+T)=x(t) \] The smallest positive value of \(T\) is called the fundamental period . Discrete-Ti...

Q.54 Let F1, F2, and F3 be functions of (x, y, z). Suppose that for every given pair of points A and B in space, the line integral...

  Q.54 Let F 1 , F 2 , and F 3 be functions of ( x , y , z ). Suppose that for every given pair of points A and B in space, the line integral ∫ C (F 1 dx + F 2 dy + F 3 dz) evaluates to the same value along any path C that starts at A and ends at B . Then which of the following is/are true? (A) For every closed path Γ, we have ∮ Γ (F 1 dx + F 2 dy + F 3 dz) = 0. (B) There exists a differentiable scalar function f ( x , y , z ) such that F 1 = ∂f/∂x, F 2 = ∂f/∂y, F 3 = ∂f/∂z. (C) ∂F 1 /∂x + ∂F 2 /∂y + ∂F 3 /∂z = 0. (D) ∂F 3 /∂y = ∂F 2 /∂z,   ∂F 1 /∂z = ∂F 3 /∂x,   ∂F 2 /∂x = ∂F 1 /∂y. Answer: A, B, and D Solution ...

Interactive Kalman Filter Simulation

Interactive Kalman Filter Lab 📡 Kalman Filter Simulation The "Optimal Estimator" that bridges the gap between Noisy Sensors and Inexact Models . 1 Prediction (The Model) "Where do I think I will be based on physics?" x̂⁻ = A · x̂ k-1 P⁻ = P + Q Where Q is Process Noise (engine vibration, wind). 2 Update (The Sensor) "How much do I trust the sensor vs my model?" K = P⁻ / (P⁻ + R) x̂ = x̂⁻ + K(z - x̂⁻) ...

Applications of State Space Model

State-Space Model in Real Engineering Systems  Control theory is often seen as exam mathematics, but in reality, the equation state-space model is the backbone of modern engineering systems. dx/dt = Ax + Bu y = Cx + Du This equation describes how every dynamic system behaves in the real world. 1. What This Equation Really Means This system tells us three important things: How the system evolves internally over time (state x) How external input affects the system (u) What output we observe (y) 2. Real-World Applications of State-Space Model Automotive Systems Cruise control systems ABS braking system Vehicle stability control Input: throttle/brake (u) State: speed, wheel dynamics (x) Output: vehicle speed (y) Aircraft & Drone Systems Autopilot systems Flight stabilization Attitude control (roll, pitch, yaw) Without state-space modeling, modern aviation control would not be stable.  Electrical Systems RL...

Interactive State-Space Car Simulation

State-Space Car Simulation Interactive State-Space Car Simulation System Equation dx/dt = -0.5x + u(t) x(t) = car speed u(t) = throttle input Control Input (Throttle u) u(t) = 1 ▶ Start ⏸ Pause 🔄 Reset Real-Time State Update Speed Graph

State Space to Transfer Function Conversion (Complete Guide with Derivation & Example)

State Space to Transfer Function Conversion (Complete Guide with Derivation & Example) In Control Systems, one of the most important concepts is the relationship between state space representation and the transfer function .  1. Definition of State Space Representation A state space model represents a system using a set of first-order differential equations. It describes the internal behavior of the system using state variables. The standard form is: State Equation: dx/dt = Ax + Bu Output Equation: y = Cx + Du where: A = system matrix, B = input matrix, C = output matrix, D = feedforward matrix. 2. Definition of Transfer Function The transfer function is defined as the ratio of output to input in the Laplace domain, assuming zero initial conditions. G(s) = Y(s) / U(s) It represents the input-output behavior of a system without ...

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