Signals and Systems
Fall 2003
Lecture #3
11 September 2003
1) Representation of DT signals in terms of shifted unit samples
2) Convolution sum representation of DT LTI systems
3) Examples
4) The unit sample response and properties
of DT LTI systems
Exploiting Superposition and Time-Invariance
Question,Are there sets of,basic” signals so that:
a) We can represent rich classes of signals as linear combinations of
these building block signals.
b) The response of LTI Systems to these basic signals are both simple
and insightful.
Fact,For LTI Systems (CT or DT) there are two natural choices for
these building blocks
Focus for now,DT Shifted unit samples
CT Shifted unit impulses
Representation of DT Signals Using Unit Samples
That is,..
Coefficients Basic Signals
The Sifting Property of the Unit Sample
DT System
x[n]
y[n]
Suppose the system is linear,and define h
k
[n] as the
response to δ[n - k]:
From superposition:
DT System
x[n]
y[n]
Now suppose the system is LTI,and define the unit
sample response h[n]:
From LTI:
From TI:
Convolution Sum Representation of
Response of LTI Systems
Interpretation
nn
nn
Visualizing the calculation of
y[0] = ∑ prod of
overlap for
n = 0
y[1] = ∑ prod of
overlap for
n = 1
Choose value of n and consider it fixed
View as functions of k with n fixed
Calculating Successive Values,Shift,Multiply,Sum
-1
1 × 1 = 1
(-1) × 2 + 0 × (-1) + 1 × (-1) = -3
(-1) × (-1) + 0 × (-1) = 1
(-1) × (-1) = 1
4
0 × 1 + 1 × 2 = 2
(-1) × 1 + 0 × 2 + 1 × (-1) = -2
Properties of Convolution and DT LTI Systems
1) A DT LTI System is completely characterized by its unit sample
response
Unit Sample response
The Distributive Property
Interpretation
The Associative Property
Implication (Very special to LTI Systems)
Properties of LTI Systems
1) Causality?
2) Stability?