written 7.9 years ago by | modified 2.8 years ago by |
Mumbai University > Computer Engineering > Sem 3 > Electronic Circuits and Communication Fundamentals
Marks: 10 Marks
Year: May 2014
written 7.9 years ago by | modified 2.8 years ago by |
Mumbai University > Computer Engineering > Sem 3 > Electronic Circuits and Communication Fundamentals
Marks: 10 Marks
Year: May 2014
written 7.9 years ago by |
Sampling Theorem
Statement
Let us assume that the highest frequency component in the signal is fmax.
We know that, frequency spectra of realistic signals are not zero above some arbitrary frequency. A real signal will have a spectrum that gets smaller and smaller at higher and higher frequencies, but which only approach zero asymptotically.
To reproduce a signal with a highest frequency component, fmax, the sampling frequency (the frequency at which samples are taken) must be at least twice the highest frequency component.
In other words, the signal cannot be reproduced accurately unless the sampling frequency is at least 2fmax - a frequency that is referred to as the Nyquist frequency for the signal. If the sampling frequency is lower than the Nyquist frequency, that is referred to as under sampling.