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Lecture 20 Outline: Laplace Transforms Announcements: Reading: “6: The Laplace Transform” pp. 1-9 HW 7 posted, due next Wednesday My OHs Monday cancelled,

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 20 Outline: Laplace Transforms Announcements: Reading: “6: The Laplace Transform” pp. 1-9 HW 7 posted, due next Wednesday My OHs Monday cancelled,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 20 Outline: Laplace Transforms Announcements: Reading: “6: The Laplace Transform” pp. 1-9 HW 7 posted, due next Wednesday My OHs Monday cancelled, available by appointment next W-F Guest lecture Monday: Paul Nuyujukian, “Using signal processing to decode brain signals”. Motivation for Laplace Transforms Bilateral Laplace Transform S-Plane and Region of Convergence Example: Right-sided Exponential

2 Review of Last Lecture Linear Convolution from Circular with Zero Padding Block-by-block linear convolution Breaks x[n] into shorter blocks; computes y[n] block-by-block. Overlap-add method: breaks x[n] into non-overlapping segments Segments computed by circular method: FFT/IFFT has complexity.5Nlog2N (vs. N 2 for DFT/IDFT) Digital Spectral Analysis exploits DSP to obtain CTFTs x 1 [n] * x 2 [n]= L=4 P=6 M=L+P-1=9

3 Motivation for Laplace Transforms Why do we need another transform? We have the CTFT, DTFT, DFT, FFT Most signals don’t have a Fourier Transform Requires that the Fourier integral converges: true if Need a more general transform to study signals and systems whose Fourier transform doesn’t exist Laplace transform x(t)  X(s) has similar properties as CTFT In general there is no Fourier Transform for power signals x(t) h(t) x(t)*h(t) X(s) H(s) Y(s)=X(s)H(s) Holds even when Fourier transforms don’t exit

4 Bilateral Laplace Transforms (Continuous Time) Definition: Relation with Fourier Transform: If we set  =0 then L[x(t)]=F[x(t)] : The bilateral Laplace transform exists if

5 S-Plane and Region of Convergence Definition of Region of Convergence (ROC) for Laplace transform L[x(t)]=X(s)=X(  +j  Defined as all values of s=  +j  such that L[x(t)] exists Convergence depends only on , not j , as it requires: s-Plane: Plot of  +j  with  on real (x) axis, j  on imaginary (y) axis. Show the ROC (shaded region) for L[x(t)] on this plane s-plane Values of Real Axis Imaginary Axis Smallest  : X(s) exists ROC consists of strips along j  axis

6 Example: Right-Sided Real Exponential This converges if Under this condition Special cases:, a real, i.e., if ROC

7 Main Points Laplace transform allows us to analyze signals and systems for which their Fourier transforms do not converge Laplace transform X(s) has similar properties as the Fourier Transform X(j  ) and equals X(j  ) when s=j  Laplace transform is defined over a range of s=  +j  values for which the transform converges The set of s=  +j  values for which the Laplace transform exists is called its Region of Convergence (RoC) RoC plotted on the S-plane Real axis for , imaginary axis for j 


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