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Lecture 25 Outline: Z Transforms, Discrete-time Systems Analysis

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1 Lecture 25 Outline: Z Transforms, Discrete-time Systems Analysis
Announcements: Last HW will be posted Friday, due Thu June 7, no late HWs Final exam announcements on next slide Sided signals and their ROCs Inverting Z-transforms LTI Systems Analysis using Z-Tranforms Feedback in LTI Systems Example: 2nd order system with feedback

2 Final Exam Details Time/Location: Monday June 11, 3:30-6:30 in this room. Food afterwards. Open book and notes – you can bring any written material you wish to the exam. Calculators not allowed. PDF browsing devices allowed. Covers all class material; emphasis on post-MT material (lectures 14 on) See lecture ppt slides for material in the reader that you are responsible for Practice final will be posted by Friday, worth 25 extra credit points for “taking” it (not graded). Can be turned in any time up until exam, Solns given when you turn in your answers My final review on W 6/6 in class. Georgia Th 6/7 4-6pm (review + OHs) OHs next week and before final: Me: 6/4, Mon, 3-4; 6/6, Wed, 12-1:30 (here); 6/8, Fri, by appt. (request by Thu 5pm) Regular Tuesday section and TA OHs next week plus Th 6/7 ~5-6pm (Georgia) Sun, 6/10, 12-2pm (John), Mon 6/11, 12-2pm (Malavika)

3 Review of Last Lecture Bilateral Z Transform Relation with DTFT:
Region of Convergence (ROC): All z s.t. X(z) exists, depends only on r, bounded by circles Rational Z-Transforms defined by poles and zeroes Plots poles and zeroes as  or o on z-plane Properties and transform pairs of z-transforms Right, left and two-sided exponential examples True for some rR Defn:

4 ROC for “Sided” Signals
Right-sided: x[n]=0 for n<a for some a ROC is outside circle associated with largest pole Example: RH exponential: x[n]=anu[n] Left-sided: x[n]=0 for n>a for some a ROC is inside circle associated with smallest pole Example: LH exponential: x[n]=-anu[-n-1] Two-sided: neither right or left sided Can be written as sum of RH and LH sided signals ROC is a circular strip between two poles Example: 2-sided exponential: x[n]=b|n|, b<1

5 Inversion of Rational Laplace Transforms
, Extract the Strictly Proper Part of X(s) If M<N, is strictly proper, proceed to next step If MN, perform long division to get , where Invert D(s) to get time signal ( ; ) Follows from z-transform table The second term is strictly proper Perform a partial fraction expansion: Invert partial fraction expansion term-by-term (check ROC) For right-sided signals: Obtain coefficients via residue method

6 LTI Systems Analysis using z-Transforms
LTI Analysis using convolution property Equivalence of Systems same as for Laplace G[z] & H[z] in Series: T[z]=G[z]H[z]; in Parallel: T[z]=G[z]+H[z] Causality and Stability in LTI Systems System is causal if h[n]=0, n<0, so if h[n] right-sided; has its ROC outside circle associated with largest pole. Causal system (BIBO) stable if bounded inputs yield bounded outputs; iff h[n] absolutely summable  H(ejW) exists H(z) is stable  H(z) strictly proper and poles inside unit circle, i.e. r=1ROC (see Reader) LTI Systems described by difference equations Easily implemented with delay elements: d(n-N)z-N H[z] called the transfer function of the system ROCROCxROCh

7 Feedback in LTI Systems
+ Equivalent System Motivation for Feedback Can make an unstable system stable; make a system less sensitive to disturbances; make it closer to ideal Can have negative effect: make a stable system unstable Transfer Function T(z) of Feedback System: Example: Population Growth: y[n]=2y[n-1]+x[n]-r[n] Stable for b<.5 Y(z)=G(z)E(z); E(z)=X(z)±Y(z)H(z)

8 Example: Second Order System with Feedback (ppt only if no time in lecture, pp 43-46.5 in notes)
Z-Transform DTFT: Exists when r<1 Lowpass filter for q=0 Bandpass filter for q=p/2 Highpass filter for q=p Impulse Response (LPF: q=0) Poles at re±jq r = 0.8, q = p/2 r = 0.8, q = 0 r = 0.8, q = p/2 r = 0.8, q = 0

9 Main Points One-Sided signals have sided ROCs outside/inside a circle. Two sided signals have circular strips as ROCs Convolution and other properties of z-transforms allow us to study input/output relationship of LTI systems A causal system with H(z) rational is stable if & only if all poles of H(z) lie inside unit circle circle (all poles have |z|<1) ROC defined implicitly for causal stable LTI systems Systems of difference equations easily characterized using z-transforms Feedback stabilizes unstable systems; obtains desired transfer function


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