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Estimation of signal parameters via rotational invariant techniques (ESPRIT), is a technique to determine the parameters of a mixture of sinusoids in background noise. This technique was first proposed for frequency estimation. [ 1 ]
The impulse response of a root-raised cosine filter multiplied by T s, for three values of β: 1.0 (blue), 0.5 (red) and 0 (green). The RRC filter is characterised by two values; β, the roll-off factor, and T s the reciprocal of the symbol-rate. The impulse response of such a filter can be given as [citation needed]:
Z-transform analysis can be used to get the pitches and decay times of the harmonics more precisely, as explained in the 1983 paper that introduced the algorithm. A demonstration of the Karplus-Strong algorithm can be heard in the following Vorbis file. The algorithm used a loop gain of 0.98 with increasingly attenuating first order lowpass ...
where:. DFT N and IDFT N refer to the Discrete Fourier transform and its inverse, evaluated over N discrete points, and; L is customarily chosen such that N = L+M-1 is an integer power-of-2, and the transforms are implemented with the FFT algorithm, for efficiency.
machine vibration analysis based on harmonic patterns (gearbox faults, turbine blade failures, ...) [2] [4] [5] Recently, cepstrum-based deconvolution was used on surface electromyography signals, to remove the effect of the stochastic impulse train, which originates an sEMG signal, from the power spectrum of the sEMG signal itself. In this way ...
The Kaiser window for several values of its parameter. The Kaiser window, also known as the Kaiser–Bessel window, was developed by James Kaiser at Bell Laboratories.It is a one-parameter family of window functions used in finite impulse response filter design and spectral analysis.
Impulse response analysis is a major facet of radar, ultrasound imaging, and many areas of digital signal processing. An interesting example would be broadband internet connections. DSL/Broadband services use adaptive equalisation techniques to help compensate for signal distortion and interference introduced by the copper phone lines used to ...
In digital signal processing, a cascaded integrator–comb (CIC) is a computationally efficient class of low-pass finite impulse response (FIR) filter that chains N number of integrator and comb filter pairs (where N is the filter's order) to form a decimator or interpolator.