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  2. Downsampling (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downsampling_(signal...

    Reduce high-frequency signal components with a digital lowpass filter. Decimate the filtered signal by M; that is, keep only every M th sample. Step 2 alone creates undesirable aliasing (i.e. high-frequency signal components will copy into the lower frequency band and be mistaken for lower frequencies). Step 1, when necessary, suppresses ...

  3. Aliasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliasing

    That paper includes an example of frequency aliasing dating back to 1922. The first published use of the term "aliasing" in this context is due to Blackman and Tukey in 1958. [ 5 ] In their preface to the Dover reprint [ 6 ] of this paper, they point out that the idea of aliasing had been illustrated graphically by Stumpf [ 7 ] ten years prior.

  4. Type aliasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_aliasing

    Type aliasing is a feature in some programming languages that allows creating a reference to a type using another name. It does not create a new type hence does not increase type safety . It can be used to shorten a long name.

  5. Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist–Shannon_sampling...

    Effects of aliasing, blurring, and sharpening may be adjusted with digital filtering implemented in software, which necessarily follows the theoretical principles. A family of sinusoids at the critical frequency, all having the same sample sequences of alternating +1 and –1.

  6. Pulse-code modulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse-code_modulation

    Between samples no measurement of the signal is made; the sampling theorem guarantees non-ambiguous representation and recovery of the signal only if it has no energy at frequency f s /2 or higher (one half the sampling frequency, known as the Nyquist frequency); higher frequencies will not be correctly represented or recovered and add aliasing ...

  7. Impulse invariance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impulse_invariance

    The bilinear transform is an alternative to impulse invariance that uses a different mapping that maps the continuous-time system's frequency response, out to infinite frequency, into the range of frequencies up to the Nyquist frequency in the discrete-time case, as opposed to mapping frequencies linearly with circular overlap as impulse ...

  8. Bandlimiting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandlimiting

    An example of a simple deterministic bandlimited signal is a sinusoid of the form () = ⁡ (+). If this signal is sampled at a rate f s = 1 T > 2 f {\displaystyle f_{s}={\tfrac {1}{T}}>2f} so that we have the samples x ( n T ) , {\displaystyle x(nT),} for all integers n {\displaystyle n} , we can recover x ( t ) {\displaystyle x(t)} completely ...

  9. Spectral leakage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_leakage

    The frequency axis has units of FFT "bins" when the window of length N is applied to data and a transform of length N is computed. For instance, the value at frequency ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠ "bin" is the response that would be measured in bins k and k + 1 to a sinusoidal signal at frequency k + ⁠ 1 / 2 ⁠. It is relative to the maximum possible ...