Perhaps the most common real-valued signal is the sinusoid.
Summary: Complex signals can be built from elemental signals, including the complex exponential, unit step, pulse, etc. This module presents the elemental signals in brief.
Elemental signals are the building blocks with which
we build complicated signals. By definition,
elemental signals have a simple structure. Exactly what we
mean by the "structure of a signal" will unfold in this
section of the course. Signals are nothing more than
functions defined with respect to some independent variable,
which we take to be time for the most part. Very interesting
signals are not functions solely of time; one great example of
which is an image. For it, the independent variables are
Perhaps the most common real-valued signal is the sinusoid.
The most important signal is complex-valued, the complex exponential.
The complex exponential defines the notion of frequency: it is
the only signal that contains only one
frequency component. The sinusoid consists of two frequency
components: one at the frequency
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Using the complex plane, we can envision the complex
exponential's temporal variations as seen in the above figure
(Figure 1). The magnitude of
the complex exponential is
As opposed to complex exponentials which oscillate, real exponentials decay.
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The quantity
The unit step function
is denoted by
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The unit pulse
describes turning a unit-amplitude signal on for a duration of
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The square wave
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"Electrical Engineering Digital Processing Systems in Braille."