Signals & Systems

 

Name of the Faculty : MS. PRIYANKA GAUR
Discipline : CSE
Semester : 5TH
Subject : SIGNALS & SYSTEMS(PCC-CS-501)
Lesson Plan Duration : JULY-DEC’19
Week Theory
Lecture Day Topic
1st 1 INTRODUCTION TO SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS
2 Signals and systems as seen in everyday life, and in various branches of engineering and science
3 Signal properties: periodicity, absolute integrability, determinism and stochastic character
4 Some special signals of importance: the unit step, the unit impulse, the sinusoid, the complex exponential, some special time-limited signals; continuous and discrete time signals, continuous and discrete amplitude signals.
2nd 5 System properties: linearity: additivity and homogeneity, shiftinvariance,
causality, stability, realizability. Examples.
6 Impulse response and step response
7 convolution, input-output behavior with aperiodic convergent inputs
8 cascade interconnections
3rd 9 Characterization of causality and stability of LTI
systems
10 System representation through differential equations and difference equations
11 Statespace Representation of systems. State Space Analysis, Multi-input, multi-output representation. State Transition Matrix and its Role
12 Periodic inputs to an LTI system, the notion of a frequency response and its relation to the impulse response
4th 13 Fourier series representation of periodic signals, Waveform Symmetries
14 Calculation of Fourier Coefficients
15 Fourier Transform, convolution/multiplication and their effect in the frequency domain, magnitude and phase response
16 Fourier domain duality. The DiscreteTime Fourier Transform (DTFT)
5th 17 the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)
18 Parseval’s Theorem
19 Review of the Laplace Transform for continuous time signals and systems, system functions
20 poles and zeros of system functions and signals, Laplace domain analysis
6th 21 solution to differential equations and system behavior
22 The z-Transform for discrete time signals and systems, system functions
23 poles and zeros of systems and sequences, z-domain analysis
24 The Sampling Theorem and its implications. Spectra of sampled signals
7th 25 Reconstruction: ideal interpolator, zero-order hold, first-order hold
26 Aliasing and its effects
27 Relation between continuous and discrete time systems
28 Introduction to the applications of signal and system theory: modulation for communication
8th 29 filtering
30 feedback control systems