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Discrete Systems Laboratory Using MATLAB

AUTHOR Schetzen, Martin; Ingle, Vinay K.
PUBLISHER Cengage Learning (12/02/1999)
PRODUCT TYPE Paperback (Paperback)

Description
This brief paperbound supplement provides 16 hands-on laboratory experiments that students can perform using MATLAB in lab sections that accompany lecture courses in Linear Systems or DSP. The 16 experiments are grouped in four main topic areas: sampling and digital-to-analog (D/A) conversion; the discrete-time Fourier transform; gain and phase-shift studies of digital filters; and analog-to-digital (A/D) quantization. (See TOC below for a listing of specific lab experiments.) The goal of these experiments is to enable students to understand the full physical significance of key concepts through a deeper understanding of the underlying mathematical formulas - not to teach MATLAB. In each experiment, students enter problem parameter values, plot the results using MATLAB's powerful plotting functions, and then respond to questions in the manual that require them to analyze and interpret these results. The experiments challenge students to approach the study of these topics in the role of an experimental investigator; students are required to define the quantitative values and size properties of each design criterion in a problem. As a result, students develop an appreciation of the physical meaning of the derived results, their theoretical and physical implications, and the use of the scientific method.
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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780534374631
ISBN-10: 0534374638
Binding: Paperback or Softback (Trade Paperback (Us))
Content Language: English
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Page Count: 144
Carton Quantity: 54
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Technology & Engineering | Electronics - Circuits - General
Technology & Engineering | Electrical
Technology & Engineering | Mechanical
Dewey Decimal: 621.381
Library of Congress Control Number: 99047989
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
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This brief paperbound supplement provides 16 hands-on laboratory experiments that students can perform using MATLAB in lab sections that accompany lecture courses in Linear Systems or DSP. The 16 experiments are grouped in four main topic areas: sampling and digital-to-analog (D/A) conversion; the discrete-time Fourier transform; gain and phase-shift studies of digital filters; and analog-to-digital (A/D) quantization. (See TOC below for a listing of specific lab experiments.) The goal of these experiments is to enable students to understand the full physical significance of key concepts through a deeper understanding of the underlying mathematical formulas - not to teach MATLAB. In each experiment, students enter problem parameter values, plot the results using MATLAB's powerful plotting functions, and then respond to questions in the manual that require them to analyze and interpret these results. The experiments challenge students to approach the study of these topics in the role of an experimental investigator; students are required to define the quantitative values and size properties of each design criterion in a problem. As a result, students develop an appreciation of the physical meaning of the derived results, their theoretical and physical implications, and the use of the scientific method.
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Author: Schetzen, Martin
MARTIN SCHETZEN is a professor of electrical engineering at Northeastern University. He did his undergraduate work at New York University and received his Masters and ScD degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. As a faculty member at M.I.T., he taught and did research in communication theory and nonlinear system theory. During his tenure at Northeastern University, he has developed a sequence of courses on linear and nonlinear system theory and also wrote the text The Volterra & Wiener Theories of Nonlinear Systems (Wiley), which includes many of his original contributions to nonlinear theory. He also consults for corporations and the U.S. government as a world expert in system theory. Among the many achievements in his long and distinguished career was his development of a new theory for the spectrum of airborne Doppler radar return that was used to land the first astronauts on the moon and for which he received the Apollo Achievement Award and the Apollo Certificate of Achievement.
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