0
$\begingroup$

I'm a newbie on use of MATLAB and also in signals and systems. I need clarification and guide (with fundamental explanations please) on above.

I want to generate a sampled square wave in MATLAB with following criteria;

Signal duration $T=5\mathrm{s}$, Sample frequency $f_s=40\mathrm{Hz}$. there are supposed to be $f_sT$ signal points (what does this mean please). $\tau=1/100$. the square wave signals are zeros for the first $\frac{f_sT(1-\tau)}{2}$ points and also for the last $\frac{f_sT(1-\tau)}{2}$ points. they are one otherwise.

What I have done so far:

clear all

fs = 40;
t = [0:1/fs:5];
dc = 50;
x = square(2*pi*t);
%f=1 for a square wave

plot (t,x);

Am I right? I have no idea how to use tau, and what signal points imply here. Kindly assist. Thank you.

$\endgroup$

1 Answer 1

1
$\begingroup$

The word "points" means "samples." Product fs*T is fs samples/second times T seconds. That's a signal duration of 40*5 = 200 samples (or points). This means your Matlab code for vector t should have been:

t = [0:1/fs:T-1/fs];

You wrote tau = 1/100, so (1–tau) = 0.99. Ratio fsT(1-tau)/2 = 40*5*0.99/2 = 99 samples (points). You cannot have a square wave sequence of length 200 samples (points) if the first and last 99 samples (points) are zero-valued. Your fs, T, and tau variables are incompatible with each other!

Note: Your x = square(2*pi*t); Matlab command is equivalent to:

x = square(2*pi*1*t); % Note the "1"

which produces square wave that repeats every one second. If you want just one cycle of a square wave over 200 samples use the commend:

x = square(2*pi*t/5);

$\endgroup$
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.