(added review by Chloe Kauffman)
m (Protected "Nyquist Miguel Castellanos ECE438 slecture review" [edit=sysop:move=sysop])
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 41: Line 41:
 
----
 
----
  
*Review by student 5
+
*Review by Matt Miller
**Author answer here
+
This slecture was very clear and very well detailed. The inclusion of diagrams made it very easy to follow.
  
 
----
 
----

Latest revision as of 04:39, 15 October 2014


Questions and Comments for Nyquist Theorem

A slecture by ECE student Miguel Rodrigo Castellanos



Please post your reviews, comments, and questions below.



  • Review by Yerkebulan Y.

Very clear explanation of Nyquist Theorem in words, which is also supported with graphs. Also,I need to mention exception that you provided. I am not sure if signal can have such FT.


  • Review by Fabian Faes

I enjoyed the mathematical steps that were taken to show how the Nyquist Theorem upholds when performing reconstruction, however I do believe that more graphs would have been beneficial in the understanding. The fact that there is a strong conclusion which states how reconstruction is sometimes possible even though the Nyquist condition is not met is an important message to be closed on. Overall it is a good slecture!


  • Review by Michael Hayashi

I enjoyed the presentation of the Nyquist Theorem in this slecture. Your proof was solid and the coloration of the center copy removed the need to have more graphs. It was a fun exercise to include the Nyquist-violating sampling example in your presentation; nothing could have done a better job explaining the sufficient, but not necessary, aspect of using the Nyquist condition for reconstruction. I applaud the thoroughness and accuracy of this slecture.


  • Review by Chloe Kauffman

This was a very helpful slecture for Nyquist. I would have liked to seen the tie between sampling at exactly above Nyquist, versus even larger of a sampling frequency for real world design application. I.e. sampling at just above Nyquist requires a nearly perfect LPF with sharp cutoff, vs. limitation of even larger Nyquist rates. Your graphs and explanations aided in the topic learning.


  • Review by Matt Miller

This slecture was very clear and very well detailed. The inclusion of diagrams made it very easy to follow.


  • Review by student 6
    • Author answer here

  • Review by student 7
    • Author answer here

  • Review by student 8
    • Author answer here

  • Review by student 9
    • Author answer here

  • Review by student 10
    • Author answer here

Back to ECE438, Fall 2014

Alumni Liaison

has a message for current ECE438 students.

Sean Hu, ECE PhD 2009