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I disagree with you.  If the input is expanded to be <math>e^{2jt} = cos(t) + 2j*sin(t)</math> and the output is <math>t*e^{-2jt} = t*cos(t) - 2jt*sin(t)</math> then since the system is linear, the output of cos(2t) should be <math>t*cos(2t)</math>.  Does anyone disagree with this?  It was just a thought.  Let me know.
 
I disagree with you.  If the input is expanded to be <math>e^{2jt} = cos(t) + 2j*sin(t)</math> and the output is <math>t*e^{-2jt} = t*cos(t) - 2jt*sin(t)</math> then since the system is linear, the output of cos(2t) should be <math>t*cos(2t)</math>.  Does anyone disagree with this?  It was just a thought.  Let me know.
 
-Tyler Johnson
 
-Tyler Johnson
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Tyler, i think you got your expansion wrong.  <math>e^{2jt} = cos(2t) + jsin(2t)</math>  and then <math>e^{-2jt} = cos(-2t) + jsin(-2t) = cos(2t) - jsin(2t)</math>  Try that and apply it and you should get the answer you thought it was.  Dont really know how you got tcos(2t) from what you typed out, but i might have read it wrong.  -Steve Anderson

Revision as of 07:46, 18 September 2008

Comments

Instead of this method, we should expand it in terms of $ \cos(2t) =\frac{e^{2jt}+e^{-2jt}}{2}\, $, as we what will happen to a random signal other than the signal shown. It might produce a different random response. By expanding it we can be sure it's right. - Wei Jian Chan



I disagree with you. If the input is expanded to be $ e^{2jt} = cos(t) + 2j*sin(t) $ and the output is $ t*e^{-2jt} = t*cos(t) - 2jt*sin(t) $ then since the system is linear, the output of cos(2t) should be $ t*cos(2t) $. Does anyone disagree with this? It was just a thought. Let me know. -Tyler Johnson


Tyler, i think you got your expansion wrong. $ e^{2jt} = cos(2t) + jsin(2t) $ and then $ e^{-2jt} = cos(-2t) + jsin(-2t) = cos(2t) - jsin(2t) $ Try that and apply it and you should get the answer you thought it was. Dont really know how you got tcos(2t) from what you typed out, but i might have read it wrong. -Steve Anderson

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Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett