Line 45: Line 45:
 
&= \sum_{n} s_D(n)x(n/D)e^{-j\omega n} \\
 
&= \sum_{n} s_D(n)x(n/D)e^{-j\omega n} \\
 
\end{align}
 
\end{align}
 +
</math>
 +
 +
<math>
 +
\text{Let } m=n/D \Rightarrow n=mD
 +
</math>
 +
 +
<math>
 +
\begin{align}
 +
\ Y(e^{j\omega}) &= \sum_{m} s_D(mD)x(m)e^{-j\omega mD} \\
 +
\end{align}
 +
</math>
 +
 +
<math>
 +
\text{But } s_D(mD) \equiv 1
 +
</math>
 +
 +
<math>
 +
Y(e^{j\omega}) = X(e^{j\omega D})
 
</math>
 
</math>

Revision as of 07:34, 13 October 2014


Frequency Domain View of Upsampling

A slecture by exchange student from UNAM, Mexico, Michel Olvera.

Partly based on the ECE438 Fall 2014 lecture material of Prof. Mireille Boutin.


OUTLINE

  1. Introduction
  2. Theory
  3. Examples
  4. Conclusion
  5. References

1. Introduction

Upsampling is the process of inserting zero-valued samples between the original samples of a signal to increase the sampling rate. One way to accomplish upsampling by an integer ratio of 1:D is to interpose D-1 zero samples between each pair of the input samples of the signal. This causes the spectrum of the original signal to repeat at multiples of the original sampling rate.

The process of upsampling doesn’t change the content of the input signal, and it only introduces the scaling of the time axis by a factor D. Consequently, the operation of upsampling is invertible, which means that it is possible to recover the input signal from samples of the output exactly.

In order to remove or at least attenuate the unwanted image spectra, a low pass filter must be placed immediately after upsampling. In the time domain, the effect is that the zero-valued samples introduced by the upsampler are filled with interpolated values.


Theory

$ y(n) = \begin{cases} x(n/D), & n/D \text{ is an integer} \\ 0, & \text{otherwise} \end{cases} $

$ \begin{align} \ Y(e^{j\omega}) &= \sum_{n} x(n/D)e^{-j\omega n} \\ &= \sum_{n} s_D(n)x(n/D)e^{-j\omega n} \\ \end{align} $

$ \text{Let } m=n/D \Rightarrow n=mD $

$ \begin{align} \ Y(e^{j\omega}) &= \sum_{m} s_D(mD)x(m)e^{-j\omega mD} \\ \end{align} $

$ \text{But } s_D(mD) \equiv 1 $

$ Y(e^{j\omega}) = X(e^{j\omega D}) $

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang