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Causality

A system is said to be causal if the output $ Y[n] $ at $ n0 $ depends only on the input $ X[n] $ at $ n<no $

In other words

The output signal $ Y[n] $ of a causal system is dependent only on the present and past samples of the input signal, X(n) and not on any future samples of the input


Non-Causality

A system is said to be non-causal if the output $ Y[n] $ at $ n0 $ depends on future values of input $ X[n] $ $ i.e $ at $ n>n0 $

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. on Applied Mathematics in Aug 2007. Involved on applications of image super-resolution to electron microscopy

Francisco Blanco-Silva