Revision as of 21:54, 17 June 2008 by Srudolph (Talk | contribs)

The six basic properties of Systems_OldKiwi

Memory_OldKiwi

A system with memory has outputs that depend on previous (or future) inputs.

  • Example of a system with memory:

$ y(t) = x(t - \pi) $

  • Example of a system without memory:

$ y(t) = x(t) $

Invertibility_OldKiwi

An invertible system is one in which there is a one-to-one correlation between inputs and outputs.

  • Example of an invertible system:

$ y(t) = x(t) $

  • Example of a non-invertible system:

$ y(t) = |x(t)| $

In the second example, both x(t) = -3 and x(t) = 3 yield the same result.

Causality_OldKiwi

A causal system has outputs that only depend on current and/or previous inputs.

  • Example of a causal system:

$ y(t) = x(t) + x(t - 1) $

  • Example of a non-causal system:

$ y(t) = x(t) + x(t + 1) $

Stability_OldKiwi

Time Invariance_OldKiwi

Linearity_OldKiwi

Alumni Liaison

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

Francisco Blanco-Silva