Revision as of 10:28, 16 September 2008 by Zcurosh (Talk)

Stable System

An input is said to be bounded if it is bounded above and below for all values of t. For example, cos(t) is a bounded input since it is bounded above by 1 and below by -1, while exp(t) is not a bounded input since for increasing t, the function increases without bound. A system is therefore said to be bounded if a bounded output yields a bounded input. According to Professor Boutin, mathematically this means that there exists an $ \epsilon \! $ such that

$ |x(t)| < \epsilon \! $ for all values of t,

and then there exists an $ M\! $ for the ouput signal y(t) such that


$ |y(t)| < M \! $ for all values of t.

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