Revision as of 11:50, 10 November 2010 by Zhao148 (Talk | contribs)


Quiz Questions Pool for Week 12


Q1. Consider a causal FIR filter of length M = 2 with impulse response

$ h[n]=\delta[n-1]+\delta[n-2]\,\! $

a) Provide a closed-form expression for the 9-pt DFT of $ h[n] $, denoted $ H_9[k] $, as a function of $ k $. Simplify as much as possible.

b) Consider the sequence $ x[n] $ of length 9 below,

$ x[n]=\text{cos}\left(\frac{2\pi}{3}n\right)(u[n]-u[n-9])\,\! $

$ y_9[n] $ is formed by computing $ X_9[k] $ as an 9-pt DFT of $ x[n] $, $ H_9[k] $ as an 9-pt DFT of $ h[n] $, and then $ y_9[n] $ as the 9-pt inverse DFT of $ Y_9[k] = X_9[k]H_9[k] $.

Express the result $ y_9[n] $ as a weighted sum of finite-length sinewaves similar to how $ x[n] $ is written above.


Q2. Consider the discrete-time signal

$ x[n]=6\delta[n]+5 \delta[n-1]+4 \delta[n-2]+3 \delta[n-3]+2 \delta[n-4]+\delta[n-5]. $

a) Obtain the 6-point DFT X[k] of x[n].

b) Obtain the signal y[n] whose DFT is $ W_6^{-2k} X[k] $.

c) Compute six-point circular convolution between x[n] and the signal

$ h[n]=\delta[n]+\delta[n-1]+\delta[n-2]. $

Q3. Consider the signal

$ x[n] = \begin{cases} cos(\pi n / 8), & n < 0 \\ cos(\pi n / 3), & \mbox{else} \end{cases} $

and assume a rectangular window

$ w[n] = \begin{cases} 1, & |n| < 25 \\ 0, & \mbox{else} \end{cases} $

The STDFT is defined as

$ \begin{align} X(\omega,n) &= \sum_{k} x[k]w[n-k]e^{-j\omega k} \end{align} $

Compute the STDTFT for the following cases:
i. n < -25
ii. n > 25
iii. n = 0


Q4. Consider the STDTFT defined as

$ X(\omega ,n)=\sum_k x[k]w[n-k]e^{-j\omega k} $

where x[n] is the speech signal and w[n] is the window sequence. Prove the following properties:

a. Linearity – if $ v[n]=ax[n]+by[n] $ ,then $ V(\omega ,n)=aX(\omega ,n)+bY(\omega, n) $.

b. Modulation – if $ v[n]=x[n]e^{j\omega_0n} $ ,then $ V(\omega ,n)=X(\omega -\omega_0,n) $.


Q5. Suppose we have two 4-pt sequences x[n] and h[n] described as follows:

$ \begin{align} x[n] &= cos(\frac{\pi n}{2})\text{ ,n=0,1,2,3} \\ h[n] &= 2^n\text{ ,n=0,1,2,3} \end{align} $


Back to ECE 438 Fall 2010 Lab Wiki Page

Back to ECE 438 Fall 2010

Alumni Liaison

Correspondence Chess Grandmaster and Purdue Alumni

Prof. Dan Fleetwood