5.1. Analog Electronics¶
Although this is a course on digital signal processing this section gives a short introduction to analog electronics:
- to illustrate that signal processing is certainly not something that can only be done with a computer, and
- in fact many (if not most) applications in signal processing deal with signals that are obtained by sampling a continuous time signal in the ‘real world’, and
- in fact many applications in signal processing end up outputting some signal in analog form (e.g. the sound signal to drive a loudspeaker, or the current to drive the motor for a robot), and
- to illustrate the use of complex impedances and corresponding frequency responses, and
- to get acquinted with decibels, and
- to practice making Bode plots,
- and to show that in some areas of computer science some knowledge of physics/electronics comes in very handy.
We start with some concepts that you will have seen when taking physics classes at high school: elementary electronics. Then we introduce the electronic components that are dependent on the use of alternating currents and voltages. The voltage then varies as a function of time, it is a signal.