Sinusoidal

A signal containing no pure sinusoidal components

A signal containing no pure sinusoidal components
  1. What are sinusoidal components?
  2. Why are sinusoids important?
  3. How many frequency components does a sinusoid have?
  4. What will you see in spectrum of a sinusoidal?

What are sinusoidal components?

The three characteristics that separate one sinusoid from another are amplitude, frequency, and phase.

Why are sinusoids important?

Sinusoids, small blood vessels between the radiating rows of hepatocytes, convey oxygen-rich hepatic arterial blood and nutrient-rich portal venous blood to the hepatocytes and eventually drain into the central vein, which drains into the hepatic vein.

How many frequency components does a sinusoid have?

Thus any periodic signal can be equivalently represented by a sinusoidal series. A sinusoid is also a pure signal in that it has energy at only one frequency, the only waveform to have this property.

What will you see in spectrum of a sinusoidal?

These sinusoidal components have different frequencies, different amplitudes, and different phases. Therefore, the plots of frequency versus amplitude and phase for the sinusoidal components which comprise the signal are called the Frequency Spectrum or Spectrum of the signal.

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