- What is difference between sampling and aliasing?
- What is aliasing effect in sampled signal?
- What is aliasing signals?
- How is sampling rate and aliasing related?
What is difference between sampling and aliasing?
Aliasing is when a continuous-time sinusoid appears as a discrete-time sinusoid with multiple frequencies. The sampling theorem establishes conditions that prevent aliasing so that a continuous-time signal can be uniquely reconstructed from its samples. The sampling theorem is very important in signal processing.
What is aliasing effect in sampled signal?
Aliasing is the effect of new frequencies appearing in the sampled signal after reconstruction, that were not present in the original signal. It is caused by too low sample rate for sampling a particular signal or too high frequencies present in the signal for a particular sample rate.
What is aliasing signals?
Aliasing occurs when an oscilloscope does not sample the signal fast enough to construct an accurate waveform record. The signal frequency is misidentified, and the waveforms displayed on an oscilloscope become indistinguishable.
How is sampling rate and aliasing related?
When the sampling rate is not large enough (not larger than 2B Hz), then interference among adjacent bands will occur, and this results in the phenomenon of aliasing. In this case, the original signal cannot be recovered from the sampled signal.