Posting Guidelines for T.Engineer - Graduate/Post-Graduate Level

  • Thread starter EnumaElish
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation discusses the properties of Hermite polynomials, specifically their use in a multiple access interference system. The objective is to reduce interference between users by assigning unique time hopping codes and using pulse position modulation. The conversation also addresses the question of finding the probability density function, mean, and variance using Hermite polynomials. Additionally, the conversation discusses the specifics of the system, such as the number of users, their actions, and the distribution of certain variables.
  • #36
Do you have it, or can you get it?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37
EnumaElish said:
Do you have it, or can you get it?

No, I don't have it.
 
  • #38
Is there a library near you?
 
  • #39
yes, why?
I don't think that they have it.
 
Last edited:
  • #40
Have you worked on deriving (19)?
 
  • #41
As I said to you:
let assume that our function g(t) instead of H(t)
So that,

g(t)= (-1)^n * e^(t^2) * d^n/dt^n * e^(-t^2)* cos (2 pi fc t)

we can say that g(t) can satisfied equations 15 and 17 because of its orthogonality properties.
Is that true?
 
  • #42
Is cos (2 pi fc t) positive over the relevant range?

You may want to post it in the homework section as a separate question.
 
  • #43
OK, I will.
Thank you very much!
 
  • #44
If the value of fc will be chosen in such a way that still keep the orthogonality property of Hermite polynomial, then orthogonality is preserved. (15) will apply, although with a different normalization constant and different psi functions.

New psi = old psi * cos (2 pi fc t).
 
  • #45
(15) will apply, although with a different normalization constant

do you mean with different N_n which is represented by eq(16)
 
  • #46
Correct; that's because the integral in (15) will evaluate to a different output.

Another possibility is N_n will remain the same, but the delta will be different. Or both might change.

But the "qualitative" result will not change, as long as fc is chosen to preserve orthogonality. That is, you will get to (17) with the new psi functions.
 
  • #47
1. please, can tell me how to find the normalization coeffecient N_n?
2. you said different δ _n,m.
I know thet δ _n,m is Kronecker delta function, how it can be changed?
Thanks a lot!
 
  • #48
1. N is determined by the output of the integral in (15). If the integral evaluated to δ*K for arbitrary K, then the norm. constant would have been N = 1/sqrt(K).

2. The δ itself won't change; but you may have something like Integral = z(δ 2nn![itex]\sqrt{\pi}[/itex]) for some function z.
 
  • #49
1. you mean for arbitrary n,m.
2. what do you mean by z.
3. can you tell me how to evalute eq(15) to get this result: δ_n,m 2^n n! sqr(pi).
if I you will know how they get this result for Hn, Hm, so I can also evaluted for my equation with Hn * cos (...)
but this is my problem I don't know how they get this general formula.
 
  • #50
1. yes

2. arbitrary function that results from including the cos term in the integrand (I haven't tried to integrate (15) with or without the cos term, so I don't know what z actually "looks like," even if we assume that a closed-form solution exists with the cos term)

3. I don't know; I think [9] might have the answer. Someone has suggested to look it up from an integration table (under another thread in the homework section).
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

  • Science and Math Textbooks
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Science and Math Textbooks
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
26
Views
3K
  • STEM Career Guidance
Replies
5
Views
832
  • STEM Career Guidance
Replies
7
Views
3K
  • Sticky
  • Math Proof Training and Practice
Replies
0
Views
1K
  • Set Theory, Logic, Probability, Statistics
2
Replies
45
Views
3K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
11
Views
1K
Back
Top