RoyLB
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From my undergraduate textbook: Circuits, Signals, and Systems by Siebert, p 453
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Consider the two principal waveform representations schemes ...
[tex] x(t) = \int x(\tau)\delta(t - \tau)d\tau [/tex]
[tex] x(t) = \int X(f)e^{j2\pi f t}df [/tex]
If we consider the set of delayed impulses as determining one set of orthogonal vectors and the set of complex exponentials as determining another set, then [itex]x(\tau) d\tau[/itex] and [itex]X(f) df[/itex] are the components of [itex]x(t)[/itex] along the corresponding coordinates. The frequency-domain representations of [itex]x(t)[/itex] thus amounts to picking a coordinate system that is rotated from the time-domain coordinate system. And Parseval's Theorem
[tex] <br /> \int x^2 (t) dt = \int |X(f)|^2 df<br /> [/tex]
is just a statement of the fact that the length of a vector is independent of the coordinate system in which it is described
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Is this true? If so, then it should be possible to the find the axis of rotation, right? How does one go about that? Does the question make sense?
Thanks
Roy
====================================================
Consider the two principal waveform representations schemes ...
[tex] x(t) = \int x(\tau)\delta(t - \tau)d\tau [/tex]
[tex] x(t) = \int X(f)e^{j2\pi f t}df [/tex]
If we consider the set of delayed impulses as determining one set of orthogonal vectors and the set of complex exponentials as determining another set, then [itex]x(\tau) d\tau[/itex] and [itex]X(f) df[/itex] are the components of [itex]x(t)[/itex] along the corresponding coordinates. The frequency-domain representations of [itex]x(t)[/itex] thus amounts to picking a coordinate system that is rotated from the time-domain coordinate system. And Parseval's Theorem
[tex] <br /> \int x^2 (t) dt = \int |X(f)|^2 df<br /> [/tex]
is just a statement of the fact that the length of a vector is independent of the coordinate system in which it is described
====================================================
Is this true? If so, then it should be possible to the find the axis of rotation, right? How does one go about that? Does the question make sense?
Thanks
Roy