1 / 18

Sinusoids

Sinusoids. Period: T Time necessary to go through one cycle Frequency: f = 1/ T Cycles per second Radian frequency: w = 2 p f Amplitude: V M. Phase. Leading and Lagging Phase. x 1 (t) leads x 2 (t) by q -  x 2 (t) lags x 1 (t) by q - . Complex Numbers. x is the real part

andra
Download Presentation

Sinusoids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sinusoids • Period: T • Time necessary to go through one cycle • Frequency: f = 1/T • Cycles per second • Radian frequency: w = 2pf • Amplitude: VM

  2. Phase

  3. Leading and Lagging Phase x1(t) leads x2(t) by q- x2(t) lags x1(t) by q-

  4. Complex Numbers • x is the real part • y is the imaginary part • z is the magnitude • q is the phase imaginary axis y z q real axis x

  5. More Complex Numbers • Polar Coordinates: A = z q • Rectangular Coordinates: A = x + jy • There is a good chance that your calculator • will convert from rectangular to polar and from • polar to rectangular.

  6. Arithmetic With Complex Numbers • We need to be able to perform computation with complex numbers. • Addition • Subtraction • Multiplication • Division

  7. Addition • Addition is most easily performed in rectangular coordinates: A = x + jy B = z + jw A + B = (x + z) + j(y + w)

  8. Imaginary Axis A + B B A Real Axis Addition

  9. Subtraction • Subtraction is most easily performed in rectangular coordinates: A = x + jy B = z + jw A - B = (x - z) + j(y - w)

  10. Imaginary Axis B A Real Axis A - B Subtraction

  11. Multiplication • Multiplication is most easily performed in polar coordinates: A = AMq B = BMf A B = (AM  BM)  (q + f)

  12. Multiplication Imaginary Axis A B B A Real Axis

  13. Division • Division is most easily performed in polar coordinates: A = AMq B = BMf A / B = (AM / BM)  (q - f)

  14. Division Imaginary Axis B A Real Axis A /B

  15. Phasors • A phasor is a complex number that represents the magnitude and phase of a sinusoid:

  16. Complex Exponentials • A complex exponential is the mathematical tool needed to obtain phasor of a sinusoidal function. • A complex exponential is ejwt= cos wt + j sin wt • A complex number A = z q can be represented A = z q = z ejq = z cos q + j z sin q • We represent a real-valued sinusoid as the real part of a complex exponential. • Complex exponentials provide the link between time functions and phasors. • Complex exponentials make solving for AC steady state an algebraic problem

  17. Complex Exponentials (cont’d) What do you get when you multiple A withejwt for the real part? Aejwt = z ejqejwt = z ej(wt+q) z ej(wt+q) = z cos (wt+q) + j z sin (wt+q) Re[Aejwt] = z cos (wt+q)

  18. Sinusoids, Complex Exponentials, and Phasors • Sinusoid: z cos (wt+q)= Re[Aejwt] • Complex exponential: Aejwt = z ej(wt+q), A= z ejq, • Phasor for the above sinusoid: V = z q

More Related