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Where is the baseband information stored if it isn't
encoded into the sampling? "Hal Murray" wrote in message ... So, if I have a signal with a 1000 hz carrier, with a bandwidth of 50 hz, you think I can sample it at just 150 hz and get accurate reproduction? That's just wrong. No, that's the whole point of this discussion. You have to understand aliasing. The signal you want aliases down into the baseband. Your anti-aliaising filter has to get rid of all the junk you don't want. In this case it includes the baseband. Since there is no baseband signal (or other out-of-band junk) you can reconstruct the original signal. It's a common trick with software radios. You do need some extra information that doesn't go in through the A/D channel. That's the design of the system, in particular what the anti-aliasing filter lets through. Maybe the reason that this is so confusing is that you also need that info the the normal/baseband case. But since that's the normal case we don't bother mentioning it. -- The suespammers.org mail server is located in California. So are all my other mailboxes. Please do not send unsolicited bulk e-mail or unsolicited commercial e-mail to my suespammers.org address or any of my other addresses. These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam. |
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