displaying a sinusoidal wave

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JJ polaris
JJ polaris on 9 Sep 2012
This is for one assignment. The question is the following. Generate a time vector (tt) to cover a range of t that will exhibit approximately two cycles of the 4000 Hz sinusoids defined in the next part, part (b). Use a definition for tt similar to part 2.2(d). If we use T to denote the period of the sinusoids, define the starting time of the vector tt to be equal to −T, and the ending time as +T. Then the two cycles will include t = 0. Finally, make sure that you have at least 25 samples per period of the sinusoidal wave. In other words, when you use the colon operator to define the time vector, make the increment small enough to generate 25 samples per period.
This is my code.
if true
% code
tt = -1 : 1/4000 : 1;
y = sin( 2*pi*tt );
plot(4000*tt, y);
%<--- plot a sinusoid
title('TEST PLOT of a SINUSOID')
xlabel('frequency')
end
My problem is that I don't fully understand what a sample is so I can answer the last part. I know 1/4000 would be the sample frequency, unless I'm wrong. Can anybody explain what exactly is a sample in matlab?
I'm new to this forum.

Accepted Answer

JJ polaris
JJ polaris on 9 Sep 2012
Edited: Image Analyst on 9 Sep 2012
thanks, so I should define T = 1/400 and use that. Can you explain what exactly is a sample as I asked previously? I have read about it online but I still don't quite understand it. I tried using linspace() and plot it but I get a straight line.
if true
% code
T = 1/400;
tt = linspace(-T, T, 50);
y = cos(2*pi*tt);
plot(tt, y, 'b:');
title('SINUSOID')
ylabel('amplitude')
xlabel('frequency')
end

More Answers (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 9 Sep 2012
Edited: Image Analyst on 9 Sep 2012
No. You're wrong. There are 4000 cycles (periods) in a second, so the period of one cycle (T) is 1/4000 of a second, not the sampling frequency. And you're supposed to have 25 samples spanning that time period. Why not use linspace:
t = linspace(-T, T, 50); % 50 samples covering two periods from -T to T.
  1 Comment
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 9 Sep 2012
Edited: Image Analyst on 9 Sep 2012
Close (referring to your "Answer" below). Almost right but not quite. You should know that the equation for a cosine is cos(2 * pi * t / period). So try this:
y = cos(2*pi*tt/T);

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JJ polaris
JJ polaris on 9 Sep 2012
ok, thank you. I changed my equation which seems to be working now using sine.
y = sin(2*pi*f*tt);
where f = 1/T
Thank you for your help, I appreciate it

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