I have the example below which produces 10 cycles
a = Sin[10 x]
Plot[a, {x, 0, 2 Pi}]
What Type of signal would I need to add/multiple/divide to reduce it's
signal/frequency to 5 cycles? I know I can just change the number 10
to 5
but I need to combine it with another signal. what mathematical
operation/signal do I need to use.
tia sal2
Seriously, what is the point in asking others to do your homework!
David Bailey
http://www.dbaileyconsultancy.co.uk
>I have the example below which produces 10 cycles
>a = Sin[10 x]
>Plot[a, {x, 0, 2 Pi}]
>What Type of signal would I need to add/multiple/divide to reduce
>it's signal/frequency to 5 cycles? I know I can just change the
>number 10 to 5 but I need to combine it with another signal. what
>mathematical operation/signal do I need to use.
Reduce the factor multiplying x by 2. That is
Plot[Sin[5 x], {x, 0, 2 Pi}]
has 5 cycles
With a continuous, cyclic function it's a bit trivial:
a = Sin[10 x];
aim = Sin[5 x];
factor = (a + aim)/a - 1;
Plot[a*factor, {x, 0, 2 \[Pi]}]
For more complex cases you'd require deconvolution, e.g.
http://terpconnect.umd.edu/~toh/spectrum/Deconvolution.html
I'm looking forward to seeing any illustrative posts.