EE32b - "Signals, Systems, and Transforms"
9 units (3-0-6); 2001-2002 second term. Prerequisite: Ma1, Ma2, EE20, EE32a/
Instructor
Robert J. McEliece
Office: Moore 162 A
E-mail: rjm@systems
Office hours: MWF after class. I will hang around to answer questions,
discuss the weather, etc., after each lecture. I will be happy to
meet with students at other times, too. Please schedule these visits with
my secretary Shirley Beatty (162 Moore, shirley@systems, x4715).
Teaching Assistants
Muhammed Yildirim (muhammed@its) Office hours: 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, 155 Moore
Donald Sze (sze@its) Office hours: 4:30 -- 6:30 p.m. Monday, 155 Moore
Swami Seetharaman (seethara@caltech) Office hours: 6-7 p.m. Th/F, 155 Moore
Cedric Anen (cedric@caltech) Office hours: 1-3 p.m. Mondays, 155 Moore.
Class Meetings:
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 9-10am in Room 070 Moore.
Assignments
Homework Assignment 1 (due January 16, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 1
Homework Assignment 2 (due January 23, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 2
Homework Assignment 3 (due January 30, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 3
Homework Assignment 4 (due February 6, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 4
Homework Assignment 5 (due February 20, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 5
Solutions to Midterm
Homework Assignment 6 (due February 27, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 6
Homework Assignment 7 (due March 6, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 7
Homework Assignment 8 (due March 11, 2002)
Solutions to Assignment 8
Solutions to Final Exam
Handouts and Suggested Reading
Some Convergence Theory for z-Transforms
The Circle of Convergence
The Skeleton in Nyquist's Closet
Designing Discrete-Time Differentiators and Integrators
Some notes on the FFT
The Hurwitz Stability Criterion
Textbooks
Signals and Systems, 2nd ed. by Oppenheim, Willsky, and Nawab.
(Prentice Hall, 1996)
Computer Explorations in Signals and Systems, 2nd ed. by Buck,
Daniel, and Singer. (Prentice Hall, 1997)
Grading Policy
There will be (approximately) one homework assignment per week
(except for midterms week), a
takehome midterm, and a takehome final. On each of these assignments you
will receive a letter grade and a numerical grade. Your letter grade
in the course will be the
weighted average of the letter grades on these assignments, where each homework
assignment will have weight one, the midterm will have weight four, and the
final will have weight eight. (Details: I will not count your worst
homework grade and I will adjust the grades at the end of the term so
that you cannot have a lower letter grade than someone who gets more
total points.)
Homework Collaboration Policy
I expect you to try to do the problems yourself, since I believe that this
material is best learned through problem-solving. If you get stuck, however,
I don't object to you asking for help, from another student, from the TA's,
or from me, unless the problem is explicitly designated as a "no
collaboration" problem. (In that case, you can only ask the TA's or me, and
we will give only general advice.) Of course, I expect you to write up your
own solutions, and to understand what you hand in.
Late Homework Policy
Please turn in the homework when it is due! One of the most valuable lessons
you can learn, at Caltech or elsewhere, is to deliver the goods
on time!
Anyway, I will normally not grant homework extensions.
Approximate Outline
In this term we will cover, approximately, Chapters 6, 7, 8, and 11 of
the Oppenheim textbook.