Digital Signal Processing 1: Basic Concepts and Algorithms Quiz Answers

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Digital Signal Processing 1: Basic Concepts and Algorithms Coursera Quiz Answers

Week 1 Quiz Answers

Quiz 1: Homework for Module 1.1 Quiz Answers

Q1. (Difficulty: \star⋆) What are the advantages of using digital signals over analog ones? Choose the correct answer(s).

  • Digital signals are more robust to noise.
  • Processing of digital signals can be easily implemented in modern computers.
  • Digital signals can be easily stored.
  • Digital signals contains more information than analog ones.

Q2. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Amongst the signals listed below, select those that are in digital format.

  • Music recorded on a CD.
  • Music recorded on a vinyl record.
  • A handwritten book manuscript.
  • JPEG image on a website.

Q3. (Difficulty: \star⋆ \star⋆) Consider the following finite support signal:

x[n]={(−1)nn0for n=1,2,3otherwise
Consider also its periodic repetition

y[n] = \sum_{k=-\infty}^{\infty} x[n + 7k]y[n]=∑
k=−∞


x[n+7k].

Compute the energy of x[n]x[n].

For a guide to entering numerical results, see here; infinity is written as oo, i.e. a double lowercase letter ‘o’.

Enter answer here

Q4. (Difficulty: \star⋆ \star⋆) Consider the same signals as the previous question. Compute the power of x[n]x[n].

For a guide to entering numerical results, see here; infinity is written as oo, i.e. a double lowercase letter ‘o’.

Enter answer here

Q5. (Difficulty: \star⋆ \star⋆) Consider the same signals as the previous question. Compute the energy of y[n]y[n].

For a guide to entering numerical results, see here; infinity is written as oo, i.e. a double lowercase letter ‘o’.

Enter answer here

Q6. (Difficulty: \star⋆ \star⋆) Consider the same signals as the previous question. Compute the power of y[n]y[n].

For a guide to entering numerical results, see here; infinity is written as oo, i.e. a double lowercase letter ‘o’.

Enter answer here

Q7. (Difficulty: \star⋆ \star⋆) Consider the signal

x[n] = \delta[n] + 2\delta[n − 1] + 3\delta[n − 2].x[n]=δ[n]+2δ[n−1]+3δ[n−2].

Consider now its moving average, i.e. the signal

  • y[n]=\frac{1}{2}(x[n]+x[n-1])y[n]=
  • (x[n]+x[n−1])

Select the correct expressions from the options below.

y[n]=0.5\delta[n] + 1.5\delta[n − 1] + 2.5\delta[n − 2]+1.5\delta[n-3]y[n]=0.5δ[n]+1.5δ[n−1]+2.5δ[n−2]+1.5δ[n−3].

The output for n\ge 0n≥0 is always zero.

Q8. (Difficulty: \star⋆) A music song recorded in a studio is stored as a digital sequence on a CD. The analog signal representing the music is 2 minutes long and is sampled at a frequency f_s=44100\;s^{-1}f
s

=44100s
−1
. How many samples should be stored on the CD? Write the number of samples without commas or dots. Assume that the audio file is mono, or in other words, single channel.

Enter answer here

Q9. (Difficulty: \star \star \star⋆⋆⋆) Given the following filter

What is the input-output relationship? y[n]=b(ax[n]+x[n-1])-(c+1)x[n-3]y[n]=b(ax[n]+x[n−1])−(c+1)x[n−3].

  • y[n]=abx[n]+bx[n-1]+cx[n-3]-x[n-4]y[n]=abx[n]+bx[n−1]+cx[n−3]−x[n−4].
  • y[n]=(bax[n]+x[n-1])+(cx[n-3]+x[n-4])y[n]=(bax[n]+x[n−1])+(cx[n−3]+x[n−4]).
  • y[n]=b(ax[n]+x[n-1])-(cx[n-3]+x[n-4])y[n]=b(ax[n]+x[n−1])−(cx[n−3]+x[n−4]).

Q10. (Difficulty: \star \star⋆⋆) What is the minimum period PP (in samples) of the signal e^{j(M/N)2\pi n}e
j(M/N)2πn
for M=1,N=3M=1,N=3.

Enter answer here

Q11. (Difficulty: \star \star⋆⋆) What is the minimum period PP (in samples) of the signal e^{j(M/N)2\pi n}e
j(M/N)2πn
for M=5, N=7M=5,N=7.

Enter answer here

Q12. (Difficulty: \star \star⋆⋆) What is the minimum period PP (in samples) of the signal e^{j(M/N)2\pi n}e
j(M/N)2πn
for M=35, N=15M=35,N=15.

Enter answer here

Week 2 Quiz Answers

Quiz 1: Homework for Module 1.2 Quiz Answers

Q1. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Write the value for the inner product \langle \mathbf{v}^{(0)}, \mathbf{v}^{(1)}\rangle⟨v
(0)
,v
(1)
⟩ where

\mathbf{v}^{(0)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12121212⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥

and \mathbf{v}^{(1)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢1212−12−12⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥

,

Enter answer here

Q2. (Difficulty: \star⋆\star⋆) Consider the following vectors in \mathbb R^4R
4

\mathbf{v}^{(0)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12121212⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥


, \mathbf{v}^{(1)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢1212−12−12⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥


and \mathbf{v}^{(2)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12−1212−12⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥

You can verify that the vectors are mutually orthogonal and have unit norm.

How many different vectors \mathbf{v}^{(3)}v
(3)
could we find such that {\mathbf{v}^{(0)},\ \mathbf{v}^{(1)},\ \mathbf{v}^{(2)},\ \mathbf{v}^{(3)}}{v
(0)
, v
(1)
, v
(2)
, v
(3)
} is a full orthogonal basis in \mathbb R^4R
4
?

0

1

2

3

3

Q3. Let \mathbf{y}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢−0.50.50.51.5⎤⎦⎥⎥
,

what are the expansion coefficients of \mathbf{y}y in the basis {\mathbf{v}^{(0)}, \mathbf{v}^{(1)}, \mathbf{v}^{(2)}, \mathbf{v}^{(3)}}{v
where

\mathbf{v}^{(0)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12121212⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥


, \mathbf{v}^{(1)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢1212−12−12⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥


, \mathbf{v}^{(2)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12−1212−12⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥


, \mathbf{v}^{(3)}=
⎡⎣⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢⎢12−12−1212⎤⎦⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥⎥
Important: Enter your answer as space separated floating point decimal numbers, e.g. the vector \mathbf{y}y would be entered as :

-0.5 0.5 0.5 1.5

Enter answer here

Q4. Which of the following sets form a basis of \mathbb R^4R?

  • {\mathbf{y},\mathbf{v}_0,\mathbf{v}_1,\mathbf{v}_2}{y,v
  • {\mathbf{y},\mathbf{v}_0,\mathbf{v}_2,\mathbf{v}_3}{y,v
  • {\mathbf{y},\mathbf{v}_1+\mathbf{v}_2,\mathbf{v}_2,\mathbf{v}_3}{y,v
  • {\mathbf{y},\mathbf{v}_0,\mathbf{v}_1,\mathbf{v}_3}{y,v

Q5. (Difficulty: \star⋆) If we represent finite-length signals as vectors in Euclidean space, many operations on signals can be encoded as a matrix-vector multiplication. Consider for example a circular shift in \mathbb{C}
: a delay by one (i.e. a right shift) transforms the signal \mathbf{x} = [x_0 \, x_1 \, x_2]^Tx=[x

into \mathbf{x}’ = [x_2 \, x_0 \, x_1]^Tx

and it can be described by the matrix

D= ⎡⎣010001100⎤⎦

so that \mathbf{x}’ = D\mathbf{x}x

=Dx.

Determine the matrix FF that implements the one-step-difference operator in {C}
i.e. the operator that transforms a signal \mathbf{x}x into [(x_0-x_2) \,\, (x_1-x_0) \,\, (x_2-x_1)]^T[(x

Write the 9 integer matrix coefficients one after the other, row by row and separated by spaces.

Enter answer here

Q6. (Difficulty \star⋆) Given the matrix

A= ⎡⎣⎢⎢0100001000011000⎤⎦⎥⎥

compute the matrix A^4A

(i.e. the fourth power of AA).

(Hint: there is a simple way to do that and, if you’ve solved the previous question, it should be obvious).

Write the 16 integer matrix coefficients one after the other, row by row and separated by spaces.

Enter answer here

Week 3 Quiz Answers

Quiz 1: Homework for Module 1.3 Quiz Answers

Q1. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Write out the phase of the complex numbers a_1=1-\mathrm{j}a
1

=1−j and a_2=-1-\mathrm{j}a
2

=−1−j.

Express the phase in degrees and separate the two phases by a single white space. Each phase should be a number in the range [-180,180][−180,180].

Enter answer here

Q2. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Let W_N^k=e^{-\mathrm{j}\frac{2\pi}{N}k}W
N
k

=e
−j
N


k
and N>1N>1. Then W^{N/2}_NW
N
N/2

is equal to…

-1

1

-\mathrm{j}−j

e^{-\mathrm{j}(2\pi/N)+N}e
−j(2π/N)+N

Q3. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Which of the following signals (continuous- and discrete-time) are periodic signals?

Note that t\in\mathbb{R}t∈R and n\in\mathbb{Z}n∈Z.

1 point

x[n]=1x[n]=1.

x(t)=\cos(2\pi f_0 t+\phi)x(t)=cos(2πf
0

t+ϕ) with f_0\in\mathbb{R}f
0

∈R.

x(t)=t-\operatorname{floor}(t)x(t)=t−floor(t).

x[n]=e^{-\mathrm{j} f_0 n}+e^{+\mathrm{j} f_0 n}x[n]=e
−jf
0

n
+e
+jf
0

n
, where f_0 = \sqrt{2}f
0

=
2

.

x[n] = \sin(n)x[n]=sin(n).

Q4. (Difficulty: \star\star\star⋆⋆⋆) Choose the correct statements from the choices below.

Consider the length-NN signal x[n]=(-1)^nx[n]=(−1)
n
with NN even. Then X[k]=0X[k]=0 for all kk except k=N/2k=N/2

If we apply the DFT twice to a signal x[n]x[n], we obtain the signal itself scaled by NN, i.e. Nx[n]Nx[n].

Consider the length-NN signal x[n]=\cos(\frac{2\pi}{N}Ln+\phi),x[n]=cos(
N


Ln+ϕ), where NN is even and L = N/2L=N/2. Then X[k]=
⎧⎩⎨N2ejϕ0 for k=L otherwise
.X[k]={
2
N

e

0

for k=L
otherwise

.

Q5. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Consider the Fourier basis {\mathbf{w}^k}_{k=0,\ldots,N-1}{w
k
}
k=0,…,N−1

, where \mathbf{w}^k[n]=e^{-j \frac{2\pi}{N}nk}w
k
[n]=e
−j
N


nk
for 0\le n\le N-10≤n≤N−1.

Select the correct statement below.

The elements of the basis are orthonormal:

\langle \mathbf{w}^i,\mathbf{w}^j\rangle=
{1 for i=j0 otherwise.
\quad⟨w
i
,w
j
⟩={
1 for i=j
0 otherwise.

The orthogonality of the vectors depends on the length NN of the elements of the basis.

The elements of the basis are orthogonal:

\langle \mathbf{w}^i,\mathbf{w}^j\rangle=
{N for i=j0 otherwise.
\quad⟨w
i
,w
j
⟩={
N for i=j
0 otherwise.

Q6. (Difficulty: \star\star⋆⋆) Consider the three sinusoids of length N=64N=64 as illustrated in the above figure; note that the signal values are shown from n=0n=0 to n=63n=63.

Call y_1[n]y
1

[n] the blue signal, y_2[n]y
2

[n] the green and y_3[n]y
3

[n] the red. Further, define x[n] = y_1[n] + y_2[n] + y_3[n]x[n]=y
1

[n]+y
2

[n]+y
3

[n].

Choose the correct statements from the list below. Note that the capital letters indicate the DFT vectors.

Y_2[k]=
⎧⎩⎨16j16j0 for k=8 for k=56 otherwise
Y
2

[k]=







16j
16j
0

for k=8
for k=56
otherwise

Y_1[k]=
{N0 for k=4,60 otherwise
Y
1

[k]={
N
0

for k=4,60
otherwise

Y_3[k]=
⎧⎩⎨32320 for k=0 for k=64 otherwise
Y
3

[k]=







32
32
0

for k=0
for k=64
otherwise

|x|_2^2=|X|_2^2=12800∥x∥
2
2

=∥X∥
2
2

=12800

Q7. (Difficulty: \star\star\star⋆⋆⋆) Consider the length-NN signal

x[n]=\cos\left(2\pi\frac{L}{M}n\right)x[n]=cos(2π
M
L

n)

where MM and LL are integer parameter with 0 \lt L \le N-10<L≤N−1, 0 \lt M \le N0<M≤N.

Choose the correct statements among the choices below.

If N=MN=M and N\neq 2LN


=2L, it is easier to compute the norm of the signal |\mathbf{x}|_2∥x∥
2

in the Fourier domain, using Parseval’s Identity.

Consider the circularly shifted signal y[n]=x[(n-D)\mod N].y[n]=x[(n−D)modN]. In the Fourier domain, since the DFT operator is shift invariant, it is Y[k]=X[k]Y[k]=X[k].

The signal has always exactly LL periods 0 \le n \lt N0≤n<N

The DFT X[k]X[k] has two elements different from zero if N=MN=M and N\neq 2lN


=2l.

Q8. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Consider an orthogonal basis {\phi_i}_{i=0,\dots,N-1}{ϕ
i

}
i=0,…,N−1

for \mathbb{R}^NR
N
. Select the statements that hold for any vector \mathbf{x} \in \mathbb{R}^Nx∈R
N
.

\displaystyle \Vert \mathbf{x}\Vert_2^2 = \frac{1}{P}\sum_{i=0}^{N-1} \vert \langle x , \phi_i \rangle \vert^2∥x∥
2
2

=
P
1

i=0

N−1

∣⟨x,ϕ
i

⟩∣
2
if and only if |\phi_i|_2^2=P∥ϕ
i


2
2

=P \forall i∀i.

\displaystyle \Vert \mathbf{x}\Vert_2^2 = \frac{1}{P}\sum_{i=0}^{N-1} \vert \langle x , \phi_i \rangle \vert^2∥x∥
2
2

=
P
1

i=0

N−1

∣⟨x,ϕ
i

⟩∣
2

if and only if |\phi_i|_2=P∥ϕ
i


2

=P \forall i∀i.

\displaystyle \Vert \mathbf{x}\Vert_2^2 = \sum_{i=0}^{N-1} \vert \langle x , \phi_i \rangle \vert^2 . ∥x∥
2
2

=
i=0

N−1

∣⟨x,ϕ
i

⟩∣
2
.

\displaystyle \Vert \mathbf{x}\Vert_2^2 = \sum_{i=0}^{N-1} \vert \langle x , \phi_i \rangle \vert^2∥x∥
2
2

=
i=0

N−1

∣⟨x,ϕ
i

⟩∣
2
if and only if |\phi_i|_2=1∥ϕ
i


2

=1 \forall i∀i.

Q9. (Difficulty: \star\star⋆⋆) Pick the correct sentence(s) among the following ones regarding the DFT \mathbf{X}X of a signal \mathbf{x}x of length NN, where NN is odd.

Remember the following definitions for an arbitrary signal (asterisk denotes conjugation):

hermitian-symmetry: x[0]x[0] real and x[n]=x[N-n]^*x[n]=x[N−n]

for n=1,\dots,N-1n=1,…,N−1.

hermitian-antisymmetry: x[0]=0x[0]=0 and x[n]=-x[N-n]^*x[n]=−x[N−n]

for n=1,\dots,N-1n=1,…,N−1.

  • If the signal \mathbf{x}x is hermitian antisymmetric, then its DFT \mathbf{X}X is purely imaginary.
  • If the signal \mathbf{x}x is hermitian-symmetric, then the DFT \mathbf{X}X is also hermitian-symmetric.
  • If the signal \mathbf{x}x is purely real, then the DFT \mathbf{X}X is purely imaginary.
  • If the signal \mathbf{x}x is hermitian-symmetric, then its DFT is real.

Week 4 Quiz Answers

Quiz 1: Homework for Module 1.4 Quiz Answers

Q1. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Consider the magnitude DTFTs |X(e^{j\omega})|∣X(e

)∣ and |Y(e^{j\omega})|∣Y(e

)∣ shown below, where vertical lines represent Dirac deltas:

Both underlying signals x[n]x[n] and y[n]y[n] are periodic. Find their periods and write them below, separated by a space. Please write the smallest period, i.e. a 5-periodic signal is also obviously 15-periodic but we’re interested in 5.

Enter the period of x[n]x[n] and y[n]y[n] with a unique white space in between.

Enter answer here

Q2. (Difficulty: \star⋆) We will see in later lectures that communication systems must fulfill what is called the “bandwidth constraint”, that is, the energy of the signals that they transmit must strictly fit into pre-defined frequency bands. In this problem we will look at the bandwidth constraint in the discrete-time domain.

The signal x[n]x[n] is real-valued and its spectrum is nonzero only over the [-\pi/8,\ \pi/8][−π/8, π/8] interval. Due to the bandwidth constraint we need to “fit” the signal over the bands indicated in green in the following figure

To this aim, we need to design a processing block \mathcal{H}H in order to convert x[n]x[n] into a sequence s[n]s[n] satisfying the following requirements:

The support of the DTFT of s[n] must be limited to [−3π/4, −π/2]∪[π/2, 3π/4]

The sequence s[n] must be real-valued (x[n] is real-valued)

Which of the following input/output relationships for \mathcal{H}H meet both requirements? (check all correct answers) :

s[n]=\sin(\frac{21\pi}{8}n)\cdot x[n]s[n]=sin(
8
21π

n)⋅x[n]

s[n] = e^{j\frac{5\pi}{8}n}\cdot x[n] s[n]=e
j
8


n
⋅x[n]

s[n]=\cos(\frac{5\pi}{8}n)\cdot x[n]s[n]=cos(
8


n)⋅x[n]

s[n]=\mathrm{IDTFT}{X(e^{j(\omega-5\pi/8)})}s[n]=IDTFT{X(e
j(ω−5π/8)
)}

Q3. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Consider the length-LL signal

x[n]=
{100≤n≤M−1M≤n≤L−1
\; ,x[n]={
1
0

0≤n≤M−1
M≤n≤L−1

Write out the closed-form analytical expression for its DFT coefficients X[k]X[k].

Be careful with your typing since the regular-expression parser can be a bit picky. Check Coursera help to enter math expression. In particular, remember that in the Coursera platform the symbols are different:

II (capital i) is used for the imaginary unit instead of jj

Euler’s number is EE instead of ee

you can also use the exponential function \exp(\cdot)exp(⋅)

\piπ is defined as pipi

The only other symbols you’ll need for the answer are the case-sensitive variables k, M, Lk,M,L.

Finally, do not forget to validate your syntax by clicking “Preview” before submitting your answer.

For instance, the expression e^{j(\pi L + 3\pi)}/(k + M)e
j(πL+3π)
/(k+M) should be entered as

E^(I(piL + 3 * pi))/(k + M)

Preview will appear here…

Enter math expression here

Q4. The real and imaginary parts of X(e^{j\omega})X(e

) are:

After examining the plots, check all the correct statements below.

x[n]x[n] is Hermitian-symmetric x[n]=x^\ast[-n]x[n]=x

[−n].

x[n]x[n] is 0-mean, i.e. \sum_{n\in\mathbb Z} x[n]=0∑
n∈Z

x[n]=0.

x[n]x[n] is real valued.

Q5. (Difficulty: \star \star⋆⋆) Consider a signal x[n]x[n] and its DTFT X(e^{j\omega})X(e

). Assume X(e^{j\omega})X(e

) is differentiable. Compute the inverse DTFT of

j\frac{d}{d\omega}X(e^{j\omega})j

d

X(e

).

You should write your answer in terms of x[n]x[n] and elementary functions and constants, for example \frac{\pi}{2}x[n]
2
π

x[n] would be written :

pi/2*x[n]

Enter answer here

Q6. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Which property of the DTFT allows you to easily compute the inverse DTFT of 4X(e^{j\omega})/\pi -24X(e

)/π−2 once you know x[n]x[n]? Just type the name of the property.

Enter answer here

Q7. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Take a length-NN signal x[n]x[n] and its DFT X[k]X[k], with 0 \le n,k, \le N-10≤n,k,≤N−1. Next, consider its periodized version \tilde x[n]=x[n\ \mathrm{mod}\ N]
x
~
[n]=x[n mod N] with its DFS \tilde X[k]
X
~
[k] where now n,k \in \mathbb{Z}n,k∈Z.

Which of the following statements are true?

\tilde X[l] = X[l\ \mathrm{mod}\ N]
X
~
[l]=X[l mod N], for all l\in\mathbb Zl∈Z

\tilde X[-2] = X[2]
X
~
[−2]=X[2] for all x[n]x[n] and N>2N>2

\tilde X[k+lN] = X[k]
X
~
[k+lN]=X[k], for all l\in\mathbb Zl∈Z and k=0,…,N-1k=0,…,N−1.

Q8. (Difficulty: ⋆) In the class, we learned how the modulation theorem can help us tune a musical instrument. Martin showed us an example with a bass but of course the same works with a classical guitar. Listen carefully to these two samples (with earphones, if possible); each audio clip is the recording of two notes played together:

Audio clip A

Audio Clip B

Select the correct options below.

  • The notes are in tune in audio clip A and out of tune in audio clip B
  • The notes are in tune in audio clip B and out of tune in audio clip A
  • The notes are out of tune in both audio clips
  • The notes are in tune in both audio clips

Q9. (Difficulty: \star\star⋆⋆) A ringback tone is the sound you hear in your landline telephone when the remote phone you are trying to call is ringing.

In most European countries, the ringback tone is a single sinusoid turned on and off periodically while in the USA, the ringbback tone is the sum of 2 sinusoids with relatively close frequencies turned on and off periodically.

Here are two audio clips:

Sample A

Sample B

Just by listening to the clips, you should be able to identify the US ringback tone. Explain in the box below what helped you identify the US tone. Use the wording and concepts that appear in the lecture slides. No credit, without a proper explanation, e.g., “I live there” is not an answer.

(use only lowercase letters in your answer)

Enter answer here

Q10. (Difficulty: \star⋆) As explained in previous question, the European and US ringback tones are composed of one or two sinusoids respectively, multiplied by a square wave switching between 00 and 11. This multiplication by a square wave periodically mutes the sinusoid(s).

Look at the following magnitude DTFT plots (each plot shows the interval [-\pi\ \pi][−π π]) :

Select the correct statement amongst the choices below.

Spectrum (a) corresponds to the European ringback tone.

Spectrum (b) corresponds to the US ringback tone.

Spectrum (a) corresponds to the US ringback tone.

Spectrum (b) corresponds to the European ringback tone.

Q11. (Difficulty: \star⋆) Consider the sequences

x_1[n]=\cos(2\pi n\cdot\sqrt{2}/30)x
1

[n]=cos(2πn⋅
2

/30)

x_2[n]=\cos(2\pi n\cdot 1.41421356/30)x
2

[n]=cos(2πn⋅1.41421356/30)

with n\in\mathbb Zn∈Z

Select the correct statements below.

There exists N\in\mathbb NN∈N for which x_2[n]x
2

[n] has a DFS of size NN

There exists N\in\mathbb NN∈N for which x_1[n]x
1

[n] has a DFS of size NN

Q12. (Difficulty: \star\star⋆⋆) Consider a signal x[n]x[n]; the only thing we know about the signal is that its DTFT is strictly bandlimited between -\frac{\pi}{10}−
10
π

and \frac{\pi}{10}
10
π

. We now modulate the signal to obtain y[n] = x[n]\cos(\omega_c n)y[n]=x[n]cos(ω
c

n).

Among the possibilities below, select all the values for \omega_cω
c

that allow us to perfectly demodulate y[n]y[n].

\frac{11\pi}{12}
12
11π

\frac{9\pi}{10}
10

\frac{\pi}{3}
3
π

\frac{\pi}{20}
20
π

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