Re: Are purely-analog audio devices immune to aliasing?"Green Xenon [Radium]" <glucegen1@excite . com > writes:
> Hi:
>
> Is it true that purely-analog audio devices [such as analog cassette,
> AM radio, and the pre-digital telephone systems*] are immune to
> aliasing?
Yes.
There is a way to see this very clearly, but it involves some
calculus. If you're prepared for that, go to a library and find the book
"Signals and Systems" and read the section on sampling.
If you're not prepared for that, and you really want to understand this
topic, go take a couple (or three) semesters of calculus at a junior
college or university and then tackle it.
--Randy
PS: Radium, you remind me of a man who says he's thirsty, and yet is
unwilling to walk to a well 1/2 mile away to get a drink. Many of the
questions you ask are fundamental if you'd be willing to expend a little
effort and get some education.
@BOOK{signalsandsystems,
title = "{Signals and Systems}",
author = "{Alan~V.~Oppenheim, Alan~S.~Willsky, with Ian~T.~Young}",
publisher = "Prentice Hall",
year = "1983"}
--
% Randy Yates % "My Shangri-la has gone away, fading like
%% Fuquay-Varina, NC % the Beatles on 'Hey Jude'"
%%% 919-577-9882 %
%%%% <yates@ieee.org> % 'Shangri-La', *A New World Record*, ELO
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