Digitisation
Digitisation of a signal is the process by which an analogue signal is converted to a digital signal.
Digitisation & Reconstruction
Let us consider the voltage output from a microphone. The signal which e
...
Digitisation
Digitisation of a signal is the process by which an analogue signal is converted to a digital signal.
Digitisation & Reconstruction
Let us consider the voltage output from a microphone. The signal which enters the microphone (sound) is an
analogue signal - it can be any of a potentially infinite range of values, and may look something like this waveform
(from an artificial (MIDI) piano):
When the microphone converts this signal to an electrical signal, it samples the signal a number of times, and
transmits the level of the signal at that point. The following diagram shows sample times (vertical black lines) and
the transmitted signal (the red line):
When we wish to listen to the sound, the digital signal has to be reconstructed. The gaps between the samples are
filled in, but, as you can see, the reconstructed signal is not the same as the original sound:
Sampling Rate
The sampling rate when digitising an analogue signal is defined as the number of samples per. second, and is
measured in Hertz (Hz), as it is a frequency. You can calculate the sampling rate using the formula:
The higher the sampling rate, the closer the reconstructed signal is to the original signal, but, unfortunately, we are
limited by the bandwidth available. Theoretically, a sampling rate of twice the highest frequency of the original
signal will result in a perfect reconstructed signal. In the example given above, the sampling rate is far too low,
hence the loss of information.
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