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ABOUT THE BOOK: Digital Signal Processing is one of the hottest areas of contemporary electronics and telecommunications and one of the toughest to master. If you are an engineer and student seeking to acquire new design skills you may have a hard time finding a practical, step-by-step approach.
James Broesch has the answer you have been looking for! His book breaks into easily understood components and provides an intuitive, practical development of the major concepts.
In addition, the enclosed Digital Signal Processing Calculator software for windows works hand-in-hand with the text to give you dynamic demonstrations of the concepts taught. CD-ROM for window 3.1 and 95 machines contains the Digital Signal Processing calculator suite of powerful interactive software routines that enable you to create waveforms, design filters, filter waveforms, and display and analyze the results.
The routines contained in the calculator are :
Here is what you will find:
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
About the Accompanying Software
Digital Signal Processing
The General Model of a Digital Signal Processing System
The Numerical Basis for Digital Signal Processing
Signal Acquisition
Some Example Applications
The Fourier Series
Orthogonality and Quadrature
Transforms
FIR Filter Design
The IIR
Tools for Working with Digital Signal Processing
Digital Signal Processing and the Future
Fundamentals of Engineering Calculus and Other Math Tools
Digital Signal Processing Vendors
Useful Magazines and Other Publications Glossary References Index
James Broesch is a staff engineer at General Atomics. He is responsible for the design and development of several advanced control systems used on the DIII-D Tokamak Fusion Research Program. He has over 10 years of experience in designing and developing communications and control systems for applications ranging from submarines to satellites. James Broesch teaches classes in signal processing and hardware design via the Extension office of the University of California, San Diego. He is the author of Practical Programmable Circuits (Academic Press) as well as magazine articles and numerous technical papers.
Undergraduate Electronics Students of Engineering, Technology and Science.