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  2. Nyquist stability criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_stability_criterion

    The Nyquist plot for () = + + with s = jω.. In control theory and stability theory, the Nyquist stability criterion or Strecker–Nyquist stability criterion, independently discovered by the German electrical engineer Felix Strecker [] at Siemens in 1930 [1] [2] [3] and the Swedish-American electrical engineer Harry Nyquist at Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1932, [4] is a graphical technique ...

  3. Nyquist ISI criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_ISI_criterion

    In communications, the Nyquist ISI criterion describes the conditions which, when satisfied by a communication channel (including responses of transmit and receive filters), result in no intersymbol interference or ISI. It provides a method for constructing band-limited functions to overcome the effects of intersymbol interference.

  4. Harry Nyquist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Nyquist

    Harry Nyquist (/ ˈ n aɪ k w ɪ s t /, Swedish: [ˈnŷːkvɪst]; February 7, 1889 – April 4, 1976) was a Swedish-American physicist and electronic engineer who made important contributions to communication theory.

  5. Nyquist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist

    Johnson–Nyquist noise, thermal noise; Nyquist stability criterion, in control theory Nyquist plot, signal processing and electronic feedback; Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem, fundamental result in the field of information theory Nyquist frequency, digital signal processing; Nyquist rate, telecommunication theory

  6. Undersampling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undersampling

    Plot of sample rates (y axis) versus the upper edge frequency (x axis) for a band of width 1; grays areas are combinations that are "allowed" in the sense that no two frequencies in the band alias to same frequency. The darker gray areas correspond to undersampling with the maximum value of n in the equations of this section.

  7. Root locus analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_locus_analysis

    The root locus plots the poles of the closed loop transfer function in the complex s-plane as a function of a gain parameter (see pole–zero plot). Evans also invented in 1948 an analog computer to compute root loci, called a "Spirule" (after "spiral" and " slide rule "); it found wide use before the advent of digital computers .

  8. Nyquist rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_rate

    Nyquist's famous 1928 paper was a study on how many pulses (code elements) could be transmitted per second, and recovered, through a channel of limited bandwidth. [4] Signaling at the Nyquist rate meant putting as many code pulses through a telegraph channel as its bandwidth would allow.

  9. Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist–Shannon_sampling...

    Example of magnitude of the Fourier transform of a bandlimited function. The Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem is a theorem in the field of signal processing which serves as a fundamental bridge between continuous-time signals and discrete-time signals.