 . The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.
. The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.Why the fourier transform of a signal does not produce any graphing?
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    TEOH CHEE JIN
 el 8 de Dic. de 2022
  
    
    
    
    
    Comentada: Paul
      
      
 el 25 de En. de 2023
            Hi, I have written a MATLAB code to convert the signal equations from time domain into frequency domain. However, when plotting the graph in frequency domain, there is no output as shown in the screenshot attached. Since my a(t) is a cosine, I believe there should be containing only the real part in frequency domain according to the Fourier Transform Table. Thank you.


%create symbolic functions x, a, b, c, d, e, f_c with independent variable t
syms x a h b c d e f_c f_c1 f_c2 t tau
%create symbolic functions A, B, C, D, and E with independent variable w
syms A B C D E w
x(t) = cos(100*pi*t);
a(t) = x(0.4*t);
h(t) = dirac(t-0.02);
b(t) = int(a(tau)*h(t-tau), 'tau', -inf, inf);
f_c(t) = 10*cos(2500*pi*t);
f_c1(t) = f_c(t);
f_c2(t) = f_c(t);
c(t) = b(t)*f_c1(t);
d(t) = c(t)*f_c2(t);
figure
A(w) = fourier(a(t));
subplot(2,2,1), fplot((A(w)))
xlim([-50 50]), ylim([-10 10])
title('Real part of A(\omega)')
xlabel('Frequency, \omega')
ylabel('Real A(\omega)')
grid on
B(w) = fourier(b(t));
subplot(2,2,2), fplot((B(w)))
xlim([-50 50]), ylim([-10 10])
title('Real part of B(\omega)')
xlabel('Frequency, \omega')
ylabel('Real B(\omega)')
grid on
C(w) = fourier(c(t));
subplot(2,2,3), fplot((C(w)))
xlim([-50 50]), ylim([-10 10])
title('Real part of C(\omega)')
xlabel('Frequency, \omega')
ylabel('Real C(\omega)')
grid on
D(w) = fourier(d(t));
subplot(2,2,4), fplot((D(w)))
xlim([-50 50]), ylim([-10 10])
title('Real part of D(\omega)')
xlabel('Frequency, \omega')
ylabel('Real D(\omega)')
grid on
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Respuesta aceptada
  Santosh Fatale
    
 el 23 de Dic. de 2022
        Hi Teoh,
The function "dirac" represents the Dirac delta function and not the Kronecker delta function. Thus, it achieves an infinity value at  . The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.
. The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.
 . The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.
. The function "fplot" does not plot the infinity for the Dirac delta function, and you need to take care of that using the following workaround.syms t
dirac_t = dirac(t);
t = -5:0.1:5;
dirac_t = dirac(t);
idx = dirac_t == Inf;
dirac_t(idx) = 1; % Assign suitable value instead of Inf.
stem(t, dirac_t); % You can even use plot function.
The modified code to plot real part of variable A is as follows:
%create symbolic functions x, a, b, c, d, e, f_c with independent variable t
syms x(t) a(t) h(t) b(t) c(t) d(t) e f_c(t) f_c1(t) f_c2(t) t tau
%create symbolic functions A, B, C, D, and E with independent variable w
syms A(w) B(w) C(w) D(w) E w
x(t) = cos(100*pi*t)
a(t) = x(0.4*t)
h(t) = dirac(t-0.02)
b(t) = int(a(tau)*h(t-tau), 'tau', -inf, inf)
f_c(t) = 10*cos(2500*pi*t);
f_c1(t) = f_c(t);
f_c2(t) = f_c(t);
c(t) = b(t)*f_c1(t);
d(t) = c(t)*f_c2(t);
figure
A(w) = fourier(a(t), w);
w = -45*pi:0.1*pi:45*pi;
subsA = A(w);
% Replace Inf value with suitable value
idx = subsA == Inf;
subsA(idx) = pi; % choose suitable value from the expression of fourier transform.
plot(w,real(subsA));
ylabel("\Re(A(\omega))");
xlabel("\omega");
xticks(-40*pi:20*pi:40*pi);
xticklabels({'-40\pi', '-20\pi', '0', '20\pi', '40\pi'})
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