disruption in curves simulation
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how to solve the disruption in these curves
8 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 15 de Mayo de 2025
What disruption are you talking about?
When I look at those plots, none of them look obviously wrong. I do not understand what they are for so I might easily be missing something.
Sam Chak
el 15 de Mayo de 2025
The term 'disruption' is likely a translated word. In the field of signal processing, we typically refer to it as 'disturbance', with 'external disturbances' specifically referring to unwanted signals that interfere with the desired signal being analyzed or transmitted. The phrase 'solve the disruption' may possibly mean 'reject the disturbance'.
Tasneem Abed
el 17 de Mayo de 2025
Sam Chak
el 18 de Mayo de 2025
@Tasneem Abed, If the signals are high-frequency noise, you can filter out the unwanted components by properly designing low-pass filters (which requires the Signal Processing Toolbox) at the selected intervals. If you can provide the sample data, some filter experts may demonstrate how to accomplish this.
Sam Chak
el 29 de Mayo de 2025
@Tasneem Abed, Any updates?
Tasneem Abed
el 30 de Mayo de 2025
Tasneem Abed
el 30 de Mayo de 2025
Sam Chak
el 30 de Mayo de 2025
Hi @Tasneem Abed, My advice is to place multiple scopes at the signal lines where you suspect the source of the noise. After locating the source, you may consider designing an appropriate low-pass filter to attenuate the noise and reduce its impact.
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