rectangle pulse start from (0,0) in matlab

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nune pratyusha
nune pratyusha el 16 de Dic. de 2020
Comentada: Abhishek Gupta el 22 de Dic. de 2020
Fs = 1e9;
t = 0:1/Fs:(4*1200e-9);
pulsewidth = 200e-9;
pulseperiods =[0:4]*1200e-9;
x = pulstran(t,pulseperiods,@rectpuls,pulsewidth);
plot(t,x)
  2 comentarios
Abhishek Gupta
Abhishek Gupta el 21 de Dic. de 2020
Hi,
Can you elaborate your question?
nune pratyusha
nune pratyusha el 22 de Dic. de 2020
Fs = 1e9;
t = 0:1/Fs:(4*1200e-9);
pulsewidth = 200e-9;
pulseperiods =[0:4]*1200e-9;
x = pulstran(t,pulseperiods,@rectpuls,pulsewidth);
plot(t,x)
for this code at t=0 the value of x=1 i.e rectangular pulse is starting from 1 but i want for t=0 the pulse also starting from 0 i.e x=0

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Respuestas (1)

Abhishek Gupta
Abhishek Gupta el 22 de Dic. de 2020
Hi,
As per my understanding, you want to create a rectangular pulse with x=0 at t=0. The reason behind why you are not getting x=0 at t=0 is that you have mentioned pulseperiods = [0 0.12 0.24 0.36 0.48], which means the first pulse will be at x=0 with x=pulsewidth/2 at t=0.
One possible workaround would be to start the pulse from x=0 by offsetting the pulse period with (pulsewidth/1.999). Note that if you would shift by exactly (pulsewidth/2) then you would get x=1 at t=0. To avoid the same, it would be preferrable to offset by a number slightly greater than half of the pulsewidth.
The implementation would look something like this: -
Fs = 1e9;
t = 0:1/Fs:(4*1200e-9);
pulsewidth = 200e-9;
pulseperiods = [0:4]*1200e-9 + pulsewidth/1.999;
x = pulstran(t,pulseperiods,@rectpuls,pulsewidth);
plot(t,x);
Output pulse:-
  2 comentarios
nune pratyusha
nune pratyusha el 22 de Dic. de 2020
Thank you Sir
Abhishek Gupta
Abhishek Gupta el 22 de Dic. de 2020
Accept the answer if it worked for you.

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