Wikipedia Article of the Day
Randomly selected articles from my personal browsing history
In mathematics, physics and engineering, the sinc function, denoted by sinc(x), has two forms, normalized and unnormalized. In mathematics, the historical unnormalized sinc function is defined for x ≠ 0 by Alternatively, the unnormalized sinc function is often called the sampling function, indicated as Sa(x). In digital signal processing and information theory, the normalized sinc function is commonly defined for x ≠ 0 by In either case, the value at x = 0 is defined to be the limiting value for all real a ≠ 0 (the limit can be proven using the squeeze theorem). The normalization causes the definite integral of the function over the real numbers to equal 1 (whereas the same integral of the unnormalized sinc function has a value of π). As a further useful property, the zeros of the normalized sinc function are the nonzero integer values of x. The normalized sinc function is the Fourier transform of the rectangular function with no scaling. It is used in the concept of reconstructing a continuous bandlimited signal from uniformly spaced samples of that signal. The only difference between the two definitions is in the scaling of the independent variable (the x axis) by a factor of π. In both cases, the value of the function at the removable singularity at zero is understood to be the limit value 1. The sinc function is then analytic everywhere and hence an entire function. The function has also been called the cardinal sine or sine cardinal function. The term sinc was introduced by Philip M. Woodward in his 1952 article "Information theory and inverse probability in telecommunication", in which he said that the function "occurs so often in Fourier analysis and its applications that it does seem to merit some notation of its own", and his 1953 book Probability and Information Theory, with Applications to Radar. The function itself was first mathematically derived in this form by Lord Rayleigh in his expression (Rayleigh's formula) for the zeroth-order spherical Bessel function of the first kind.
History
May 18
Snowflake ID
May 17
Go (programming language)
May 16
Criticism of C++
May 15
Assembly language
May 14
Pitch detection algorithm
May 13
Ethyl acetate
May 12
Zigbee
May 11
AutoCAD DXF
May 10
Convex function
May 9
Raised-cosine filter
May 8
Boy or girl paradox
May 7
netcat
May 6
Idiot plot
May 5
Blackboard bold
May 4
Zero crossing
May 3
ASCII
May 2
Inverse trigonometric functions
May 1
RAID
Apr 30
Arccos
Apr 29
Real-time operating system
Apr 28
Unidirectional network
Apr 27
SD card
Apr 26
Red/black concept
Apr 25
Discrete cosine transform
Apr 24
Polynomial ring
Apr 23
Ring (mathematics)
Apr 22
Airship
Apr 21
Sinc function
Apr 20
Field-effect transistor
Apr 19
Subsatellite