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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Küpfmüller's uncertainty principle by Karl Küpfmüller in the year 1924 states that the relation of the rise time of a bandlimited signal to its bandwidth is a constant.[1]
with either or
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: steps missing, why is the rise time involved? Is it related to sampling intervals? (November 2023) |
A bandlimited signal with fourier transform is given by the multiplication of any signal with a rectangular function of width in frequency domain:
This multiplication with a rectangular function acts as a Bandlimiting filter and results in
Applying the convolution theorem, we also know
Since the fourier transform of a rectangular function is a sinc function and vice versa, it follows directly by definition that
Now the first root is at . This is the rise time of the pulse . Since the rise time influences how fast g(t) can go from 0 to its maximum, it affects how fast the bandwidth limited signal transitions from 0 to its maximal value.
We have the important finding, that the rise time is inversely related to the frequency bandwidth:
the lower the rise time, the wider the frequency bandwidth needs to be.
Equality is given as long as is finite.
Regarding that a real signal has both positive and negative frequencies of the same frequency band, becomes , which leads to instead of
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