10-06-2003 12:51 PM
10-07-2003 12:01 PM
05-18-2011 09:17 AM
Hi Joshua,
I have a question. The "dt" should be greater that the sampling rate for sure. but if dt=0.0001 and sampling rate is 1kHz, it means that each sample is count 10 times? i.e. we have 1000 data points in 1 second, but we are sampling 10,000 times.
Cheers,
Ali
05-18-2011 09:51 AM
The dt is the inverse of the sample rate. If dt is .0001, then your sample rate 10kHz. If your sample rate is 1kHz, then the dt is .001. Your numbers are not correct.
05-18-2011 12:11 PM
I'm pretty sure my numbers are correct. My question was that if I choose dt=0.0001 AND my sampling rate be 1kHz what is happening.
My qustion was that in the integrator each point contributes 10 times.
05-18-2011 01:22 PM
You choose one or the other. You simply cannot have a dt of .0001 and a sample rate of 1kHz. I will repeat - the dt is simply the inverse of the sample rate and vice versa. It's basic arithmetic.