??? 05/09/05 15:08 Read: times Msg Score: +1 +1 Good Answer/Helpful |
#93226 - basically Responding to: ???'s previous message |
The high frequency noise generated by not switching at the zero crossing points is caused because the truncated sine wave which you then create has higher frequency components than a simple sine wave as can be shown by simply performing a fft on the resulting waveforms if you switch at differing angles in the cycle. So you just need an understanding of basic differencial equations to be able to plug any truncated sine wave into the FFT. |