sound generation using MATLAB

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kartik singh
kartik singh il 14 Mar 2019
Commentato: Stephan il 14 Mar 2019
clc;
clear all;
close all;
fs=24000; %sampling frequency
f=100000; %frequency of the sound wave
t=0:1/fs:10;
y=sin(2*pi*f*t);
sound(y);
I generated a sound wave using the above code. Why is it audible? I set its frequency to more than 20kHz which is the limit of the human ear.
what's wrong here? Does it have to do with the speakers? or the code?

Risposta accettata

Image Analyst
Image Analyst il 14 Mar 2019
It's called aliasing. Sampling at rate lower than the Nyquist frequency will give signals that look like they are oscillating at a lower frequency. See the Wikipedia article on it: Wikpedia on Aliasing
Aliasing_between_a_positive_and_a_negative_frequency.png

Più risposte (1)

Stephan
Stephan il 14 Mar 2019
Hi,
think about your sampling frequency. Can it really work to sample a signal of 100kHz with a sample rate of 24kHz? Or do you get some useless stuff?
Consider:
fs=2.4; %bad sampling frequency
fs2 = 240 % good sampling frequency
f=10; %frequency of the sound wave
t=0:1/fs:2;
t2 = 0:1/fs2:2;
y=sin(2*pi*f.*t);
y2=sin(2*pi*f.*t2);
plot(t,y,t2,y2)
which gives the following plot:
bad_fs_vs_good_fs.PNG:
This does not look rigth for the blue line which corresponds to a much too low sample frequency. The higher sample rate gives a correct result.
Best regards
Stephan
  2 Commenti
kartik singh
kartik singh il 14 Mar 2019
Thanks for the answer. My query got cleared.
Stephan
Stephan il 14 Mar 2019
Did you notice, that you can accept useful answers and or vote for them? Feel free to do so, if the contributions were useful.

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