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When two signals are added together and fed to the filter, the filter
output is the same as if one had put each signal through the filter
separately and then added the outputs (the superposition
property).
While the implications of linearity are far-reaching, the mathematical
definition is simple. Let us represent the general linear
(but possibly time-varying) filter as a signal operator:
 |
(5.2) |
where
is the entire input signal,
is the output at
time
, and
is the filter expressed as a real-valued
function of a signal for each
. Think of the subscript
on
as selecting the
th output sample of the filter. In general,
each output sample can be a function of several or even
all input samples, and this is why we write
as the
filter input.
Definition. A filter
is said to be
linear
if for any pair of signals
and for all
constant gains
, we have the following relation for each
sample time
:
where
denotes the signal space (complex-valued sequences, in
general). These two conditions are simply a mathematical restatement of the
previous descriptive definition.
The
scaling property of linear systems
states that scaling
the input of a linear system (multiplying it by a constant gain
factor) scales the output by the same factor.
The
superposition property of linear systems states that
the response of a linear system to a sum of signals is the sum of the
responses to each individual input signal. Another view is that the
individual signals which have been summed at the input are processed
independently inside the filter--they superimpose and do not
interact. (The addition of two signals, sample by sample, is like
converting stereo to mono by mixing the two channels together
equally.)
Another example of a linear signal medium is the earth's
atmosphere. When two sounds are in the air at once, the air pressure
fluctuations that convey them simply add (unless they are extremely
loud). Since any finite continuous signal can be represented as a sum
(i.e., superposition) of sinusoids, we can predict the filter response to
any input signal just by knowing the response for all
sinusoids. Without superposition, we have no such general description
and it may be impossible to do any better than to catalog the filter
output for each possible input.
Linear operators distribute over linear combinations, i.e.,
for any linear operator
, any real or complex signals
, and any real or complex constant gain factors
.
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