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D ave Shattuck U niversity ofH ouston ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Electronics Email: [email protected] Phone: (713) 743-4422 Office: Room W326-D3

ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

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Page 1: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

ENGI 1100, November 2005

Dr. Dave ShattuckAssociate Professor

Electrical and Computer Engineering Department

Sinusoids, Paradigms and Sinusoids, Paradigms and ElectronicsElectronics

Email: [email protected]: (713) 743-4422

Office: Room W326-D3

Page 2: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction

• I want to talk about what engineers do, and how engineers think about attacking problems.

• I want to talk about sinusoids.

• I want to introduce the area called “electronics”.

Page 3: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

• What is engineering?

Page 4: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

• What is engineering? -- Answer: Answer: Engineering is Problem Solving.Engineering is Problem Solving.

• So, what is electrical engineering?So, what is electrical engineering?

Page 5: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

• What is engineering? -- Answer: Engineering is Problem Solving.

• What is electrical engineering? -- Answer: Problem solving using Problem solving using electricity, electrical tools and electricity, electrical tools and concepts.concepts.

• What is science?What is science?

Page 6: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

• What is engineering? -- Answer: Engineering is Problem Solving.

• What is electrical engineering? -- Answer: Problem solving using electricity, electrical tools and concepts.

• What is science? – Answer: Science is Science is knowledge gaining.knowledge gaining.

Page 7: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

• What is engineering? -- Answer: Engineering is Problem Solving.

• What is electrical engineering? -- Answer: Problem solving using electricity, electrical tools and concepts.

• What is science? – Answer: Science is knowledge gaining.

• So, how can you tell an electrical engineer So, how can you tell an electrical engineer from a physicist?from a physicist?

Page 8: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Introduction to Engineering

How can you tell an electrical engineer from a physicist? – Answer: by the goals they work towards.

• An engineer's goal is to solve problems.

• A scientist's goal is to learn.However, an engineer needs to learn to be

able to solve problems, and a scientist needs to solve problems to learn, so the situation gets muddled. The key is to look at their goals.

Page 9: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Quiz Time:Were the following famous

people engineers or scientists?

To decide, we need to look at their GOALS!

Introduction to Engineering

Page 10: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

He wanted to understand He wanted to understand the stars and planetsthe stars and planets

Engineer or Scientist

Galileo?

He was a scientistHe was a scientist

Introduction to Engineering

Page 11: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Engineer or ScientistLeonardo da Vinci?

He was an engineerHe was an engineer

He wanted to fly, to He wanted to fly, to paint, to do thingspaint, to do things

Introduction to Engineering

Page 12: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

He wanted to build He wanted to build things, lights, phonographs, things, lights, phonographs, etc.etc.

Engineer or Scientist

Thomas Edison?

He was an engineerHe was an engineer

Introduction to Engineering

Page 13: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

He wanted to understand He wanted to understand how things movedhow things moved

Engineer or Scientist

Sir Isaac Newton?

He was a scientistHe was a scientist

Introduction to Engineering

Page 14: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Engineer or Scientist

Albert Einstein?

He was a scientistHe was a scientist

He wanted to find the He wanted to find the Unified Theory of EverythingUnified Theory of Everything

Introduction to Engineering

Page 15: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Engineer or Scientist

Robert Oppenheimer?

He was an engineerHe was an engineer

He wanted to build the He wanted to build the Atomic Bomb - Manhattan Atomic Bomb - Manhattan ProjectProject

Introduction to Engineering

Page 16: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Engineer or Scientist

Professor Paul Chu?

He is a scientistHe is a scientist

He wants to understand He wants to understand superconductivitysuperconductivity

Introduction to Engineering

Page 17: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Engineer or Scientist

Sir Thomas Crapper?

He was an engineerHe was an engineer

He wanted to buildHe wanted to build a sanitary toilet, which a sanitary toilet, which was so important he was knightedwas so important he was knighted

Introduction to Engineering

Page 18: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston Goal of this lecture:

Answer Some Questions

• Why does a guitar sound different from a violin?

• Why don’t I sound like Phil Collins?

• Why don’t I make as much $ as Phil Collins?

• Why do people talk about audio systems in terms of sinusoids?

Page 19: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Engineering Paradigms

• We are going to introduce a couple of major engineering paradigms.

• What are paradigms?

Page 20: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

What are paradigms?

About 20 cents.

Get it? “Pair a dimes?” Okay, so it is not very funny…

Page 21: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Engineering Paradigms

• A paradigm is a way of thinking about something.

• A paradigm shift is a change in the way we think about something.

• I want to introduce a couple of engineering paradigm shifts.

• I will use sinusoids as the basis for this.

Page 22: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Euler’s Relation

• Who knows Euler’s Relation?

To Play = To Lose

Page 23: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

NO Wait!

• To Play = To Lose

• That was Oiler’s Relation. They are in Tennessee now. They’re called the Titans. This is now an obsolete joke.

• What is Euler’s Relation?

Page 24: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Euler’s Relation

• Euler’s Relation is:

ej= cos + j sin • This means that sinusoids are just

complex exponentials. When we solve certain kinds of problems, the solutions turn out to be complex exponentials, or sine waves.

Page 25: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Euler’s Relation

• Dr. Dave, can you say that again, in English? OK ….

• Sine waves happen.

Page 26: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem

• Now, there is a special rule that concerns sinusoids. First, we need to be able to pronounce this.

• Furrier’s theorem applies in animal husbandry

• So, pronounce it 4 - E - A !!!

Page 27: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem

• Any physically realizable waveform can be represented by, and is equivalent to, a summation of sinusoids of different amplitude, frequency and phase.

• This represented a major paradigm shift in engineering.

Page 28: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem

• In English this time, Dr. Dave? OK….• You can get any real function by adding

up sine waves.• This represented a major change in the

way we think about problem solving in engineering. We could look at what happens to sine waves, and know what would happen when other signals are used.

Page 29: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why does a guitar sound different from a violin?

• Answer: Sine wave components in the two instruments are different.

Page 30: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why don’t I sound like Phil Collins?

• Answer: Sine wave components in the two voices are different.

Page 31: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why don’t I make as much $ as Phil Collins?

•Equivalent Answer: He can sing. I can’t.

•Answer: Sine wave components in the two voices are different.

Page 32: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why do people talk about audio systems in terms of sinusoids?

• Answer: Sine wave components tell us everything we need to know about any signal.

• Therefore, Fourier’s Theorem allows us to describe and analyze a system without knowing what signals we use it with.

Page 33: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why do we introduce complicated mathematical concepts like Fourier’s Theorem?

•Answer: To make life hard for engineering students.

Page 34: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why do we introduce complicated mathematical concepts like Fourier’s Theorem?

•Answer: To make life hard for engineering students.

No, this is RONG!No, this is RONG!

Page 35: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Fourier’s Theorem: Answers

• Question: Why do we introduce complicated mathematical concepts like Fourier’s Theorem?

• Answer: These concepts help us to solve problems, and to think about how to solve problems.

Page 36: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Demonstration of Sinusoids

• Let’s look at a system to send signals around. (Telephone, Radio, etc.)

Page 37: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Application to Electronics • Let’s look at a system to send signals

around. The telephone:– Converts sound to voltage, with a

microphone.– Sends the voltage to the

location needed.– Converts voltage to sound,

with a speaker.

Page 38: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Send the voltage?

• How does the voltage get to where we want it?– We need to amplify it, to make it louder.– We need to amplify it, to send it a long

way.– We need to deal with noise.– We may need to modulate it to send it

through some kinds of channels.

Page 39: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

• Did I say modulate? In English, please, Dr. Dave! First, the problem:– Sometimes it is kind of awkward to run a

wire to the place I want the signal to go.

Modulate?

Page 40: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

• Did I say modulate? In English, please, Dr. Dave! – The problem: Sometimes it is kind of

awkward to run a wire to the place I want the signal to go.

– The solution: If I stick the wire up in the air, it will send that signal through the air.

Modulate?

Page 41: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Modulate?

• If I stick a wire up in the air, it will send that signal through the air.– However, to work well, it must be at least

1/10th of a wavelength () long.– At 15 Hertz, the low end of human hearing,

that is 0.1 = (0.1)c/f = (0.1)(186,000[miles/s])/(15[s-1]) = 1,240 miles in length.

Page 42: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Modulate!

• Need antennas that are about the length of Texas. Rhode Island would be out of luck.

• Only one signal can be sent at a time. The strongest signal would win, if you were lucky.

Solution: Multiply by sinusoid at some high frequency. Wavelengths are shorter, and I can have lots of signals at once, each with a different frequency sinusoid. The different frequencies are called “stations”.

Page 43: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Modulate!!

• For example, for radio station @ 740[kHz]– At 740,000[Hertz], we have

0.1 = (0.1)c/f = (0.1)(186,000[miles/s])/(740,000[s-1])

= 130 feet in length

Page 44: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Solution: Electronics!!

• In electronics, we:– Amplify signals (make them bigger).– Deal with noise in signals.– Modulate and demodulate signals.– Fool around with signals, and the

devices that allow us to do this fooling around.

Page 45: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Who cares about this stuff?

• I do, obviously. • But that is not really your question. Your question is,

why should you care about this?• You should only care about this if you are going into

electrical engineering. If you are, this is the kind of way you will learn to approach problems.

• I am showing you electronics as one example. There are many different kinds of problems that Electrical Engineers solve.

Page 46: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston Kinds of Problems Electrical and

Computer Engineers Solve

• Communications• Electromagnetic Theory• Computer Programming• Computer Design• Computer Systems• Signal Analysis• Electronics• Digital Logic Design• Semiconductor Physics• Power Generation and Distribution

Page 47: ENGI 1100, November 2005 Dr. Dave Shattuck Associate Professor Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Sinusoids, Paradigms and Electronics Email:

Dave ShattuckUniversity of Houston

Conclusions

• Engineers are problem solvers. Electrical Engineers solve problems using or relating to electricity, and Computer Engineers solve problems using or related to computers.

• Engineers attack problems using technology, science, and mathematics, because they work.