answersLogoWhite

0

What is an imaginary spectral being?

Updated: 12/21/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Best Answer

ghost

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is an imaginary spectral being?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Engineering

What is the same track on each platter?

A cylinder. Each track on each platter can be thought of as being a ring, thus if you isolated the same track upon each platter you'd have a stack of imaginary rings which would therefore form an imaginary cylinder.


What is power spectral density?

power spectral density (PSD), which describes how the power of a signal or time series is distributed with frequency. Here power can be the actual physical power, or more often, for convenience with abstract signals, can be defined as the squared value of the signal, that is, as the actual power if the signal was a voltage applied to a 1-ohm load.Since a signal with nonzero average power is not square integrable, the Fourier transforms do not exist in this case. Fortunately, the Wiener-Khinchin theorem provides a simple alternative. The PSD is the Fourier transform of the autocorrelation function, R(Ï„), of the signal if the signal can be treated as a wide-sense stationary random process.The power of the signal in a given frequency band can be calculated by integrating over positive and negative frequencies.The power spectral density of a signal exists if and only if the signal is a wide-sense stationary process. If the signal is not stationary, then the autocorrelation function must be a function of two variables, so no PSD exists, but similar techniques may be used to estimate a time-varying spectral density.


What are inventions that aren't made yet?

Still imaginary...


Could you have a quadratic function with one real root and one complex root?

Provided some of the coefficients and the constant were imaginary (complex) as well, yes. For example, (x + 2)(x - 3+i) has both a real and an imaginary root, and has coefficients that are also both real and imaginary, i.e. 1, -1+i, and -6+2i.


Define a complex number using c structure?

Just define two fields (whatever those are called in "C" - the parts of the structure), one for the real part, one for the imaginary part.Just define two fields (whatever those are called in "C" - the parts of the structure), one for the real part, one for the imaginary part.Just define two fields (whatever those are called in "C" - the parts of the structure), one for the real part, one for the imaginary part.Just define two fields (whatever those are called in "C" - the parts of the structure), one for the real part, one for the imaginary part.