CS代写 Poles & Zeros

Poles & Zeros
Effect of poles on impulse responses 1st and 2nd order systems

Motivation

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 It is very important for analysis/design to understand how poles/zeros affect impulse/step responses.
 Step response design specifications can be related to locations of poles and zeros
E.g. zero steady-state error tracking a step function with unity feedbackOpen-loop pole at s=0
 It is possible to get a model of an LTI system by measuring its step response

Poles and zeros
 Consider a proper transfer function
 If are real, then are either real or
complex conjugate of the form
 are the zeros of the transfer function.  are the poles of the transfer function.

Visualising Poles and Zeros in s-Domain
Source: Swarthmore College, US

 Example 1:
 Example 2:

Effect of poles (and zeros) on transient response
 Qualitative- oscillatory or smooth; stable or unstable
 Quantitative – rate of decay/explosion, oscillation frequency, rise time, settling time,

Partial fractional expansion:
 We can write any rational function using its partial fractional expansion (different poles):
or for repeated poles:

Solutions in time domain
 Taking inverse Laplace transform of the previous expressions leads to a set of possible time-domain functions that arise:
– Polynomial functions
– Exponentials in time
– Sinusoidal functions
– Their products

Impulse response of LTI systems
Each such term is called a mode of the system.
• The growth rate σ, freq. ω and powers n depend only each corresponding pole
• But the linear coefficients in front of each mode, and the phase φ, also depend on other poles and zeros

 Consider the transfer function:
 Its impulse response is obtained via its partial fraction expansion ( ):

 When we have repeated poles, we get terms of this form in partial fraction expansion:
 They lead to response terms of the form
 Note that response is still dominated by exponential terms provided .

1st and 2nd order systems

Impulse response terms with real pole

Impulse response with complex pole
E.g. recall:

2nd order systems
 Consider a generic 2nd order system:  Suppose then the poles are

Terminology
 natural (undamped) frequency
 damped frequency (imaginary part)
 damping factor
 real part

Graphic representation of poles

Response of 2nd order systems

Important relationships:
 Time constant increases as damping decreases.
 Peak of oscillation increases as damping decreases.
 Frequency of oscillation increases when damping decreases.

General systems – summary:

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