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WD Mass-Spring Oscillator at Half the Sampling Rate

Under the bilinear transform, the $ s=\infty$ maps to $ z=-1$ (half the sampling rate). It is therefore no surprise that given $ \omega_0=\infty$ ($ \rho=-1$ ), inspection of Fig.F.37 reveals that any alternating sequence (sinusoid sampled at half the sampling rate) will circulate unchanged in the loop on the right, which is now isolated. Let $ x_2(n) = (-1)^n x_0$ denote this alternating sequence. The loop on the left receives $ - 2 x_2(n)$ and adds $ - x_1(n-1)$ to it, i.e., $ x_1(n+1)= - x_1(n) - 2 x_2(n) = -x_1(n) - 2x_2(0)(-1)^n$ . If we start out with $ x_1(0)=0$ and $ x_2(0)=x_0$ , we obtain $ x_1 =
[0,-2x_0, 4x_0, -6x_0, \ldots]$ , or

$\displaystyle x_1(n) = (-1)^n 2 n x_0, \quad n=0,1,2,3,\ldots\,.
$

However, the physical spring force is well behaved, since

$\displaystyle f_k(n) = f^{{+}}_k(n) + f^{{-}}_k(n) = x_1(n+1) + x_1(n) = (-1)^{n+1}2 x_0
$

As a check, the mass force is found to be

\begin{eqnarray*}
f_m(n) &=& x_2(n+1) - x_2(n)\\
&=& (-1)^{n+1}x_0 - (-1)^n x_0\\
&=& (-1)^{n+1}x_0 + (-1)^{n+1}x_0\\
&=& (-1)^{n+1}2 x_0,
\end{eqnarray*}

which agrees with the spring, as it must.


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``Physical Audio Signal Processing'', by Julius O. Smith III, W3K Publishing, 2010, ISBN 978-0-9745607-2-4
Copyright © 2024-06-28 by Julius O. Smith III
Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA),   Stanford University
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