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Convergence in Audio Applications

Because the range of human hearing is bounded (nominally between 20 and 20 kHz), spectral components of a signal outside this range are not audible. Therefore, when the solution to a differential equation is to be considered an audio signal, there are frequency regions over which convergence is not a requirement.

Instead of pointwise convergence, we may ask for the following two properties:

Superposition holds for all linear partial differential equations with constant coefficients (linear, shift-invariant systems [426]). We need this condition so that errors in the inaudible bands do not affect the audible bands. Inaudible errors are fine as long as they do not grow so large that they cause numerical overflow. An example in which this ``bandlimited design'' approach yields large practical dividends is in bandlimited interpolator design (see §I.3).

In many cases, such as in digital waveguide modeling of vibrating strings, we can do better than convergence. We can construct finite difference schemes which agree with the corresponding continuous solutions exactly at the sample points. (See §G.4.1.)


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[How to cite and copy this work] 
``Physical Audio Signal Processing for Virtual Musical Instruments and Digital Audio Effects'', by Julius O. Smith III, (December 2005 Edition).
Copyright © 2006-07-01 by Julius O. Smith III
Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA),   Stanford University
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