Difference between revisions of "Theory of Stochastic Signals"

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$(1)$    [[LNTwww:Bibliography_to_Stochastic_Signal_Theory|$\text{Bibliography to the book}$]]
 
$(1)$    [[LNTwww:Bibliography_to_Stochastic_Signal_Theory|$\text{Bibliography to the book}$]]
  
$(2)$    [[LNTwww:General_Notes_to_the_Book_Information_Theory|$\text{General notes about the book}$]]   (authors,  other participants,  materials as a starting point for the book,  list of sources)  
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$(2)$    [[LNTwww:General_Notes_about_the_Book_"Stochastic_Signal_Theory"|$\text{General notes about the book}$]]   (authors,  other participants,  materials as a starting point for the book,  list of sources)  
 
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Revision as of 10:50, 12 January 2022

$\Rightarrow \hspace{0.5cm}\text{We are just beginning the English translation of this book.}$

This third book of our learning tutorial deals in detail with stochastic signals and their modeling.

  • Knowledge of  $\text{stochastic signal theory}$  is an important prerequisite for understanding the following books, which focus on transmission aspects.
  • Knowledge of the first two  $\text{LNTwww}$ books, which include the representation of $\text{ deterministic signals}$  and the description of  $\text{LTI systems}$   ⇒   "linear and time-invariant systems"  is helpful for understanding this book,  but not required.


The course material corresponds to a  $\text{lecture with three semester hours per week (sh/w) and two sh/w exercises}$.

Here is a table of contents based on the  $\text{five main chapters}$  with a total of  $\text{28 individual chapters}$.


Content

In addition to these theory pages, we also offer tasks and multimedia modules on this topic, which could help to clarify the teaching material:



$\text{Other links:}$

$(1)$    $\text{Bibliography to the book}$

$(2)$    $\text{General notes about the book}$   (authors,  other participants,  materials as a starting point for the book,  list of sources)