280 C H A P T E R 4: Frequency Analysis: The Fourier Series
TheXkare purely imaginary. Indeed, for an oddx(t),
Xk=
1
T 0
∫
T 0
x(t)e−jk^0 tdt=
1
T 0
∫
T 0
x(t)[cos(k 0 t)−jsin(k 0 )]dt
=
−j
T 0
∫
T 0
x(t)sin(k 0 t)dt
sincex(t)cos(k 0 t)is odd. The Fourier series of an odd function can thus be written as
x(t)= 2
∑∞
k= 1
(jXk)sin(k 0 t) (4.39)
According to the even and odd decomposition, any periodic signalx(t)can be expressed as
x(t)=xe(t)+xo(t)
wherexe(t)is the even andxo(t)is the odd component ofx(t). Finding the Fourier coefficients of
xe(t), which will be real, and those ofxo(t), which will be purely imaginary, we would then have
Xk=Xek+Xoksince
xe(t)=0.5[x(t)+x(−t)] ⇒ Xek=0.5[Xk+X−k]
xo(t)=0.5[x(t)−x(−t)] ⇒ Xok=0.5[Xk−X−k] (4.40)
n Reflection: If the Fourier coefficients of a periodic signalx(t)are{Xk}then those ofx(−t), the time-reversed
signal with the same period asx(t), are{X−k}.
n Even periodic signalx(t): Its Fourier coefficientsXkare real, and its trigonometric Fourier series is
x(t)=X 0 + 2
∑∞
k= 1
Xkcos(k 0 t) (4.41)
n Odd periodic signalx(t): Its Fourier coefficientsXkare imaginary, and its trigonometric Fourier series is
x(t)= 2
∑∞
k= 1
jXksin(k 0 t) (4.42)
For any periodic signalx(t)=xe(t)+xo(t)wherexe(t)andxo(t)are the even and odd component ofx(t), then
Xk=Xek+Xok (4.43)
where{Xek}are the Fourier coefficients ofxe(t)and{Xok}are the Fourier coefficients ofxo(t).
nExample 4.14
Consider the periodic signals x(t)and y(t) shown in Figure 4.16. Determine their Fourier
coefficients by using the symmetry conditions and the even–odd decomposition.