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Amplitude of Combined Signals

If a signal $x[n]$ has a peak or RMS amplitude $A$ (in some fixed window), then the scaled signal $k \cdot a[n]$ (where $k \ge 0$) has amplitude $kA$. The RMS power of the scaled signal changes by a factor of $k^2$. The situation gets more complicated when two different signals are added together; just knowing the amplitudes of the two does not suffice to know the amplitude of the sum. The two amplitude measures do at least obey triangle inequalities; for any two signals $x[n]$ and $y[n]$,

\begin{displaymath}
{A_{\mathrm{peak}}} \{x[n]\} +
{A_{\mathrm{peak}}} \{y[n]\} \ge
{A_{\mathrm{peak}}} \{x[n]+y[n]\} ,
\end{displaymath}


\begin{displaymath}
{A_{\mathrm{RMS}}} \{x[n]\} +
{A_{\mathrm{RMS}}} \{y[n]\} \ge
{A_{\mathrm{RMS}}} \{x[n]+y[n]\} .
\end{displaymath}

If we fix a window from $M$ to $N+M-1$ as usual, we can write out the mean power of the sum of two signals:
MEAN POWER OF THE SUM OF TWO SIGNALS

\begin{displaymath}
P \{x[n] + y[n]\} = P \{x[n]\} + P \{y[n]\}
+ 2 {\mathrm{COR}} \{ x[n] , y[n] \},
\end{displaymath}

where we have introduced the correlation of two signals:
CORRELATION

\begin{displaymath}
{\mathrm{COR}} \{ x[n] , y[n] \} = x[M]y[M] + \cdots + x[M+N-1]y[M+N-1].
\end{displaymath}

The correlation may be positive, zero, or negative. Over a sufficiently large window, the correlation of two sinusoids with different frequencies is negligible. In general, for two uncorrelated signals, the power of the sum is the sum of the powers:
POWER RULE FOR UNCORRELATED SIGNALS

\begin{displaymath}
P \{x[n] + y[n]\} = P \{x[n]\} + P \{y[n]\} , \hspace{0.1in}
\mathrm{whenever}
\ {\mathrm{COR}} \{ x[n] , y[n] \} = 0 .
\end{displaymath}

Put in terms of amplitude, this becomes:

\begin{displaymath}
{{\left ( {A_{\mathrm{RMS}}} \{x[n]+y[n]\} \right ) } ^ 2} ...
...2} +
{{\left ( {A_{\mathrm{RMS}}} \{y[n]\} \right ) } ^ 2} .
\end{displaymath}

This is the familiar Pythagorean relation. So uncorrelated signals can be thought of as vectors at right angles to each other; positively correlated ones as having an acute angle between them, and negatively correlated as having an obtuse angle between them.

For example, if we have two uncorrelated signals both with RMS amplitude $a$, the sum will have RMS amplitude ${\sqrt 2} a$. On the other hand if the two signals happen to be equal--the most correlated possible--the sum will have amplitude $2a$, which is the maximum allowed by the triangle inequality.


next up previous contents index
Next: Units of Amplitude Up: Acoustics of digital audio Previous: Measures of Amplitude   Contents   Index
msp 2003-08-09