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First we apply this to the sawtooth wave
. For
we
have:
Ignoring the DC offset of
, this gives an impulse, zero everywhere except one sample per
cycle. The summation in the Fourier transform only has one term,
and we get:
We then apply the difference formula backward to
get:
valid for integer values of
with
and
.
(To get the second form of the expression we plugged in
and
.)
This analysis doesn't give us the DC component
, because we would
have had to divide by
. Instead, we can evaluate
the DC term directly as the sum of all the points of the waveform:
it's approximately zero by symmetry.
To get a Fourier series in terms of familiar
real-valued sine and cosine functions, we combine corresponding
terms for negative and positive values of
. The
first harmonic (
) is:
and similarly for other values of
,
the
th harmonic is
and the entire Fourier series is:

Next: Parabolic
wave Up: Fourier series of the Previous: Fourier series of the
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Miller Puckette 2005-07-11