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A system is called time invariant if its output , input characteristics dos not change with time. e.g.y(n)=x(n)+x(n-1) A system is called time variant if its input, output characteristics changes with time. e.g.y(n)=x(-n).
A system is called Time Invariant if we delay an input before processing, output will be equal to output delayed after processing. And if we delay an input before processing, output will not be equal to input delayed after processing, the system is Time Variant.
A more formal proof of why systems A and B above differ is now presented. To perform this proof, the second definition will be used.
System A:
Start with a delay of the input Now delay the output by Clearly , therefore the system is not time-invariant.System B:
Start with a delay of the input Now delay the output by Clearly , therefore the system is time-invariant.More generally, the relationship between the input and output is , and its variation with time is
.For time-invariant systems, the system properties remain constant with time, . Applied to Systems A and B above:
in general, so not time-invariant so time-invariant.
A system is called time invariant if its output , input characteristics dos not change with time.
Introduce a known delay y(n,k) to a given system and determine the output as y(n,k). As a second scenario, substitute the discrete time variable n by n-k in the given system, say y(n-k).
If both y(n,k) = y(n-k),-------> system is time invariant.
Otherwise, time variant
A system is called time invariant if its output , input characteristics dos not change with time.
e.g.y(n)=x(n)+x(n-1)
A system is called time variant if its input, output characteristics changes with time.
e.g.y(n)=x(-n).