Identifier

etd-0405102-094607

Degree

Master of Science in Electrical Engineering (MSEE)

Department

Electrical and Computer Engineering

Document Type

Thesis

Abstract

The problem of computing linear convolution is a very important one because with linear convolution we can mechanize digital filtering. The linear convolution of two N-point sequences can be computed by the cyclic convolution of the following 2N-point sequences. The original sequence padded with N zero’s each. The cyclic convolution of two N-point sequences requires multiplications and additions for its computation. A very efficient way of computing cyclic convolution of two sequences is by using the Polynomial Residue Number System (PRNS) technique. Using this technique the cyclic convolution of two N-point sequences can be computed using only N multiplications instead of N2 multiplications. This can be achieved based on some forward and inverse PRNS transformation mappings. These mappings rely on additions, subtractions and many scaling operations (multiplications by constants). The PRNS technique would lose a lot in value if these many scaling operations were difficultly implemented. In this thesis we will show how to calculate cyclic convolution of two sequences using the PRNS technique based on forward and inverse transformation mapping which rely on complement operations (negations), additions and rotation operations. These rotation operations do not require any computational hardware. Therefore the complicated hardware required for the scaling operations has now been substituted by rotators, which do not require any computational hardware.

Date

2002

Document Availability at the Time of Submission

Release the entire work immediately for access worldwide.

Committee Chair

Alexander Skavantzos

DOI

10.31390/gradschool_theses.2832

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