An impulse response is a "window" out of many possible impulses in a non-LTI case?S0lo wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2024 12:02 pmSorry my terminology might have caused a confusion. By analysis I don’t mean processing. I meant mathematical derivation. Totally different things. There is no windowing involved or anything like that.soundmodel wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2024 10:22 amBut this is what I was trying to suggest several times, but as I am inexperienced, then I cannot use the proper vocabulary. But the main naive idea I had is just that frequency-domain things necessarily need windows or "finite snapshots", and windowed-processing leads to discontinuities or at least difficulties in managing continuities.
One of the reasons to use frequency domain derivation is because it’s much easier in many cases. For example, the equivalent of a transfer function (Z domain) in discrete time domain is a recurrence relation which is not always the easiest thing to manipulate, understand and design for.
https://dsp.stackexchange.com/a/41841
"The whole concept of a time variant impulse response only works if the time scale on which time variation happens is significantly slower than the length of the impulse response. That allows treating the impulse response as piece wise "time invariant" at least during the interval of the convolution."
Possibly, this same thing explains why fast modulation blows an LTI-theory based filter up?
This also makes it sound like time-varying with impulse responses is making things really hard. Probably only useful for very accurate analog-convolutions.
But this paper says they did such processor without problems with modulation https://ntnuopen.ntnu.no/ntnu-xmlui/bit ... sequence=1. Now I don't understand where the problem with fast modulation comes from.