ILikeMusic
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2004
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The 'perfect waveform' is the part I'm missing, at least in the amplitude domain. My understanding is that in terms of frequency, sample rate needs to be only twice that of the highest frequency you intend to encode since that will provide sufficient sample points to fit a sine function that will allow exact reproduction of the input, hence a perfect waveform in the frequency domain. However, with regard to bit depth you are attempting to quantize amplitude and there will always be some error. I understand how this error becomes broadband noise but I don't understand how we reconstruct a perfect reproduction of amplitude in the reproduced signal. Is the idea that dither provides sufficient randomization to eliminate all error down to a mathematical certainty?Obviously, this is highly imperfect or to put it another way, we have a great deal of error (resulting in a perfect waveform and a great deal of noise).
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