M
MDS
Audioholic Spartan
Perhaps confusing, but how else to explain the difference between 'continuous' and 'discrete'? A continuous waveform has an infinite number of values between any two points. Digital sampling must chop up that interval into a number of discrete values. A 44.1 kHz sampling rate will chop up every second of a continuous analog waveform into 44, 100 discrete values. That is why I said that it is loosely true that sampling cannot perfectly reproduce an analog waveform.WmAx said:I feel this may confuse some readers. It should be pointed out that the only relevance the number of samples have considering PCM audio, is the bandwidth. Therefor, 44.1kHz is perfectly sufficient for human perception, according to known credited perceptual research, since this extends the bandwidth to approximately 22kHz.
-Chris
However, as you are pointing out, based on the Nyquist theorem as long as we sample at 2x the highest frequency we want to capture we will faithfully reproduce the signal - as long as the reconstruction filter does a good job. It is a faithful reproduction to our ears, but obvioulsy not *exactly* the same as the analog waveform.