In
signal processing,
harmonic distortion occurs when a
sine wave signal is sent through a memory-less
nonlinear system, that is, a system whose output at time
t only depends on the input at time
t and does not depend on the input at any previous times. Such a system is described by a response function V_\text{out}(t) = f(V_\text{in}(t)). The type of
harmonics produced depend on the response function
f: • When the response function is even, the resulting signal will consist of only even harmonics of the input sine wave; 0f, 2f, 4f, 6f, \dots • The
fundamental is also an odd harmonic, so will not be present. • A simple example is a
full-wave rectifier. • The 0f component represents the DC offset, due to the one-sided nature of even-symmetric transfer functions. • When it is odd, the resulting signal will consist of only odd harmonics of the input sine wave; 1f, 3f, 5f, \dots • The output signal will be half-wave
symmetric. • A simple example is
clipping in a symmetric
push-pull amplifier. • When it is asymmetric, the resulting signal may contain either even or odd harmonics; 1f, 2f, 3f, \dots • Simple examples are a half-wave rectifier, and clipping in an asymmetrical
class-A amplifier. This does not hold true for more complex waveforms. A
sawtooth wave contains both even and odd harmonics, for instance. After even-symmetric full-wave rectification, it becomes a
triangle wave, which, other than the DC offset, contains only odd harmonics. ==Generalizations==