User`s guide
Chirp
5-67
the chirp output when the Frequency Sweep parameter is set to Linear, 
Quadratic, or Logarithmic. 
For instance, if you want a chirp signal with a linear instantaneous frequency 
sweep, you should set the 
Frequency Sweep parameter to Linear, and tune 
the linear sweep values by setting other parameters appropriately. The block 
will output a chirp signal, the phase derivative of which is the specified linear 
sweep. This ensures that the instantaneous frequency of the output is the 
linear sweep you desired. For equations describing the linear, quadratic, and 
logarithmic sweeps, see “Equations for Output Computation” on page 5-65.
Output Computation Method for Swept Cosine Frequency Sweep. To generate the swept 
cosine chirp signal, the block sets the swept cosine chirp output as follows.
Note that Equation 5-1 does not hold for the swept cosine chirp, so the 
user-defined frequency sweep, f
i
(t), is not the actual output frequency sweep, 
f
i(actual)
(t), of the swept cosine chirp. Thus, the swept cosine output may not 
behave as you expect. To learn more about swept cosine chirp behavior, see 
“Cautions Regarding the Swept Cosine Sweep” on page 5-67 and “Equations for 
Output Computation” on page 5-65.
Cautions Regarding the Swept Cosine Sweep
If you want a linearly swept chirp signal, we recommend you use a linear 
frequency sweep. Though a swept cosine frequency sweep also yields a linearly 
swept chirp signal, the output may have unexpected frequency content. For 
details, see the following two sections.
Linear, quadratic, or logarithmic chirp 
signal with phase 
Phase derivative is instantaneous 
frequency
(5-1)
Swept cosine chirp 
output (Equation 5-1 
does not hold.)
y
chirp
t() ψt() φ
0
+()cos=
ψ t()
f
i
t()
1
2π
------
dψ t()
dt
---------------
⋅=
y
chirp
t() ψt() φ
0
+()cos 2πf
i
t()t φ
0
+()cos==










