Skip to main contentSkip to search barSkip to navigationSkip to footer
Logo of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland
  • DE
  • EN
  • Home
  • Degree programmes
  • Continuing education

Ten Schools One Goal

The FHNW comprises 10 schools with different specializations. Select a school to see its specific courses, study programmes and information.

Applied Psychology

Architecture, Construction and Geomatics

Art and Design

Music

Computer Science

Life Sciences

School of Education

Social Work

Engineering and Environment

Business

  • Research

    • Research fields
    • Projects
  • Updates and insights

    • News and stories
  • Events

  • Media corner

  • About the School of Engineering and Environment

    • People directory
    • Management Board
  • Institutes

    • Institute of Automation
    • Institute of Bioenergy and Resource Efficiency
    • Institute of Business Engineering
    • Institute of Electric Power Systems
    • Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences
    • Institute of Polymer Engineering
    • Institute of Mathematics and Natural Sciences
    • Institute of Polymer Nanotechnology
    • Institute of Optometry
    • Institute of Product and Production Engineering
    • Institute for Sensors and Electronics
    • Institute of Thermal and Fluid Engineering
    • Laboratories of the School of Engineering and Environment
Logo of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland
  • About the School
    • FHNW School of Engineering and Environment
    • Degree Programmes
    • Continuing Education
    • Collaboration in Research and Services
  • Social Media
    • LinkedIn
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
    • TikTok
    • YouTube
  • About FHNW
    • Organisation
    • Schools
    • Locations
    • FHNW Library
    • Media Relations
  • Support
    • IT Support
    • Inside FHNW
    • Webmail
  • Data Protection
  • Imprint
  • Accessibility
  • Research

    • Research fields
    • Projects
  • Updates and insights

    • News and stories
  • Events

  • Media corner

  • About the School of Engineering and Environment

    • People directory
    • Management Board
  • Institutes

    • Institute of Automation
    • Institute of Bioenergy and Resource Efficiency
    • Institute of Business Engineering
    • Institute of Electric Power Systems
    • Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences
    • Institute of Polymer Engineering
    • Institute of Mathematics and Natural Sciences
    • Institute of Polymer Nanotechnology
    • Institute of Optometry
    • Institute of Product and Production Engineering
    • Institute for Sensors and Electronics
    • Institute of Thermal and Fluid Engineering
    • Laboratories of the School of Engineering and Environment

Type a search term and search continuing education,degree programmes, events, documents and other content.

  • Engineering and Environment
  • Research and services
  • Research
  • Projects
Projects

Authenticity in Music, FHNW School of Engineering and Environment

School of Engineering and Environment


Together with the research centre of the Academy of Music, the Institute for Sensors and Electronics is developing a method to simulate electronic equipment such as guitar amplifiers or effect devices in a purely digital environment.

Project details

University
FHNW School of Engineering and Environment / School of Engineering and Environment, lnstitute for Sensors and Electronics
Guitar photo by Simon Weisser on Unsplash

Technologies

FPGA, signal-flow graphs

Background

The FHNW Academy of Music is concerned with the preservation of music. This idea was carried over into modern times, which raised the question of how to preserve electronic music instruments for posterity. The restoration of hardware is often not possible because necessary spare parts are no longer available. Precise software simulations are not fast enough to be applied in real time. With the new method, it should be possible to simulate any circuit in real time so that it can be used simultaneously with other audio equipment.

Goals

Synthesising strongly non-linear circuits with the help of signal-flow graphs.  Development of hardware which, based on FPGA technology, can simulate the system in real time and cannot be distinguished from the original in a blind test.

Method

The basis is the so-called signal-flow graph method, which enables a graphical representation of a system of equations. It can be used to describe any mixed-signal circuit in the frequency domain. The idea now is to transform the graph 1:1 into the discrete-time domain. Each path is transformed separately into its discrete-time counterpart while retaining the underlying structure of the graph. This new, purely digital description of the system can then be implemented in hardware.

Implementation on hardware brings with it many challenges. Even small circuits result in complex signal-flow graphs in which many signals have to be processed in parallel. Only FPGAs with their large signal processing capacities can calculate such systems in real time. The large dynamic range of analogue components and the required precision place high demands on the numerics, which further increases the complexity of the model. Intensive optimisation work is therefore necessary to simulate real systems with the new method on conventional FPGAs.

For an introduction to signal-flow graphs, check the short course “Signal-flow graphs in 12 short lessons” on https://tube.switch.ch/channels/d206c96c.

Project Information

Execution

FHNW Academy of Music, FHNW Institute for Sensors and Electronics

Duration

1 year

Funding

SNF Spark

Team

Hannes Barfuss, Dominik Hiltbrunner, Thomas Resch, Hanspeter Schmid

School of
Engineering and Environment FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland

  • About the School
    • FHNW School of Engineering and Environment
    • Degree Programmes
    • Continuing Education
    • Collaboration in Research and Services
  • Social Media
    • LinkedIn
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
    • TikTok
    • YouTube
  • About FHNW
    • Organisation
    • Schools
    • Locations
    • FHNW Library
    • Media Relations
  • Support
    • IT Support
    • Inside FHNW
    • Webmail
Logo FHNW - 20 Years
Logo Swiss Universities
Logo European University Association
© University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW)
  • Data Protection
  • Imprint
  • Accessibility
  • DE
  • EN