This block configures the GenericNoise block to produce band-limited white noise. This is performed by using a normal distribution with mu=0 and sigma = sqrt(noisePower/samplePeriod).
In order for this block to produce meaningful results, you should set the following parameters:
Ideal white noise contains all frequencies, including infinitely high ones. However, these usually cannot be observed in physical systems, since all physical systems in one way or the other contain low-pass filters. It is thus sufficient to generate a limited range of frequency content in the noise signal, as long as it exceeds the frequencies of the subsequent dynamics by a sufficiently high factor (of e.g. 100).
Ideal white noise has a flat, i.e. constant, power spectral density for all frequencies. It has thus infinitely high power, because the total power of a signal can be obtained by integrating the power spectral density over all frequencies. The following three ways to think of the power of a signal may be helpful:
In order to set the correct level of the band-limited white noise power spectral density,
the variance of its normal distribtution can thus be influenced directly.
Recalling that the samplePeriod of the noise signal generates frequency content in the
range ±0.5/samplePeriod, the variance must be increased to generate sufficient
total signal power. The total power must match the product of the noisePower and its
frequency bandwidth 1/samplePeriod: signal power = signal variance = noisePower / samplePeriod
.
Example NoiseExamples.DrydenContinuousTurbulence demonstrates how to utilize this block to model wind gust.