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I'm interested about aliasing in digital audio and I wonder if aliasing can be produced by simple mixing of band-limited signals. As I know a band limited signal can contain frequencies up to sample rate/2 frequency, the so-called Nyquist frequency. Is this right?
If that is so, what will happen if an harmonic in a band-limited signal at Nyquist frequency is added to a 90 degrees out-of-phase replica of it? Will this create an harmonic with double frequency and could such an addition create aliasing?

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No. Adding two waves at the same frequency results in another wave of the same frequency. Depending on the phases, there can be anywhere from complete constructive interference to maximum destructive interference. If the amplitudes are the same there can be complete cancellation. This applies to the Nyquist frequency too.

See the math from my answer to FFT Frequency bin relationship.

Hope this helps.

Ced

Cedron Dawg
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  • Thanks, if I add two sawtooth waves 90 degrees out of phase (in the time domain) don't I get a signal with double frequency? This confuses me –  Mar 26 '18 at 15:54
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    @John Am, In your question you asked about harmonics, which are pure tones. A saw tooth is a summation of harmonics, it already has the higher frequency tones embedded within it. – Cedron Dawg Mar 26 '18 at 15:57
  • So in reality the summation just lead to different harmonics amplitudes and the fundamental does not change neither new harmonics are created. I think it is clear now. Thanks –  Mar 26 '18 at 15:59
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    @John Am, that is correct. It is even possible that the fundamentals cancel each other, and even the lower harmonics and all that is left is the higher harmonics. The frequency of the aggregate waveform will remain the same (unless something like all the odd harmonics are knocked out, but that would have to be a contrived case.) – Cedron Dawg Mar 26 '18 at 16:07