By having them appropriately low-passed and sampled. Digital audio is sampled. 
If you sample a real-world signal without putting a lowpass filter on it first, 
you will getthese frequencies of over pi radians. Notice how the higher 
frequency (3pi/2) gets sampled less than twice in one period, and the highest 
frequency thatcould be sampled twice a period is pi radians/sample. So, before 
sampling we need to put a lowpass filter on the signal in order to filter out 
everythinghigher in frequency than pi radians/sample. Otherwise, the 
higher-frequency real signals will "go past" the 2 sampling points and you will 
get 2 different sine waves that could be represented by the same samples. 
Therefore in practice, digital audio assumes that the samples represent sine 
waves lower than pi radiansin frequency. so if you did sample without low 
passing first, you would get these weird lower-frequency sine waves in your 
digital signal that correspond to air pressure waves (sounds) higher than the 
range of human hearing, assuming a normal sample-rate
Also notice that if you have a real sampled cosine wave w/ higher frequency 
than pi radians/sample it can be represented as the frequency (frequency in 
radians - 2pi) which will be negative. This negative frequency will be the same 
as the positive frequency it will be confused for when sampled.If you have a 
sine wave that's higher than pi radians/sample, it will also be confused for 
the same corresponding negative frequency, but negative (shifted by 1/2 
aperiod).
Since all sinusoids are linear combinations of sine and cosine, this means that 
any sampled sinusoid of frequency higher than pi radians will be confused for 
thecorresponding frequency of radians if the higher frequency on the unit 
circle were flipped over the x axis from the negative to the positive-y part. 
(with thelower-frequency sine portion being multiplied by -1)
and obviously if the signal to be sampled is higher than 2pi radians/sample in 
frequency it will be confused for the corresponding lower frequency on the unit 
circle,in radians/sample
Hope this helps,    -Seb

-----Original Message-----
From: Billy Stiltner <billy.stilt...@gmail.com>
To: pd-list@lists.iem.at <pd-l...@mail.iem.at>
Sent: Thu, May 23, 2019 10:14 am
Subject: [PD] audio signal distinguishing

from chapter 3 of theory and techniques of electronic music"Figure 3.1: Two 
real sinusoids, with angular frequencies π/2 and 3π/2, showingthat they 
coincide at integers. A digital audio signal can’t distinguish betweenthe two."
How does an audio signal distinguish 2 
waveforms?_______________________________________________
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