Fourier Transform

Revision as of 23:54, 13 December 2015 by Bbecane (talk | contribs)

The Fourier and inverse Fourier transforms convert a time-series into a power spectrum and viseversa. These are well-known transformations that are employed for many applications including finding and characterizing periodicities in time-series analysis and regression; fast convolution and de-convolution; transfer function modeling in systems analysis; solving systems of differential equations; Bayesian analysis using characteristic functions; and signal filtering.

The discrete Fourier transform involves a time domain (corresponding to an index) and a frequency domain (corresponding to a frequency index). The time points are equally spaced at internals of Δt, and the frequency points are equally spaced at ΔF . Both index have npoints. The intervals spacings are related as

[math]\displaystyle{ \Delta t =\frac{1}{n \Delta t} }[/math]

The quantity 1/(Δt) is called the sampling frequency, which should be at least twice the smallest frequency that is present in the underlying continuous signal. See FFT on the Analytica Wiki for additional details.

FFT(x, t, freq)

Computes the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) of the time-series x, indexed by t, and returns the discrete frequency spectrum as a complex array indexed by freq. It performs this calculation using the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithm. The indexes t and freq must have the same length. This is a complex-valued function -- even if x is real-valued, the result in general will be an array of complex numbers. You can apply the Abs() function to the result to obtain the magnitude of the frequency component if you are not interested in the phase. The discrete Fourier transform is defined as

[math]\displaystyle{ H_k = \sum_{t=0}^{n-1} x_{t}e^{2j\pi t k /n} }[/math]

The computation is fastest when the length of the indexes is a power of 2. It is also reasonably efficient when all the prime factors of the length of the index is small. So, for example, it is fairly efficient when the indexes are a power of 10, since the length factors to powers of 2 and 5, both of which are still small. The computation time increases approximately quadratically with the square of the largest factor.

Library: Advanced math

Examples: For usage examples, please see FFT on the Analytica Wiki.

FFTInv(x, freq, t)

Computes the inverse Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) using the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithm. The frequency spectrum, x, is indexed by freq, and typically consists of complex numbers encoding both the magnitude and phase of each frequency. Returns the time-series with the indicated spectrum, indexed by t. The indexes freq and t must have the same length.


The inverse DFT is defined as

See Also

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