When calculating the standard deviation of arrays of complex numbers c, why is std(c) not equal to std(abs(c))?
10 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
for example, when both the real and imaginary components are normally distributed:
c = randn(100,1) + i*randn(100,1);
>> std(c)
ans =
1.5367
>> std(abs(c))
ans =
0.7312
Looking at how Matlab calculates these, it appears that the modulus of c is used in both instances. Am I wrong?
Thanks for your help.
0 comentarios
Respuestas (2)
seackone
el 1 de Mayo de 2018
Hi, I also want to calculate the standard deviation of a complex number.. At my research, I found your question. But std(c) and std(abs(c)) is not the same!
For example:
A = [1+1i*1 1+1i*2]
The mean of A is:
mean(A) = 1/2 * (1+1i*1 + 1+1i*2) = 1+1i*1.5
Now you can calculate the standard deviation..
But std(abs(A)) is an other equation:
abs(A) = [1.412 2.2361]
and the mean:
mean(abs(A)) = 1.8251
you got a different matrix and a different mean, so the result of the standard deviation isn't the same. If you want, you can calculate the example to the end and the results are:
std(A) = 0.70..
std(abs(A)) = 0.58..
I hope I could help (maybe not you, because the post is more then a year old..)
0 comentarios
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Creating and Concatenating Matrices en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!