obtain the fourier trasnform doing the fft. Do I need to normalize??
1 visualización (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
SYML2nd
el 24 de Jun. de 2019
Hi,
I have a signal in time domain, actually, specific kinetic energy was calculated in time domain and its medium value is 10 m2/s2 (with some peak at 60 m2/s2). I wanted to obtain the Fourier transform of this signal in time domain. Then I did an FFT on the signal and converted to frequency domain; but the amplitude of this kinetic energy in frequency domain is at the magnitude order of 10e6. Why this difference? Should I normalize this FFT in some way to obtain the Fourier trasform? If I do the fft the unit lenght is m2/s2, while if I do the Fourier trasform the unit lenght should be m2/s, so I thought that my problem could be due to a normalization
This is the code (the tket.txt contain the signal, which can be read at the 34th column) can you help me?
tket1=readtable('tket.txt');
tket=table2array(tket1);
Tinc=0.001;
% Tinc is the time step
Fs=1/Tinc;
L=length(tket);
f = Fs*(0:(L/2))/L;
tkef1= fft(tket(:,34:34),L);
fl=length(f);
tkef=tkef1(1:fl,:);
3 comentarios
dpb
el 24 de Jun. de 2019
As Matt J says, "it all depends" on what you're actually trying to compute.
Respuesta aceptada
Matt J
el 24 de Jun. de 2019
Editada: Matt J
el 24 de Jun. de 2019
To approximate a continuous Fourier transform integral, you need to multiply by the time step,
tkef1= fft(tket(:,34:34),L) * Tinc;
Depending on whether you are an engineer or a physicist, you may also need to multiply by 1/sqrt(2*pi), as different professions define the Fourier Transform scaling differently.
4 comentarios
Matt J
el 25 de Jun. de 2019
Editada: Matt J
el 25 de Jun. de 2019
Dviding by L gives the Discrete Time Fourier Series coefficients. Possibly, that is what they were trying to compute.
Más respuestas (0)
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Fourier Analysis and Filtering 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!