Effacer les filtres
Effacer les filtres

fft scalloping or window effect

12 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 15 Fév 2012
why is the magnitude higher in the plot below without using the flattop window than when it is used. I thought the flattop window should compensate for the window effect
fs=1000;
T=1/fs;
N=512;
n=0:1:512-1;
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
xt=sin(2*pi*101.6*t);
xn=sin(2*pi*101.6/fs*n);
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
f=fs*(0:length(xn)-1)/length(xn)
wn = flattopwin(N);
% xn=xn(:);
% xn=xn.*(wn);
Xk=fft(xn,length(xn));
% Xk=(Xk)';
G=abs(Xk);
plot(wn)

Réponse acceptée

Wayne King
Wayne King le 16 Fév 2012
Lisa, you are correcting above for the window, which is what I said initially. You're not working with power in the above example, which is why you are only using sum(w).
The factor of two gives you the correction for a single-sided spectral estimate for all frequencies except 0 and the Nyquist.
You should not multiply 0 and the Nyquist by two.
The mistake you have is that you are plotting the whole spectrum [-Nyquist,Nyquist). You only want to apply the factor of two if you are plotting just a single side, so:
fs=1000;
T=1/fs;
N=512;
n=0:1:512-1;
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
xn=2*sin(2*pi*100/fs*n);
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
w=flattopwin(N);
xn=xn(:);
xn1=xn.*w;
ws=sum(w);
Xk = fft(xn1);
Xk = Xk(1:length(Xk)/2+1);
Xk = Xk.*(1/ws);
Xk(2:end-1) = Xk(2:end-1)*2;
plot(abs(Xk));
  3 commentaires
Wayne King
Wayne King le 16 Fév 2012
Lisa, I used 2 as the amplitude in the above example (not 1). Change it to 1 and you see that you now get approximately 1 as the amplitude estimate. Or change it to 4 and see what happens. I have to tried to tell you many times in this thread what the job of sum(w) is. You have to divide out the effect of the window, that is what 1/sum(w) is doing.
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 16 Fév 2012
Thanks a million, now i have a better understanding of fft and its scaling!

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Plus de réponses (4)

Wayne King
Wayne King le 15 Fév 2012
Hi Lisa, If you use the msspectrum method for spectrum.periodogram with the flat top window, you see that it does an awfully good job.
Fs = 1e3;
t = linspace(0,1,1000);
x = cos(2*pi*100*t);
Hft = msspectrum(spectrum.periodogram('Flat Top'),x,'Fs',1e3,'NFFT',length(x));
sqrt(2*Hft.Data(101))
Hnw = msspectrum(spectrum.periodogram,x,'Fs',1e3,'NFFT',length(x));
sqrt(2*Hnw.Data(101))
% flat top actually does a better job than no window
  1 commentaire
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 15 Fév 2012
how do i convert Hft to the type n*m double because i need to use is subsequently

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Wayne King
Wayne King le 15 Fév 2012
Lisa, you have to compensate for the L2 norm of the window, regardless of which window you use. Keep in mind that you are multiplying the signal by the window, which means that you are convolving the signal's spectrum with the spectrum of the window.
  4 commentaires
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 15 Fév 2012
how do i convert Hft to the type n*m double because i need to use is subsequently
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 15 Fév 2012
One last question please , why is the magnitude higher with no window than with a flattop window in my code?

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Wayne King
Wayne King le 15 Fév 2012
The L2 norm is the energy of the window, not the length.
You can use Hft.Data that has the doubles that you need.
Hft.Frequencies has the corresponding frequencies.
  3 commentaires
Wayne King
Wayne King le 16 Fév 2012
Lisa, I have told you. Hft.Data is what you want and that is type double.
Lisa Justin
Lisa Justin le 16 Fév 2012
Hi Wayne If i do this i get the frequency at 1 but i do not know what the scale 2/Ws, I really like to know to understand more.
fs=1000;
T=1/fs;
N=512;
n=0:1:512-1;
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
xt=sin(2*pi*100*t);
xn=sin(2*pi*100/fs*n);
t=(0:1:N-1)*T;
f=fs*(0:length(xn)-1)/length(xn)
w=flattopwin(N);
xn=xn(:);
xn1=xn.*w;
ws=sum(w);
sca=2/(Ws);
Xk=(fft(xn1,length(xn1))).*sca;
plot(abs(Xk))
What does sca=2/Ws do in this code?

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Dr. Seis
Dr. Seis le 16 Fév 2012
Nooooo... The FFT should be scaled by the time increment (dt = 1/fs). You apply this correction to ALL the amplitudes in the frequency domain, not just the ones that aren't at 0 Hz or the Nyquist.
See my reasons here:
It has to do with the conservation of energy between the time domain and its representation in the frequency domain.

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