No obvious maximum in power spectral density graph
1 vue (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
sarah Abdellahi
le 19 Sep 2018
Commenté : Star Strider
le 19 Sep 2018
I am extremely new to signal processing.
I have sampled the wind velocity downstream of a fan at 100 HZ and here is the time history:
I would like to plot the power density. Using pwelch I get the following plot which doesn't seem meaningful to me. I simply use pwelch(V,[],[],[],100). Based on Matlab documentations, I should get a curve with a peak! Can someone help me figuring out what the problem is? Or if this odd-shaped pwelch plot is actually meaningful and I can get it?
0 commentaires
Réponse acceptée
Star Strider
le 19 Sep 2018
You are seeing a peak, just not the one you’re anticipating. The reason is that you have a significant d-c (constant) offset in your signal.
To Illustrate —
t = linspace(0, 1);
V1 = sin(2*pi*t) + randn(size(t));
V2 = sin(2*pi*t) + randn(size(t)) + 10;
figure
pwelch(V1,[],[],[],100)
figure
pwelch(V2,[],[],[],100)
See if subtracting the mean of your signal produces the result you want:
pwelch(V-mean(V),[],[],[],100)
I¹m thinking it will.
2 commentaires
Star Strider
le 19 Sep 2018
The peak is there. It is at very low frequencies. The rest is noise.
If you want to see the amplitude spectrum, use the fft (link) function. That may actually be what you want.
Remember to subtract the mean to calculate it as well, so the d-c offset does not obscure the peaks you are interested in.
Plus de réponses (0)
Voir également
Catégories
En savoir plus sur Spectral Measurements dans Help Center et File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!