Why the amplitude of fft computing is a little bit different from a known value?
1 Ansicht (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
André Luiz Regis Monteiro
am 21 Jul. 2014
Kommentiert: André Luiz Regis Monteiro
am 4 Aug. 2014
I was trying test this:
n=5000;
ts=5;
t=[0:ts/n:ts];
x1=sin(2*pi*20*t);
x2=2*sin(2*pi*60*t);
x3=20*sin(2*pi*200*t);
x4=15*sin(2*pi*350*t);
x=x1+x2+x3+x4;
N=length(x);
k=[0:N-1];
T=N/Fs;
freq=k/T;
cutoff=ceil(N/2);
X=fftn(x)/(N/2);
X=abs(X);
stem(freq(1:cutoff),X(1:cutoff))
The magnitudes got different results to 1 (x1); 2 (x2); 20 (x3) and 15 (x4). And more...if "n" has more or less points for computing the fft, the frequencies (20, 60, 200, 350) also change. Why? Can someone help me? Thanks a lot.
0 Kommentare
Akzeptierte Antwort
Wayne King
am 21 Jul. 2014
Bearbeitet: Wayne King
am 21 Jul. 2014
You have to realize that the frequency spacing between DFT elements depends on the length of the DFT and the sampling frequency. If your frequencies do not fall directly on a DFT bin (the spacing is Fs/N where Fs is the sampling frequency and N the length of the DFT) then the energy in a particular component will be mapped to a slightly different frequency.
Here is your example the way you think it should look:
n=5000; ts=5; t=[0:ts/n:ts-ts/n];
x1=sin(2*pi*20*t); x2=2*sin(2*pi*60*t); x3=20*sin(2*pi*200*t);
x4=15*sin(2*pi*350*t); x=x1+x2+x3+x4;
xdft = fft(x);
xdft = xdft(1:length(x)/2+1);
xdft(2:end-1) = 2*xdft(2:end-1);
xdft = xdft./length(x);
df = 1000/length(x);
freq = 0:df:500;
plot(freq,abs(xdft));
xlabel('Hz'); ylabel('Magnitude');
grid on;
You may want to review this:
3 Kommentare
Wayne King
am 22 Jul. 2014
Andre, the frequency spacing in the DFT is Fs/N where Fs is the sampling frequency and N is the number of DFT points.
If you change N = 512, then the frequency spacing is 1000/512. As a result the frequencies in your signal may not correspond to a DFT bin.
For example, your frequency spacing would be 1000/512=1.9531 and 350 is not divisible by 1.9531. Accordingly, the energy in that signal may not get perfectly mapped to one DFT bin and the amplitude estimation may be off. Did you read the example in the link I provided? That is explained.
To get the amplitude correct on a one-sided DFT magnitude plot, yo have to multiply all the frequencies that occur twice in the DFT by 2.
Yes,
df = (n/ts)/length(x);
because (n/ts) is equal to the sampling frequency.
Thank you for accepting my answer if I have helped you.
Weitere Antworten (0)
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Spectral Estimation finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Produkte
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!