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Journal ArticleDOI

Discrete Hartley transform

Ronald N. Bracewell
- 01 Dec 1983 - 
- Vol. 73, Iss: 12, pp 1832-1835
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TLDR
The discrete Hartley transform (DHT) resembles the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) but is free from two characteristics of the DFT that are sometimes computationally undesirable and promises to speed up Fourier-transform calculations.
Abstract
The discrete Hartley transform (DHT) resembles the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) but is free from two characteristics of the DFT that are sometimes computationally undesirable. The inverse DHT is identical with the direct transform, and so it is not necessary to keep track of the +i and −i versions as with the DFT. Also, the DHT has real rather than complex values and thus does not require provision for complex arithmetic or separately managed storage for real and imaginary parts. Nevertheless, the DFT is directly obtainable from the DHT by a simple additive operation. In most image-processing applications the convolution of two data sequences f1 and f2 is given by DHT of [(DHT of f1) × (DHT of f2)], which is a rather simpler algorithm than the DFT permits, especially if images are. to be manipulated in two dimensions. It permits faster computing. Since the speed of the fast Fourier transform depends on the number of multiplications, and since one complex multiplication equals four real multiplications, a fast Hartley transform also promises to speed up Fourier-transform calculations. The name discrete Hartley transform is proposed because the DHT bears the same relation to an integral transform described by Hartley [ HartleyR. V. L., Proc. IRE30, 144 ( 1942)] as the DFT bears to the Fourier transform.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Power Efficient Optical OFDM Based on Hartley Transform for Intensity-Modulated Direct-Detection Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) scheme, suitable for intensity-modulated direct-detection systems, where the modulation/demodulation processing takes advantage of the fast Hartley transform algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unified parallel lattice structures for time-recursive discrete cosine/sine/Hartley transforms

TL;DR: It is shown that the DCT, DST, DHT and their inverse transforms share an almost identical lattice structure so that they are very suitable for VLSI implementation for high-speed applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical correlator performance of binary phase-only filters using Fourier and Hartley transforms

TL;DR: This work demonstrates that the quality of the correlation signal can also depend on the technique used in the synthesis of the BPOF, and that BPOFs made using the Hartley transform provide superior false correlation rejection and more uniformly sized correlation signals for heavily multiplexed BPOs.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

FPGA implementations of fast fourier transforms for real-time signal and image processing

TL;DR: Results show that the parallel implementation of 2-D FFT achieves virtually linear speed-up and real-time performance for large matrix sizes, and an FPGA-based parametrisable environment based on the developed parallel 2- D FFT architecture is presented as a solution for frequency-domain image filtering application.
Book

Advanced biomedical image analysis

TL;DR: This text serves as an authoritative resource and self-study guide explaining sophisticated techniques of quantitative image analysis, with a focus on biomedical applications, that offers both theory and practical examples for immediate application of the topics.
References
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Book

The Fourier Transform and Its Applications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a broad overview of Fourier Transform and its relation with the FFT and the Hartley Transform, as well as the Laplace Transform and the Laplacian Transform.
Journal ArticleDOI

A More Symmetrical Fourier Analysis Applied to Transmission Problems

TL;DR: In this article, the Fourier identity is expressed in a more symmetrical form which leads to certain analogies between the function of the original variable and its transform, and it permits a function of time to be analyzed into two independent sets of sinusoidal components, one of which is represented in terms of positive frequencies, and the other of negative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Harmonic analysis with a real frequency function—I. aperiodic case

TL;DR: An integral transform which converts a real spatial (or temporal) function into a real frequency function is introduced in this paper, and the properties of this transform are investigated, and it is concluded that this transform is parallel to the Fourier transform and may be applied to all fields in which the FFT has been successfully applied.