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Journal ArticleDOI

The fractional Fourier transform and time-frequency representations

Luís B. Almeida
- 01 Nov 1994 - 
- Vol. 42, Iss: 11, pp 3084-3091
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TLDR
The authors briefly introduce the functional Fourier transform and a number of its properties and present some new results: the interpretation as a rotation in the time-frequency plane, and the FRFT's relationships with time- frequencies such as the Wigner distribution, the ambiguity function, the short-time Fouriertransform and the spectrogram.
Abstract
The functional Fourier transform (FRFT), which is a generalization of the classical Fourier transform, was introduced a number of years ago in the mathematics literature but appears to have remained largely unknown to the signal processing community, to which it may, however, be potentially useful. The FRFT depends on a parameter /spl alpha/ and can be interpreted as a rotation by an angle /spl alpha/ in the time-frequency plane. An FRFT with /spl alpha/=/spl pi//2 corresponds to the classical Fourier transform, and an FRFT with /spl alpha/=0 corresponds to the identity operator. On the other hand, the angles of successively performed FRFTs simply add up, as do the angles of successive rotations. The FRFT of a signal can also be interpreted as a decomposition of the signal in terms of chirps. The authors briefly introduce the FRFT and a number of its properties and then present some new results: the interpretation as a rotation in the time-frequency plane, and the FRFT's relationships with time-frequency representations such as the Wigner distribution, the ambiguity function, the short-time Fourier transform and the spectrogram. These relationships have a very simple and natural form and support the FRFT's interpretation as a rotation operator. Examples of FRFTs of some simple signals are given. An example of the application of the FRFT is also given. >

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The T-class of time–frequency distributions: Time-only kernels with amplitude estimation

TL;DR: It is shown that separable time-lag kernels should be lag-independent (or time-only) for best resolution and non-parametric amplitude estimation is possible directly from the T-distributions in case of FM signals, a property that is not verified by other TFDs.
Journal ArticleDOI

FrWT-PPCA-Based R-peak Detection for Improved Management of Healthcare System

TL;DR: Fourier analysis is well known to provide complete information of the frequencies present in a signal, but in the process, time information is lost and its time-frequency representation is changed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Novel convolution and correlation theorems for the fractional Fourier transform

Deyun Wei
- 01 Apr 2016 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new convolution as well as correlation structure for the fractional Fourier transform (FRFT) which have similar time domain to frequency domain mapping results as the classical FT.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image and video processing using discrete fractional transforms

TL;DR: Comparison of performance states that discrete fractional Fourier transform is superior in compression, while discrete fractionsal cosine transform is better in encryption of image and video.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quaternionic one-dimensional fractional Fourier transform

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduced quaternionic fractional Fourier transform of integrable functions on ℝ and proved that it is satisfying all the expected properties like linearity, inversion formula, Parseval's formula, convolution theorem and product theorem.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Time-frequency distributions-a review

TL;DR: A review and tutorial of the fundamental ideas and methods of joint time-frequency distributions is presented with emphasis on the diversity of concepts and motivations that have gone into the formation of the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linear and quadratic time-frequency signal representations

TL;DR: A tutorial review of both linear and quadratic representations is given, and examples of the application of these representations to typical problems encountered in time-varying signal processing are provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fractional Order Fourier Transform and its Application to Quantum Mechanics

TL;DR: In this article, a generalized operational calculus is developed, paralleling the familiar one for the ordinary transform, which provides a convenient technique for solving certain classes of ordinary and partial differential equations which arise in quantum mechanics from classical quadratic hamiltonians.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image rotation, Wigner rotation, and the fractional Fourier transform

TL;DR: In this article, the degree p = 1 is assigned to the ordinary Fourier transform and the degree P = 1/2 to the fractional transform, where p is the degree of the optical fiber.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time-frequency representation of digital signals and systems based on short-time Fourier analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a representation for discrete-time signals and systems based on short-time Fourier analysis and showed that a class of linear-filtering problems can be represented as the product of the time-varying frequency response of the filter multiplied by the short time Fourier transform of the input signal.
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