Wavelet bandwith, centre frequency
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The Wavelet Toolbox provides the fucntion scal2frq which gives a so called pseudo-frequency to a corresponding scale.
As I understand it, each scale represents a daughter wavelet. In contrast to a periodic sine wave doesn´t a wavelet represent a frequency range rather than one frequency?
How can one calculate the bandwidth of a wavelet?
Is there a way of getting the actual function of the scaled wavelets used in cwt in order to perform an fft on them?
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Wayne King
2011 年 11 月 19 日
Hi Chris, there are a couple things you can do:
1.) If you want to see the support of wavelets at different scales, you can input a shifted Kronecker delta sequence
x = zeros(1000,1);
x(500) = 1;
cfs = cwt(x,1:2:64,'sym8');
% next part obviously not needed
for nn = 1:32
plot(cfs(nn,:)); pause(0.2);
end
2.) The other thing is that the Wavelet Toolbox now has a DFT-based continuous wavelet transform, implemented in cwtft.m and an inverse CWT in icwtft.m. The wavelets supported in cwtft have their Fourier transforms explicit. See the reference page for cwtft.m
Also see:
for some examples.
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その他の回答 (1 件)
Wayne King
2011 年 11 月 19 日
Hi Chris, here is a quick example of the first option above:
x = zeros(1000,1);
x(500) = 1;
cfs = cwt(x,1:2:64,'sym8');
Fs = 1000;
wavdft = abs(fft(cfs(5:10:30,:)'));
wavdft = wavdft(1:length(x)/2+1,:);
freq = 0:(Fs/length(x)):500;
plot(freq,abs(wavdft),'linewidth',2);
xlabel('Hz'); ylabel('Magnitude');
legend('Scale 10','Scale 30','Scale 60');
参考
カテゴリ
Help Center および File Exchange で Continuous Wavelet Transforms についてさらに検索
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