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  2. Frequency domain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_domain

    The inverse Fourier transform converts the frequency-domain function back to the time-domain function. A spectrum analyzer is a tool commonly used to visualize electronic signals in the frequency domain. A frequency-domain representation may describe either a static function or a particular time period of a dynamic function (signal or system).

  3. Time–frequency analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timefrequency_analysis

    In signal processing, timefrequency analysis comprises those techniques that study a signal in both the time and frequency domains simultaneously, using various timefrequency representations. Rather than viewing a 1-dimensional signal (a function, real or complex-valued, whose domain is the real line) and some transform (another function ...

  4. Discrete-time Fourier transform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discrete-time_Fourier...

    From uniformly spaced samples it produces a function of frequency that is a periodic summation of the continuous Fourier transform of the original continuous function. In simpler terms, when you take the DTFT of regularly-spaced samples of a continuous signal, you get repeating (and possibly overlapping) copies of the signal's frequency ...

  5. Time–frequency representation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timefrequency...

    A timefrequency representation (TFR) is a view of a signal (taken to be a function of time) represented over both time and frequency. [1] Timefrequency analysis means analysis into the timefrequency domain provided by a TFR. This is achieved by using a formulation often called "TimeFrequency Distribution", abbreviated as TFD.

  6. Time domain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_domain

    In the time domain, the signal or function's value is known for all real numbers, for the case of continuous time, or at various separate instants in the case of discrete time. An oscilloscope is a tool commonly used to visualize real-world signals in the time domain. A time-domain graph shows how a signal changes with time, whereas a frequency ...

  7. Fourier transform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourier_transform

    The trade-off between the compaction of a function and its Fourier transform can be formalized in the form of an uncertainty principle by viewing a function and its Fourier transform as conjugate variables with respect to the symplectic form on the timefrequency domain: from the point of view of the linear canonical transformation, the ...

  8. Natural frequency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_frequency

    Natural frequency, measured in terms of eigenfrequency, is the rate at which an oscillatory system tends to oscillate in the absence of disturbance. A foundational example pertains to simple harmonic oscillators, such as an idealized spring with no energy loss wherein the system exhibits constant-amplitude oscillations with a constant frequency.

  9. Discrete time and continuous time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discrete_time_and...

    A continuous signal or a continuous-time signal is a varying quantity (a signal) whose domain, which is often time, is a continuum (e.g., a connected interval of the reals). That is, the function's domain is an uncountable set. The function itself need not to be continuous.