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See the recommended documentation of this function
cspect
two sided cross-spectral estimate between 2 discrete time signals using the correlation method
Syntax
sm = cspect(nlags, npoints, wtype, x) sm = cspect(nlags, npoints, wtype, x, y) sm = cspect(nlags, npoints, wtype, nx) sm = cspect(nlags, npoints, wtype, nx, ny) [sm, cwp] = cspect(.., wpar)
Arguments
- x
vector, the data of the first signal.
- y
vector, the data of the second signal. If
y
is omitted it is supposed to be equal tox
(auto-correlation). If it is present, it must have the same number of element thanx.
- nx
a scalar : the number of points in the
x
signal. In this case the segments of the x signal are loaded by a user defined function namedgetx
(see below).- ny
a scalar : the number of points in the
y
signal. In this case the segments of they
signal are loaded by a user defined function namedgety
(see below). If presentny
must be equal tonx
.- nlags
number of correlation lags (positive integer)
- npoints
number of transform points (positive integer)
- wtype
The window type
're'
: rectangular'tr'
: triangular'hm'
: Hamming'hn'
: Hann'kr'
: Kaiser, in this case thewpar
argument must be given'ch'
: Chebyshev, in this case thewpar
argument must be given
- wpar
optional parameters for Kaiser and Chebyshev windows:
'kr':
wpar
must be a strictly positive number'ch':
wpar
must be a 2 element vector[main_lobe_width,side_lobe_height]
with0<main_lobe_width<.5
, andside_lobe_height>0
- sm
The power spectral estimate in the interval
[0,1]
of the normalized frequencies. It is a row array of sizenpoints
. The array is real in case of auto-correlation and complex in case of cross-correlation.- cwp
the unspecified Chebyshev window parameter in case of Chebyshev windowing, or an empty matrix.
Description
Computes the cross-spectrum estimate of two signals
x
and y
if both are given and the
auto-spectral estimate of x
otherwise. Spectral
estimate obtained using the correlation method.
The cross-spectrum of two signal x
and y
is defined to be
The correlation method calculates the spectral estimate as the Fourier transform of a modified estimate of the auto/cross correlation function. This auto/cross correlation modified estimate consist of repeatedly calculating estimates of the autocorrelation function from overlapping sub-segments of the data, and then averaging these estimates to obtain the result.
The number of points of the window is
2*nlags-1.
For batch processing, the x
and y
data may be read
segment by segment using the getx
and gety
user
defined functions. These functions have the following syntax:
xk=getx(ns,offset)
and
yk=gety(ns,offset)
where ns
is the
segment size and offset
is the index of the first
element of the segment in the full signal.
Warning
For Scilab version up to 5.0.2 the returned value was the modulus of the current one.
Reference
Oppenheim, A.V., and R.W. Schafer. Discrete-Time Signal Processing, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1999
Examples
rand('normal'); rand('seed',0); x = rand(1:1024-33+1); // make low-pass filter with eqfir [nf, bedge, des, wate] = (33, [0 .1;.125 .5], [1 0], [1 1]); h = eqfir(nf, bedge, des, wate); // filter white data to obtain colored data h1 = [h 0*ones(1:max(size(x))-1)]; x1 = [x 0*ones(1:max(size(h))-1)]; hf = fft(h1,-1); xf = fft(x1,-1); yf = hf .* xf; y = real(fft(yf,1)); sm = cspect(100, 200, 'tr', y); smsize = max(size(sm)); fr = (1:smsize)/smsize; plot(fr, log(sm), 'r')
See also
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