DocumentCode
944229
Title
Envelopes and pre-envelopes of real waveforms
Author
Dugundji, J.
Volume
4
Issue
1
fYear
1958
fDate
3/1/1958 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
53
Lastpage
57
Abstract
Rice\´s formula
for the "envelope" of a given signal is very cumbersome; in any case where the signal is not a single sine wave, the analytical use and explicit calculation of the envelope is practically prohibitive. A different formula for the envelope is given herein which is much simpler and easier to handle analytically. We show precisely that if
is the Hilbert transform of
, then Rice\´s envelope of
is the absolute value of the complex-valued function
. The function
is called the pre-envelope of
and is shown to be involved implicitly in some other usual engineering practices. The Hilbert transform
is then studied; it is shown that
has the same power spectrum as
and is uncorrelated with
at the same time instant. Further, the autocorrelation of the pre-envelope of
is twice the pre-envelope of the autocorrelation of
. By using the pre-envelope, the envelope of the output of a linear filter is easily calculated, and this is used to compute the first probability density for the envelope of the output of an arbitrary linear filter when the input is an arbitrary signal plus Gaussian noise. An application of pre-envelopes to the frequency modulation of an arbitrary waveform by another arbitrary waveform is also given.
for the "envelope" of a given signal is very cumbersome; in any case where the signal is not a single sine wave, the analytical use and explicit calculation of the envelope is practically prohibitive. A different formula for the envelope is given herein which is much simpler and easier to handle analytically. We show precisely that if
is the Hilbert transform of
, then Rice\´s envelope of
is the absolute value of the complex-valued function
. The function
is called the pre-envelope of
and is shown to be involved implicitly in some other usual engineering practices. The Hilbert transform
is then studied; it is shown that
has the same power spectrum as
and is uncorrelated with
at the same time instant. Further, the autocorrelation of the pre-envelope of
is twice the pre-envelope of the autocorrelation of
. By using the pre-envelope, the envelope of the output of a linear filter is easily calculated, and this is used to compute the first probability density for the envelope of the output of an arbitrary linear filter when the input is an arbitrary signal plus Gaussian noise. An application of pre-envelopes to the frequency modulation of an arbitrary waveform by another arbitrary waveform is also given.Keywords
Hilbert transforms; Waveform analysis; Autocorrelation; Chirp modulation; Electrical engineering; Frequency modulation; Gaussian noise; Information theory; Nonlinear filters; Power engineering and energy; Probability; Signal analysis; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Theory, IRE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-1000
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TIT.1958.1057435
Filename
1057435
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