Line 12: Line 12:
 
Some pages discussing or using Discrete Fourier Transform
 
Some pages discussing or using Discrete Fourier Transform
 
*[[Student_summary_Discrete_Fourier_transform_ECE438F09|A summary page about the DFT written by a student]] from [[ECE438]]
 
*[[Student_summary_Discrete_Fourier_transform_ECE438F09|A summary page about the DFT written by a student]] from [[ECE438]]
 +
*[[Notes_on_Discrete_Fourier_Transform|Course notes on DFT]]
 +
*[[Exercise_effect_of_zero_padding_on_DFT_ECE438F11|What is the effect of zero padding a signal on its DFT?]]
 
*[[Practice_question_1_eECE439F10|Practice Question on DFT computation]] from [[ECE438]]
 
*[[Practice_question_1_eECE439F10|Practice Question on DFT computation]] from [[ECE438]]
 
*[[Compute DFT practice no1 ECE438F11|Practice Question on DFT computation]] from [[ECE438]]
 
*[[Compute DFT practice no1 ECE438F11|Practice Question on DFT computation]] from [[ECE438]]

Revision as of 12:12, 2 December 2011

Discrete Fourier Transform

Definition: let x[n] be a discrete-time signal with Period N. Then the Discrete Fourier Transform X[k] of x[n] is the discrete-time signal defined by

$ X [k] = \sum_{k=0}^{N-1} x[n].e^{-J.2pi.kn/N}. $

Conversely, the Inverse Discrete Fourier transform is

$ x [n] = (1/N) \sum_{k=0}^{N-1} X[k].e^{J.2pi.kn/N} $


Some pages discussing or using Discrete Fourier Transform

Click here to view all the pages in the discrete Fourier transform category.

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang