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[b]Finding amplitude from PSD data?[/b] 1

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Parsnip

Mechanical
Apr 30, 2003
46
A question to those of you who probably have a far greater knowledge about this than me!
I have a PSD plot (g2/Hz) against frequency, there are very distinct peaks at certain frequencies. Very simply I want to find out what the displacement of the object would be at these frequencies.
I am sure this must be easy but.....
Thanks alot in advance
Parsnip
 
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Hello,

What do you mean, the travel of the vibration head or the deflection on the part due to Fn?

Tobalcane
"If you avoid failure, you also avoid success."
 
Afternoon,
Basically the accelerometer was mounted on the vertical axis of the excited part, the PSD was 0.004 g2/Hz at 504Hz, what I want to try and find out is how much has that part moved. Does that make sense?
Cheers
Parsnip
 
If these frequencies are continuously present, then the double integral of A*sin(2pi*f*t) will give you the maximum displacement of a sinusoidal motion with that acceleration.

BUT, unless the random background is VERY low, the total random displacements might exceed the contribution from any single line.

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
Oh, I should mention that it's usually easier to assume a sinusoidal displacement d*sin(2pi*f*t) and differentiate twice: d*(2pi*f)^2, which you set equal to the acceleration and solve for d

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
504 Hz~ 3000 rad/s

a~0.6 m/s^2 rms

x~5*10^-6 m rms

Cheers

Greg Locock

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips.
 
"PSD was 0.004 g2/Hz at 504Hz"

How do we convert that PSD into acceleration in g's?

I would assume two steps:
1 - Integrate over a certain frequency band.
2 - Take the square root.

What frequency band should be used for step 1?

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Yes, you have to know the frequency band. If the data was taken digitally then the band width = sample rate/frame length. If the frequency band is small enough then you would just multiply instead of integrate.

So for instance, in this case, suppose the sample rate was 8192 pts/sec and the frame length was 1024 points, then the frequency resolution would be 8192/1024 = 8 hertz. Then, using the OP's data:

Average amplitude = sqrt[.004 g2/hz* 8 hz] = .179 g
Peak Displacement = (.179 * 386 )/((2*pi*504)**2) = .00000689 inches
 
Sorry, yes I got the wrong units. Again.
that should be m/Hz


Cheers

Greg Locock

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips.
 
Thanks for all your help - I reckon that should do me great.
Cheers
Parsnip
 
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