GregLocock
Automotive
- Apr 10, 2001
- 23,767
Back when I was young and naive I came across Cesptral Nyalysis or whatever silly word game they want to call it. Since then I have occasionally tried it on real signals with strong harmonic structure, and usually found it to be less than helpful. I suppose it is fair to say that I usually have the luxury of looking at variable speed data, so a waterfall or campbell's diagram is helpful and easy to interpret.
Anyway, here's an example of a cepstrum, showing how the presence of noise and pure tones seem to render it less than powerful. The blue signal, which is the useful red one with some noise and tones added, fails to strongly identify the correct harmonic spacing.
Sorry about the axis labelling, apart from the first the x axis is in bins, and the y axis is in whatevers.
So am I missing some trick here?
Cheers
Greg Locock
New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
Anyway, here's an example of a cepstrum, showing how the presence of noise and pure tones seem to render it less than powerful. The blue signal, which is the useful red one with some noise and tones added, fails to strongly identify the correct harmonic spacing.
Sorry about the axis labelling, apart from the first the x axis is in bins, and the y axis is in whatevers.
So am I missing some trick here?
Cheers
Greg Locock
New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376