Guest
Hello,
I'm doing vibration analysis at a synchrotron and I would like to know what if any information I can garner from amplitudes in the frequency domain.
I understand that the units for a integral fourier transform X{f(t)} are in [Amplitude*Time] I would think this implies [Amplitude/Freq] is that right?
I'm doing the analysis using a MathCad FFT. Are the FFT values in Amplitude/Hz or are they simply amplitudes. For example if I take a finite signal like a sine wave and do an FFT on it I end up with a two finite peaks in the frequency domain. I would think the amplitude of the frequency peaks depends on the data length because the Dirac delta function is convolved with the sinc function.
Long story short what if anything can I garner from peaks in the freq. domain or is it simply the area under the peaks that matters.
Bert
I'm doing vibration analysis at a synchrotron and I would like to know what if any information I can garner from amplitudes in the frequency domain.
I understand that the units for a integral fourier transform X{f(t)} are in [Amplitude*Time] I would think this implies [Amplitude/Freq] is that right?
I'm doing the analysis using a MathCad FFT. Are the FFT values in Amplitude/Hz or are they simply amplitudes. For example if I take a finite signal like a sine wave and do an FFT on it I end up with a two finite peaks in the frequency domain. I would think the amplitude of the frequency peaks depends on the data length because the Dirac delta function is convolved with the sinc function.
Long story short what if anything can I garner from peaks in the freq. domain or is it simply the area under the peaks that matters.
Bert