Sinewave with log frequency - Shows the wrong frequency content
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Djamil Boulahbal
on 24 Oct 2024
Commented: Djamil Boulahbal
on 5 Nov 2024
I'm struggling with a rather basic problem. I create a sinewave with a continuously increasing frequency:
NPTS=500000;
A=(log(50)-log(7))/450;
time = linspace(0,450,NPTS)';
freq = 7*exp(A*time); % The frequency varies from 7 to 50 Hz
Y = sin(2*pi*freq.*time);
Then, when I do an FFT vs. Time of the Y trace, I find that the highest frequency in the signal is close to 150 Hz.
What am I missing here?
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Accepted Answer
Mathieu NOE
on 5 Nov 2024
hello
you have to compute the angle increment vs time then take the sine of that angle (or, in other words, do the integral of the time varying frequency and then take the sine of that angle )
NPTS=500000;
t_final = 450;
A=(log(50)-log(7))/t_final;
time = linspace(0,t_final,NPTS)';
dt = mean(diff(time));
fs = 1/dt
freq = 7*exp(A*time); % The frequency varies from 7 to 50 Hz
freq(1)
freq(end)
ang = cumsum(2*pi*freq)*dt; % integral of the time varying frequency
Y = sin(ang);
% spectrogram plot
nfft = 1000;
overlap = 0.75; % 75% overlap
spectrogram(Y,hanning(nfft),round(overlap*nfft),nfft,fs,'yaxis')
ylim([0 100])
3 Comments
Mathieu NOE
on 5 Nov 2024
hello again
yes this is the usual remark when someone tries to generate variable frequency signals (sweeps)
always remember you are dealing with variable frequency and what you want at the end is the sine of an angle (not a frequency)
if your frequency is steady , you can write Y = sin(2*pi*freq.*time);
but if you have a variable frequency, start with the equation that describes how this frequency varies , multiply by 2*pi to convert to pulsation and then time integrate to get the angle
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