How to get a period of cosinus function ?

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Hi,
I have to find the period of the cosinus function using only the vector time and the vector data of the function.
Cosinus function
Vector data
time data
  2 Comments
Rik
Rik on 25 May 2020
This looks like the sum of two cosines, not just one. Do you want the cosine with the largest magnitude? Are you allowed to use a Fourrier transform?
Ilan Moshe
Ilan Moshe on 25 May 2020
Yes, it is actually a sum of cosines by using this code :
function [t,x]=getSumOfCosines(delta_t,Tlim,f)
t=0:delta_t:Tlim;
x=sum(cos(2*pi*t.*f));
end
The only restriction is to not use any loop and to use only x and t vectors.

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Accepted Answer

Rik
Rik on 25 May 2020
Edited: Rik on 25 May 2020
Because this is homework, I won't provide a copy-paste ready solution.
If you follow the example from the documentation for fft, you get the code below.
%recreate data
delta_t=0.1;Tlim=5;f=[1;2];
t=0:delta_t:Tlim;
x=sum(cos(2*pi*t.*f));
%figure(1),clf(1)
%plot(t,x)
Fs=1/mean(diff(t));%sampling frequency
L=numel(x);
Y = fft(x);
P2 = abs(Y/L);
P1 = P2(1:floor(L/2)+1);
f = Fs*(0:(L/2))/L;
figure(1),clf(1)
plot(f,P1,'-*')
title('Fourrier transform'),xlabel('frequency'),ylabel('magnitude')
Now you can clearly see there are two frequencies that have a high magnitude.
  3 Comments
Rik
Rik on 25 May 2020
Frequency is the inverse of period.

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