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  4. Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?

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Offline Geezer

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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #140 on: 06/08/2011 01:54:17 »
Quote from: JP on 05/08/2011 21:35:34
since you can't sample the step with perfect resolution.

Ah, right! Doesn't that boil down to giving it a certain amount of slope that doesn't really exist, in which case a step function would really be a ramp?
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Offline JP

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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #141 on: 06/08/2011 12:43:59 »
Quote from: Geezer on 06/08/2011 01:54:17
Quote from: JP on 05/08/2011 21:35:34
since you can't sample the step with perfect resolution.

Ah, right! Doesn't that boil down to giving it a certain amount of slope that doesn't really exist, in which case a step function would really be a ramp?

Something like that, I think.  When you actually sample the function, you have to do a discrete Fourier transform, which isn't quite the same as the continuous integral.  If the function has sharp features that you can't resolve perfectly with your sampling, it throws off the result a little bit.
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #142 on: 06/08/2011 17:54:50 »
Quote from: JP on 06/08/2011 12:43:59
Something like that, I think.  When you actually sample the function, you have to do a discrete Fourier transform, which isn't quite the same as the continuous integral.  If the function has sharp features that you can't resolve perfectly with your sampling, it throws off the result a little bit.

Right, but what about a "vertical" section of the signal? If it really is vertical, there is no phase angle between the start and end of the vertical section.
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #143 on: 08/08/2011 14:40:16 »
Quote from: Geezer on 06/08/2011 17:54:50
Quote from: JP on 06/08/2011 12:43:59
Something like that, I think.  When you actually sample the function, you have to do a discrete Fourier transform, which isn't quite the same as the continuous integral.  If the function has sharp features that you can't resolve perfectly with your sampling, it throws off the result a little bit.

Right, but what about a "vertical" section of the signal? If it really is vertical, there is no phase angle between the start and end of the vertical section.

The way I'm picturing this, the signal is sin(t) to the left of the discontinuity and sin(t+phi) to the right.  The phase of the sine shifts by phi at the discontinuity.
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #144 on: 08/08/2011 18:06:15 »
Quote from: JP on 08/08/2011 14:40:16

The way I'm picturing this, the signal is sin(t) to the left of the discontinuity and sin(t+phi) to the right.  The phase of the sine shifts by phi at the discontinuity.


Ewe! You mean a DC section. I'm not sure that constitutes a phase shift exactly. I think you have to instantaneously "jump" from one sine wave to another sine wave of the same frequency but different phase, and that results in an "infinite" slope rather than no slope.
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Offline JP

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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #145 on: 08/08/2011 18:52:28 »
Maybe we're at odds with each other on terminology.  Usually when I see DC, I think of a constant added to the signal.  I would tell you that sin(t)+C has a DC component of C.

When I think of phase of a sine function, I think of whatever's in the parentheses.  For sin(t), the phase is t, which increases linearly and continuously with time.  If it jumps from sin(t) to sin(t+phi) suddenly, that's a discontinuous change in phase, which I would probably call a phase jump or phase discontinuity, although I assumed (perhaps wrongly) that's what we meant by the term phase shift.

At any rate, I think I get your point.  Your sampling density can only put a lower limit on the slope.  If you know it was sin(t) on one side and sin(t+phi) on the other, you don't know if it took the entire interval to climb or if it jumped in a fraction of the interval.  Your discrete Fourier transform will look identical whether it did either of those, you you've lost information.  (I believe the usual discrete Fourier transform assumes linear changes in phase across intervals.)
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #146 on: 08/08/2011 21:46:17 »
I'm pretty sure an instantaneous phase change constitutes a vertical "jump". If the signal had a horizontal section and you analysed only that section, there would be no frequency components at all, whereas the vertical jump tends towards infinite frequencies.

EDIT: Of course, if you do the "jump" at precisely the right time, the signal would just have a sharp bend in it.
« Last Edit: 08/08/2011 22:15:52 by Geezer »
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #147 on: 08/08/2011 22:51:18 »
Quote from: Geezer on 08/08/2011 21:46:17
I'm pretty sure an instantaneous phase change constitutes a vertical "jump". If the signal had a horizontal section and you analysed only that section, there would be no frequency components at all, whereas the vertical jump tends towards infinite frequencies.

EDIT: Of course, if you do the "jump" at precisely the right time, the signal would just have a sharp bend in it.

Yep.  I agree.  The DC term I was talking about is a flat, horizontal component of the signal, or a flat, horizontal component added to a changing signal, which just shifts it's amplitude globally by a certain amount.  A discontinuous jump in the signal would have infinite slope. 

But if you sampled the signal, you'd only be able to say that it jumped between samples by a certain amount.  You couldn't tell if that was an instantaneous jump with infinite slope, or a steep but linear rise.  For that reason, sampling and doing a discrete version of the Fourier transform can lose information if you aren't careful about sampling finely enough.  (And you can never sample vertical segments densely enough.) 

By the way, one of the basic rules of determining sampling density is to use Nyquist sampling:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist%E2%80%93Shannon_sampling_theorem ,
which essentially says that you have to sample your signal more finely if you want to accurately recover high frequency components.
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #148 on: 09/08/2011 03:45:06 »
Great! Well, I think this cow has been more than adequately flogged.
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Can cow farts make the Earth rotate faster?
« Reply #149 on: 09/08/2011 16:44:39 »
Quote from: Geezer on 09/08/2011 03:45:06
Great! Well, I think this cow has been more than adequately flogged.

We went from cow farts to Fourier transforms in just 6 pages of posts!
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