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I have a question that maybe someone can help me with. I am a novice when it
comes to advanced math like this. I understand the concepts and can read the math, but I am by no means proficient. I have some wave data and have performed a FFT transform on the data using the FFT Analysis . I get my results just fine, that isn't the problem. I also can plot the values based on magnitude and frequemcy. What I am trying to do is rebuild the original wave from the FFT values. First question is; How do I do this? Can I rebuild the waves from the frequencies and magnitudes alone or do I need the real/imaginary components to rebuild the wave? How do I rebuild the wave? I have tried to find examples and all I have found is people saying use a IFFT on the data to rebuild it. How do I do that in Excel? Thanks for any help. -Stephen |
#2
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... all I have found is people saying use a
IFFT on the data to rebuild it. How do I do that in Excel? Hi. In Excel, on the "Fourier Analysis" window, select "Inverse" on the bottom of the window. This takes the Inverse, and returns your original data. = = = = HTH Dana DeLouis shull wrote: I have a question that maybe someone can help me with. I am a novice when it comes to advanced math like this. I understand the concepts and can read the math, but I am by no means proficient. I have some wave data and have performed a FFT transform on the data using the FFT Analysis . I get my results just fine, that isn't the problem. I also can plot the values based on magnitude and frequemcy. What I am trying to do is rebuild the original wave from the FFT values. First question is; How do I do this? Can I rebuild the waves from the frequencies and magnitudes alone or do I need the real/imaginary components to rebuild the wave? How do I rebuild the wave? I have tried to find examples and all I have found is people saying use a IFFT on the data to rebuild it. How do I do that in Excel? Thanks for any help. -Stephen |
#3
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Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
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... all I have found is people saying use a
IFFT on the data to rebuild it. How do I do that in Excel? Hi. In Excel, on the "Fourier Analysis" window, select "Inverse" on the bottom of the window. This takes the Inverse, and returns your original data. = = = = HTH Dana DeLouis shull wrote: I have a question that maybe someone can help me with. I am a novice when it comes to advanced math like this. I understand the concepts and can read the math, but I am by no means proficient. I have some wave data and have performed a FFT transform on the data using the FFT Analysis . I get my results just fine, that isn't the problem. I also can plot the values based on magnitude and frequemcy. What I am trying to do is rebuild the original wave from the FFT values. First question is; How do I do this? Can I rebuild the waves from the frequencies and magnitudes alone or do I need the real/imaginary components to rebuild the wave? How do I rebuild the wave? I have tried to find examples and all I have found is people saying use a IFFT on the data to rebuild it. How do I do that in Excel? Thanks for any help. -Stephen |
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