I have fft data. How can I predict from the fft data whether the data is of sine or cosine wave?

5 views (last 30 days)
I have an fft. It is of sine or cosine, I dont know. I want to calculate amplitude, phase, frequency and which signal it is(sine or cosine). The first 3 I was able to do it. I am not able to find whether the signal is sine or cosine.

Answers (1)

Rick Rosson
Rick Rosson on 13 Nov 2015
Edited: Rick Rosson on 13 Nov 2015
You can tell from the phase. If the phase is 0 degrees, then it's a cosine. If the phase is -90 degrees, then it's a sine. If +/-180 degrees, it's -cosine. And if +90 degrees, it's -sine. If the phase is anything else, it's a mixture of both sine and cosine.
In any event, regardless of the phase, you can always represent it as
a*cos(2*pi*f*t + phi)
where a is the amplitude, f is the frequency (in hertz), t is time (in seconds), and phi is the phase angle (in radians).
  3 Comments
Rick Rosson
Rick Rosson on 15 Nov 2015
Edited: Rick Rosson on 15 Nov 2015
What happens if you have a sine and a cosine where both are at the same frequency?
a*cos(2*pi*f*t) - b*sin(2*pi*f*t)
Then you will see a single peak in the magnitude response at frequency f even though the signal has two components: a sine and a cosine.
Not to worry, it is possible to show that this signal is mathematically equivalent to:
c*cos(2*pi*f*t + phi)
You can find the value of c from the magnitude response, and the value of phi from the phase response. Then, if you are interested, you can compute the values of a and b as:
a = c*cos(phi)
b = c*sin(phi)
As you can see, these parameters represent a right triangle (in the complex plane), where a and b are the legs of the triangle, c is the hypotenuse, and phi is the angle opposite to b.
Jaime López
Jaime López on 18 Apr 2022
Hi.
I know it is a very old issue but:
Is there any reason for the cosine to be 0 degrees and the sine -90 degrees and not the other way around, sine 0 degrees and cosine 90 degrees?
Also, altough it is maybe too big a question, is this always the case?, i mean, everytime someone performs a fft, the way to plot it is always c*cos(2*pi*f*t + phi) instead of c*sin(2*pi*f*t + phi)?
Thanks in advance

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Fourier Analysis and Filtering in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!