The functional Fourier transform (FRFT), which is a generalization of the classical Fourier transform, was introduced a number of years ago in the mathematics literature but appears to have remained largely unknown to the signal processing community, to which it may, however, be potentially useful. The FRFT depends on a parameter /spl alpha/ and can be interpreted as a rotation by an angle /spl alpha/ in the time-frequency plane. An FRFT with /spl alpha/=/spl pi//2 corresponds to the classical Fourier transform, and an FRFT with /spl alpha/=0 corresponds to the identity operator. On the other hand, the angles of successively performed FRFTs simply add up, as do the angles of successive rotations. The FRFT of a signal can also be interpreted as a decomposition of the signal in terms of chirps. The authors briefly introduce the FRFT and a number of its properties and then present some new results: the interpretation as a rotation in the time-frequency plane, and the FRFT's relationships with time-frequency representations such as the Wigner distribution, the ambiguity function, the short-time Fourier transform and the spectrogram. These relationships have a very simple and natural form and support the FRFT's interpretation as a rotation operator. Examples of FRFTs of some simple signals are given. An example of the application of the FRFT is also given. >
[1]
M. Portnoff.
Time-frequency representation of digital signals and systems based on short-time Fourier analysis
,
1980
.
[2]
F. Hlawatsch,et al.
Linear and quadratic time-frequency signal representations
,
1992,
IEEE Signal Processing Magazine.
[3]
L. Cohen,et al.
Time-frequency distributions-a review
,
1989,
Proc. IEEE.
[4]
V. Namias.
The Fractional Order Fourier Transform and its Application to Quantum Mechanics
,
1980
.
[5]
Levent Onural,et al.
Convolution, filtering, and multiplexing in fractional Fourier domains and their relation to chirp and wavelet transforms
,
1994
.
[6]
Tatiana Alieva,et al.
The Fractional Fourier Transform in Optical Propagation Problems
,
1994
.
[7]
F. H. Kerr,et al.
On Namias's fractional Fourier transforms
,
1987
.
[8]
A. Lohmann.
Image rotation, Wigner rotation, and the fractional Fourier transform
,
1993
.
[9]
Luís B. Almeida.
An introduction to the angular Fourier transform
,
1993,
1993 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing.