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Shifts and phase changes
Section 7.2 showed how time-shifting a signal changes the
phases of its sinusoidal components, and Section 8.4.3
showed how multiplying a signal by a complex sinusoid shifts its component
frequencies. These two effects have corresponding identities
involving the Fourier transform.
First we consider a time shift. If
, as usual, is a complex-valued
signal that repeats every
samples, let
be
delayed
samples:
which also repeats every
samples since
does. We can reduce the Fourier
transform of
this way:
(The third line is just the second one with the terms summed in a
different order). We therefore get the Time Shift Formula for Fourier
Transforms:
The Fourier transform of
is a phase term times the Fourier transform
of
. The phase is changed by
, a
linear function of the frequency
.
Now suppose instead that we change our starting signal
by multiplying
it by a complex exponential
with angular frequency
:
The Fourier transform is:
We therefore get the Phase Shift Formula for Fourier Transforms:
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Miller Puckette
2006-12-30