getting X domain as Frequency when applying FFT

4 views (last 30 days)
kobi
kobi on 31 Dec 2013
Commented: HS Kim on 21 Nov 2016
hi everyone,
i have data of Volt Vs Second of some measurment i did. i plotted this data and made dft(fft) on this data in order to get into the frequency domain and to filter some noise by a bandstop filter.
the problem is that when i make fft, the x axis is not Frequency. how can i invert it to Frequency so i can know in what Hz i have nosie.
tnanks a lot

Answers (2)

Wayne King
Wayne King on 31 Dec 2013
Edited: Wayne King on 31 Dec 2013
You have to know the sampling frequency, which is the reciprocal of the difference between your time increments. I'm assuming that your time instants are evenly spaced. I'll assume you know your sampling frequency, but you can get if from your time vector if you do not.
Here is how to create a frequency vector.
t = 0:1/1000:1-1/1000;
x = cos(2*pi*100*t);
xdft = fft(x);
xdft = xdft(1:length(x)/2+1); % even length signal
Fs = 1000;
df = Fs/length(x);
freqvec = 0:df:Fs/2;
plot(freqvec,abs(xdft))
If you have the Signal Processing Toolbox, use periodogram() that will output a meaningful frequency vector for you.
  1 Comment
HS Kim
HS Kim on 21 Nov 2016
I think you uesd "xdft(1:length(x)/2+1)" for deleting mirror image that will be happended by 'abs(xdft)' in plot, right?? I learned that plot(freq, abs(dtft)) then mirror image is happened if do plot without dtft/2. Please let me know exactly. Thank you :D

Sign in to comment.


kobi
kobi on 31 Dec 2013
thanks Wayne King, your information really helped me but on a second thought i don't even have to invert my signal into the frequency domain because when i use filter() i need the time domain signal and the notch filter.In case that i know the speciefic frequency i can design the notch filter to filter the noise. Am i wrong ? when i am doing it i get a side affect of nise in other frequencies that weren't be there before...
  1 Comment
Wayne King
Wayne King on 31 Dec 2013
You are not wrong. If you want to filter your signal, then do it that way -- using filter()

Sign in to comment.

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!