about fourier transform

what is the best reconstruction in term of quality of the image when using fft2 and ifft2 without pre and post processing.

2 Comments

What do you mean "What is the best reconstruction?" Explain your question and you'll get better answers.
Example,if use Radon,the values of angle determine how good result we can get.For Zernike moments,the order will be the manipulated variable. But for fourier i don't know what are the manipulated variables.

Answers (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 22 Mar 2011

0 votes

Are you asking: "If I have an image and I fft2() the image, and I ifft2() the result of that, then what is the maximum difference I should expect for any one pixel compared between the original and reconstructed image" ?

1 Comment

yes,but i also want ask about:
Example,if use Radon,the values of angle determine how good result we can get.For Zernike moments,the order will be the manipulated variable. But for fourier i don't know what are the manipulated variables.
The Discrete Fourier Transform has no parameters to manipulate. The difference between the original and the reconstructed images will always be very small, though non-zero because of rounding errors.
You could explore this experimentally with test code similar to this:
imsize = 100 + ceil(1000*rand);
img = rand(imsize);
ft = fft2(img);
recon = ifft2(ft);
max(abs(img(:)-recon(:)))
which typically produces a result of order 1e-15 on my system.

1 Comment

From one point of view at least, the parameter for fft would be the number of fft bins to use, and the best would be the same as the number of points along that dimension.

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Asked:

on 22 Mar 2011

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on 20 Aug 2021

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