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by bonoboTP
2049 days ago
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> Actually I thought it is the other way round: A frequency is defined as a sine basically, it has an * amplitude * frequency * phase shift But this is also true of any periodic wave. The beginner question is, why don't we use triangle waves of square waves? Those also have amplitude, frequency and phase. Frequency just means the reciprocal of the period. To which my answer is that the magical property of complex exponential functions is that they can be shifted by constant (pointwise) multiplication. Which is a really non-obvious fact at first but is crucial in the machinery. The complex exponentials constitute an orthogonal basis which diagonalizes the convolution. |
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(A deeper thing going on is that a periodic function can be thought of as a function whose domain is a circle. Circles have obvious rotational symmetry, and when you have symmetry you can use representation theory to decompose things into an (orthogonal) basis. In this case, rotations commute with each other so by some theory the decomposition is going to be entirely through eigenvectors of rotation, which happen to precisely be the exponential functions e^(n theta i) for n an integer. This decomposition is also an isomorphism that carries convolutions to point-wise products in both directions. Also: if you make it so the circle is the complex unit circle, a Fourier transform is the idea that you can create a Laurent polynomial that extends the function to the complex plane minus the origin.)