Compute the spectra
To compute the spectrum of the turbulent velocity fluctuations, you need to:
- Determine appropriate fft-length and their overlap when averaging spectra within each data segment
- Compute the spectrum
- Convert the spectrum from the time domain to the space domain using the mean speed past the sensor only for steady flows, not required for surface wave analysis
- Compute degrees of freedom (dof) and confidence/significance levels of the final spectra.
Placeholder Example spectra
The spectrum's lowest resolved frequency and final resolution are the inverse of the fft-length. Each segment is often subdivided into smaller fft-length long chunks, which are then windowed before estimating numerous spectra (FFT) that are block-averaged for increased statistical significance. Another averaging strategy is band-averaging spectra in the frequency domain, which allows the segment length to be the same as the fft-length. A combination of both strategies is also possible. Nevertheless, the fft-length dictates the final range of frequencies resolved by the spectra.
- Add significance levels on spectra.
- Coherence stuff for motion contamination (must be own page)
Remove redundant info from Segmenting datasets, and add references to figure summary page
References
- Section 5.6.7 in Emery & Thomson has reference for band vs block averaging (2nd ed, p450).
- Confidence levels on p. 453 5.6.8
- Summary of spectral estimates on p.461