mars.tensor.fft.ihfft#

mars.tensor.fft.ihfft(a, n=None, axis=-1, norm=None)[source]#

Compute the inverse FFT of a signal that has Hermitian symmetry.

Parameters
  • a (array_like) – Input tensor.

  • n (int, optional) – Length of the inverse FFT, the number of points along transformation axis in the input to use. If n is smaller than the length of the input, the input is cropped. If it is larger, the input is padded with zeros. If n is not given, the length of the input along the axis specified by axis is used.

  • axis (int, optional) – Axis over which to compute the inverse FFT. If not given, the last axis is used.

  • norm ({None, "ortho"}, optional) – Normalization mode (see numpy.fft). Default is None.

Returns

out – The truncated or zero-padded input, transformed along the axis indicated by axis, or the last one if axis is not specified. The length of the transformed axis is n//2 + 1.

Return type

complex Tensor

See also

hfft, irfft

Notes

hfft/ihfft are a pair analogous to rfft/irfft, but for the opposite case: here the signal has Hermitian symmetry in the time domain and is real in the frequency domain. So here it’s hfft for which you must supply the length of the result if it is to be odd:

  • even: ihfft(hfft(a, 2*len(a) - 2) == a, within roundoff error,

  • odd: ihfft(hfft(a, 2*len(a) - 1) == a, within roundoff error.

Examples

>>> import mars.tensor as mt
>>> spectrum = mt.array([ 15, -4, 0, -1, 0, -4])
>>> mt.fft.ifft(spectrum).execute()
array([ 1.+0.j,  2.-0.j,  3.+0.j,  4.+0.j,  3.+0.j,  2.-0.j])
>>> mt.fft.ihfft(spectrum).execute()
array([ 1.-0.j,  2.-0.j,  3.-0.j,  4.-0.j])