Next: Pathological examples
Up: SPECTRAL FACTORIZATION
Previous: Finding a causal wavelet
Next we see why the causal wavelet B(Z), which we have made
from the prescribed spectrum,
turns out to be minimum-phase.
First return to the original definition of minimum-phase:
a causal wavelet is minimum-phase if and only if
its inverse is causal.
We have our wavelet in the form B(Z)= eC(Z).
Consider another wavelet A(Z) = e-C(Z),
constructed analogously.
By the same reasoning, at is also causal.
Since A(Z)B(Z)=1, we have found a causal, inverse wavelet.
Thus the bt wavelet is
minimum-phase.
Since the phase is a Fourier series,
it must be periodic; that is, it cannot increase
indefinitely with as it does for the nonminimum-phase wavelet
(see Figure 19).
Next: Pathological examples
Up: SPECTRAL FACTORIZATION
Previous: Finding a causal wavelet
Stanford Exploration Project
10/21/1998