Reconstruction from zero crossings

The problem of reconstruction from zero crossings can be stated as: given the zero crossings of a continuous signal, is it possible to reconstruct the signal (to within a constant factor)? Worded differently, what are the conditions under which a signal can be reconstructed from its zero crossings?

This problem has two parts. Firstly proving that there is a unique reconstruction of the signal from the zero crossings and secondly how to actually go about reconstructing the signal. Though there have been quite a few attempts, no conclusive solution has yet been found. Ben Logan from Bell Labs wrote a paper in 1977 in the Bell System Technical Journal giving some criteria under which unique reconstruction is possible. Though this has been a major step towards the solution, many people are dissatisfied with the type of condition which results from his paper.

According to Logan a signal is uniquely reconstructible from its zero crossings if:

  1. The signal x(t) and its Hilbert transform xt have no zeros in common with each other.
  2. The frequency domain representation of the signal is at most 1 octave long, in other words, it is bandpass-limited between some B and 2B.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/31/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.