Periodogram


In signal processing, a periodogram is an estimate of the spectral density of a signal. The term was coined by Arthur Schuster in 1898. Today, the periodogram is a component of more sophisticated methods. It is the most common tool for examining the amplitude vs frequency characteristics of FIR filters and window functions. FFT spectrum analyzers are also implemented as a time-sequence of periodograms.

Definition

There are at least two different definitions in use today. One of them involves time-averaging, and one does not. Time-averaging is also the purview of other articles. This article is not about time-averaging. The definition of interest here is that the power spectral density of a continuous function, is the Fourier transform of its auto-correlation function :

Computation

For sufficiently small values of parameter an arbitrarily-accurate approximation for can be observed in the region of the function:
which is precisely determined by the samples that span the non-zero duration of .
And for sufficiently large values of parameter, can be evaluated at an arbitrarily close frequency by a summation of the form:
where is an integer. The periodicity of allows this to be written very simply in terms of a Discrete Fourier transform:
where is a periodic summation:
When evaluated for all integers,, between 0 and -1, the array:
is a periodogram.

Applications

When a periodogram is used to examine the detailed characteristics of an FIR filter or window function, the parameter is chosen to be several multiples of the non-zero duration of the sequence, which is called zero-padding. When it is used to implement a filter bank, is several sub-multiples of the non-zero duration of the sequence.
One of the periodogram's deficiencies is that the variance at a given frequency does not decrease as the number of samples used in the computation increases. It does not provide the averaging needed to analyze noiselike signals or even sinusoids at low signal-to-noise ratios. Window functions and filter impulse responses are noiseless, but many other signals require more sophisticated methods of spectral estimation. Two of the alternatives use periodograms as part of the process:
Periodogram-based techniques introduce small biases that are unacceptable in some applications. Other techniques that do not rely on periodograms are presented in the spectral density estimation article.