[rescue] Spaceballs.
Dave McGuire
rescue at sunhelp.org
Sat Dec 8 14:44:58 CST 2001
On December 8, Joshua D Boyd wrote:
> Apparently FFTs can be applied to any number of dimensions. However, I also
> understood an FFT as something that required 2 inputs, a time and a value, and
> returned to inputs, a frequency for that value. In fact, most descriptions
> I've read about FFTs state that it is a transformation from the time domain
> to the frequency domain. Well, fine. But, what is the time domain for a
> single image? Which is to day that I'm far from understanding the forces at
> work here.
FFTs can be used to convert from the time domain to the frequency
domain OR the inverse.
The time domain for a single image (take a single-channel image for
simplicity) is luminance. Look at it this way...take an image as a
2-d array of integer pixels. Iterate through the rows and columns
sequentially, as they would be stored in memory. Plot the luminance
(the integer pixel value). Bang, there's your time-domain signal.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
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