DOC PREVIEW
Stanford EE 261 - The Fourier Transform and its Applications Some References

This preview shows page 1 out of 3 pages.

Save
View full document
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 3 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 3 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience

Unformatted text preview:

EE 261 The Fourier Transform and its ApplicationsSome ReferencesOur course will be based on the course reader, available at the bookstore and also on the courseweb site. This is really a collection of lecture notes masquerading as a book. You’ll probably findphrases like ‘as we saw in Lecture 6’ (point those out to me, please), Appendices in the middle ofchapters, etc. This shouldn’t be a problem in your following the exposition, and, as I hope you’llbe able to detect, the notes were written for students to read, not with the specter of imperious,mathematical colleagues looking over my shoulder as I wrote them. Comments and corrections aremost welcome.Two books that have been used often as texts for 261 are:R. M. Gray and J. W. Goodman Fourier Transforms, Kluwer, 1995R. N. Bracewell, The Fourier Transform and its Applications, McGraw Hill, 1986These are the primary additional references for the course. The feature of Gray &Goodman that makes it different from most other books is the parallel treatmentof the continuous and discrete cases throughout. Though we won’t follow thatapproach per se, it makes good parallel reading to what we’ll do. Bracewell, now inits third edition, is also highly recommended. Both books are on reserve in Termanlibrary along with several others listed below.Some other references (among many ), and in no particular ord er, are:J. F. James, A Student’s Guide to Fourier Transforms 2nded., Cambridge, 2002This is a good, short book (130 pages), similar to Bracewell to s ome extent, withabout 70% devoted to various applications. The topics and examples are interestingand relevant. There are, however, some pretty obscure mathematical arguments, Ithink, and some errors, too.Jack D. Gaskill, Linear Systems, Fourier Transforms, and Optics, Wiley, 1978This is sometimes used as a text for EE261. The applications are d rawn primarilyfrom optics (nothing wrong with that) but the topics and treatment mesh very wellwith the course overall. Clearly written.David W. Kammler, A First Course in Fourier Analysis, Prentice hall, 2000This is a relatively recent book that has been used in the winter version of E E 261.It’s more on the mathematical side of things, very well written, and with manyworked examples and a good selection of problems.References–1S. Papoulis, The Fourier Transform and its Applications, McGraw Hill, 1960Same title as Bracewell’s book, but a more formal mathematical treatment. Pa-poulis has written a whole slew of EE books. Two others that are relevant to thetopics in this class are:S. Papoulis, Systems and Transforms With Applications in Optics, Krieger PublishingCompany, 1981S. Papoulis, Probability, Random Variables, and Stochastic Processes, McGraw Hill, 1991This last one has very general forms of the sampling theorem, including reconstruc-tion by random sampling. Read this and be one of the few people on earth to knowthese resu lts.P. J. Nahim, The Science of Radio, 2nd edition, Springer, 2001This is an interesting and entertaining book on the history and pr actice of radio.Of relevan ce to our course are treatments of the Fourier analysis of radio signals,from sparks to AM. The author’s intention is to start from scratch and take a ‘topdown’ approach.Some references for the discrete Four ier transform and the fast Fourier transform algorithmare:E. O. Brigham, The Fast Fourier Transform, Prentice Hall, 1974This is a standard reference and I included it because of that. I think it’s kind ofclunky, however.W. Briggs & V. Henson, The DFT: An Owner’s Manual for the Discrete Fourier Trans-form, SI AM, 1995I really like the treatment in this book; the topics, the examples, the problems areall well chosen.A highly respected, advanced book on the FFT algorithm isC van Loam, Computational Frameworks for the Fast Fourier Transform, SIAM 1992Bo oks more often found on mathematician’s shelves include:H. Dym and H. P. McKean, Fourier Series and Integrals, Academic Press, 1972This is a very well written, straightforward mathematical treatment of Fourierseries and Fourier transforms. It includes a b rief development of the theory ofintegration needed for the mathematical details (the L2and L1theory). It alsoincludes chapters on the applications of complex analysis to Fourier analysis andon Fourier analysis on groups. Breezy style, but sophisticated.T. W. K¨orner, Fourier Analysis, Cambridge, 1988References–2This is a wonderful book full of th e lore of Fourier analysis for mathematicians (andothers). Broken up into 110 (!) small chapters, it’s written with a light touch andwith lots of illuminating comments. K ¨orner has also w ritten a separate book ofexercises on Fourier analysis (Cambridge Press, 1993) as an accompaniment. Hespoke for all of us in trying to find good exercises when he quoted a verse fromKipling in the Preface. You can look it up.R. S tr ichartz, A Guide to Distribution Theory and Fourier Transforms, CRC P ress, 1994This is an accessible introduction to distributions (generalized functions) and theirapplications, at the advanced undergraduate, beginning graduate level of math-ematics. It’s a good way to see how distributions and Fourier transforms havebecome fundamental in studying partial differential equations (at least for provingtheorems, if not for computing solutions).A. Terras, Harmonic Analysis on Symmetric Spaces and Applications, I, II, Sprin gerVerlag, 1988If you want to see how the Fourier transform is generalized to the setting of Liegroups, and why it’s such a big deal in number theory, these books are an excellentsource. Let me know if you believe the applications.I will be finding inspiration (read: stealing) from all of these sources, and there are many others.I encourage you to browse the


View Full Document

Stanford EE 261 - The Fourier Transform and its Applications Some References

Download The Fourier Transform and its Applications Some References
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view The Fourier Transform and its Applications Some References and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view The Fourier Transform and its Applications Some References 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?