←back to thread

What Is the Fourier Transform?

(www.quantamagazine.org)
474 points rbanffy | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.285s | source
Show context
anyfoo ◴[] No.45133536[source]
If you like Fourier, you're going to love Laplace (or its discrete counterpart, the z transform).

This took me down a very fascinating and intricate rabbit hole years ago, and is still one of my favorite hobbies. Application of Fourier, Laplace, and z transforms is (famously) useful in an incredibly wide variety of fields. I mostly use it for signal processing and analog electronics.

replies(7): >>45134309 #>>45134360 #>>45134494 #>>45136059 #>>45136233 #>>45136685 #>>45144576 #
segfault99 ◴[] No.45134360[source]
When I did EE, didn't have access to any kind of computer algebra system. Have 'fond' memories of taking Laplace transform transfer functions and converting to z-transform form. Expand and then re-group and factor. Used a lot of pencil, eraser and line printer fanfold paper for doing the very basic but very tedious algebra. Youngsters today don't know how lucky.. (ties onion to belt, etc., etc.)
replies(4): >>45136650 #>>45136654 #>>45140144 #>>45142196 #
1. schlauerfox ◴[] No.45140144[source]
I just recently got my Computer Engineering degree which is the modern Electronics Engineering and we had a whole class on transforms. We had to do it on paper, but that professor at Cal State LA knew what the heck she was doing. We learned it good.