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Phase (waves)

In physics and mathematics, the phase of a periodic function of some real variable (such as time) is an angle-like quantity representing the fraction of the cycle covered up to . It is denoted and expressed in such a scale that it varies by one full turn as the variable goes through each period (and goes through each complete cycle). It may be measured in any angular unit such as degrees or radians, thus increasing by 360° or as the variable completes a full period.[1]

Plot of one cycle of a sinusoidal function. The phase for each argument value, relative to the start of the cycle, is shown at the bottom, in degrees from 0° to 360° and in radians from 0 to 2π.

This convention is especially appropriate for a sinusoidal function, since its value at any argument then can be expressed as , the sine of the phase, multiplied by some factor (the amplitude of the sinusoid). (The cosine may be used instead of sine, depending on where one considers each period to start.)

Usually, whole turns are ignored when expressing the phase; so that is also a periodic function, with the same period as , that repeatedly scans the same range of angles as goes through each period. Then, is said to be "at the same phase" at two argument values and (that is, ) if the difference between them is a whole number of periods.

The numeric value of the phase depends on the arbitrary choice of the start of each period, and on the interval of angles that each period is to be mapped to.

The term "phase" is also used when comparing a periodic function with a shifted version of it. If the shift in is expressed as a fraction of the period, and then scaled to an angle spanning a whole turn, one gets the phase shift, phase offset, or phase difference of relative to . If is a "canonical" function for a class of signals, like is for all sinusoidal signals, then is called the initial phase of .

Mathematical definition

Let   be a periodic signal (that is, a function of one real variable), and   be its period (that is, the smallest positive real number such that   for all  ). Then the phase of   at any argument   is

 

Here   denotes the fractional part of a real number, discarding its integer part; that is,  ; and   is an arbitrary "origin" value of the argument, that one considers to be the beginning of a cycle.

This concept can be visualized by imagining a clock with a hand that turns at constant speed, making a full turn every   seconds, and is pointing straight up at time  . The phase   is then the angle from the 12:00 position to the current position of the hand, at time  , measured clockwise.

The phase concept is most useful when the origin   is chosen based on features of  . For example, for a sinusoid, a convenient choice is any   where the function's value changes from zero to positive.

The formula above gives the phase as an angle in radians between 0 and  . To get the phase as an angle between   and  , one uses instead

 

The phase expressed in degrees (from 0° to 360°, or from −180° to +180°) is defined the same way, except with "360°" in place of "2π".

Consequences

With any of the above definitions, the phase   of a periodic signal is periodic too, with the same period  :

  for all  .

The phase is zero at the start of each period; that is

  for any integer  .

Moreover, for any given choice of the origin  , the value of the signal   for any argument   depends only on its phase at  . Namely, one can write  , where   is a function of an angle, defined only for a single full turn, that describes the variation of   as   ranges over a single period.

In fact, every periodic signal   with a specific waveform can be expressed as

 

where   is a "canonical" function of a phase angle in 0 to 2π, that describes just one cycle of that waveform; and   is a scaling factor for the amplitude. (This claim assumes that the starting time   chosen to compute the phase of   corresponds to argument 0 of  .)

Adding and comparing phases

Since phases are angles, any whole full turns should usually be ignored when performing arithmetic operations on them. That is, the sum and difference of two phases (in degrees) should be computed by the formulas

  and  

respectively. Thus, for example, the sum of phase angles 190° + 200° is 30° (190 + 200 = 390, minus one full turn), and subtracting 50° from 30° gives a phase of 340° (30 - 50 = −20, plus one full turn).

Similar formulas hold for radians, with   instead of 360.

Phase shift

 
Illustration of phase shift. The horizontal axis represents an angle (phase) that is increasing with time.
 
Phase shifter using IQ modulator

The difference   between the phases of two periodic signals   and   is called the phase difference or phase shift of   relative to  .[1] At values of   when the difference is zero, the two signals are said to be in phase, otherwise they are out of phase with each other.

In the clock analogy, each signal is represented by a hand (or pointer) of the same clock, both turning at constant but possibly different speeds. The phase difference is then the angle between the two hands, measured clockwise.

The phase difference is particularly important when two signals are added together by a physical process, such as two periodic sound waves emitted by two sources and recorded together by a microphone. This is usually the case in linear systems, when the superposition principle holds.

For arguments   when the phase difference is zero, the two signals will have the same sign and will be reinforcing each other. One says that constructive interference is occurring. At arguments   when the phases are different, the value of the sum depends on the waveform.

For sinusoids

For sinusoidal signals, when the phase difference   is 180° (  radians), one says that the phases are opposite, and that the signals are in antiphase. Then the signals have opposite signs, and destructive interference occurs. Conversely, a phase reversal or phase inversion implies a 180-degree phase shift.[2]

When the phase difference   is a quarter of turn (a right angle, +90° = π/2 or −90° = 270° = −π/2 = 3π/2), sinusoidal signals are sometimes said to be in quadrature (e.g., in-phase and quadrature components).

If the frequencies are different, the phase difference   increases linearly with the argument  . The periodic changes from reinforcement and opposition cause a phenomenon called beating.

For shifted signals

The phase difference is especially important when comparing a periodic signal   with a shifted and possibly scaled version   of it. That is, suppose that   for some constants   and all  . Suppose also that the origin for computing the phase of   has been shifted too. In that case, the phase difference   is a constant (independent of  ), called the 'phase shift' or 'phase offset' of   relative to  . In the clock analogy, this situation corresponds to the two hands turning at the same speed, so that the angle between them is constant.

In this case, the phase shift is simply the argument shift  , expressed as a fraction of the common period   (in terms of the modulo operation) of the two signals and then scaled to a full turn:

 

If   is a "canonical" representative for a class of signals, like   is for all sinusoidal signals, then the phase shift   called simply the initial phase of  .

Therefore, when two periodic signals have the same frequency, they are always in phase, or always out of phase. Physically, this situation commonly occurs, for many reasons. For example, the two signals may be a periodic soundwave recorded by two microphones at separate locations. Or, conversely, they may be periodic soundwaves created by two separate speakers from the same electrical signal, and recorded by a single microphone. They may be a radio signal that reaches the receiving antenna in a straight line, and a copy of it that was reflected off a large building nearby.

A well-known example of phase difference is the length of shadows seen at different points of Earth. To a first approximation, if   is the length seen at time   at one spot, and   is the length seen at the same time at a longitude 30° west of that point, then the phase difference between the two signals will be 30° (assuming that, in each signal, each period starts when the shadow is shortest).

For sinusoids with same frequency

For sinusoidal signals (and a few other waveforms, like square or symmetric triangular), a phase shift of 180° is equivalent to a phase shift of 0° with negation of the amplitude. When two signals with these waveforms, same period, and opposite phases are added together, the sum   is either identically zero, or is a sinusoidal signal with the same period and phase, whose amplitude is the difference of the original amplitudes.

The phase shift of the co-sine function relative to the sine function is +90°. It follows that, for two sinusoidal signals   and   with same frequency and amplitudes   and  , and   has phase shift +90° relative to  , the sum   is a sinusoidal signal with the same frequency, with amplitude   and phase shift   from  , such that

  and  .
 
In-phase signals
 
Out-of-phase signals
 
Representation of phase comparison.[3]
 
Left: the real part of a plane wave moving from top to bottom. Right: the same wave after a central section underwent a phase shift, for example, by passing through a glass of different thickness than the other parts.
 
Out of phase AE

A real-world example of a sonic phase difference occurs in the warble of a Native American flute. The amplitude of different harmonic components of same long-held note on the flute come into dominance at different points in the phase cycle. The phase difference between the different harmonics can be observed on a spectrogram of the sound of a warbling flute.[4]

Phase comparison

Phase comparison is a comparison of the phase of two waveforms, usually of the same nominal frequency. In time and frequency, the purpose of a phase comparison is generally to determine the frequency offset (difference between signal cycles) with respect to a reference.[3]

A phase comparison can be made by connecting two signals to a two-channel oscilloscope. The oscilloscope will display two sine signals, as shown in the graphic to the right. In the adjacent image, the top sine signal is the test frequency, and the bottom sine signal represents a signal from the reference.

If the two frequencies were exactly the same, their phase relationship would not change and both would appear to be stationary on the oscilloscope display. Since the two frequencies are not exactly the same, the reference appears to be stationary and the test signal moves. By measuring the rate of motion of the test signal the offset between frequencies can be determined.

Vertical lines have been drawn through the points where each sine signal passes through zero. The bottom of the figure shows bars whose width represents the phase difference between the signals. In this case the phase difference is increasing, indicating that the test signal is lower in frequency than the reference.[3]

Formula for phase of an oscillation or a periodic signal

The phase of an oscillation or signal refers to a sinusoidal function such as the following:

 

where  ,  , and   are constant parameters called the amplitude, frequency, and phase of the sinusoid. These signals are periodic with period  , and they are identical except for a displacement of   along the   axis. The term phase can refer to several different things:

  • It can refer to a specified reference, such as  , in which case we would say the phase of   is  , and the phase of   is  .
  • It can refer to  , in which case we would say   and   have the same phase but are relative to their own specific references.
  • In the context of communication waveforms, the time-variant angle  , or its principal value, is referred to as instantaneous phase, often just phase.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ballou, Glen (2005). Handbook for sound engineers (3 ed.). Focal Press, Gulf Professional Publishing. p. 1499. ISBN 978-0-240-80758-4.
  2. ^ "Federal Standard 1037C: Glossary of Telecommunications Terms".
  3. ^ a b c Time and Frequency from A to Z (2010-05-12). "Phase". Nist. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Retrieved 12 June 2016. This content has been copied and pasted from an NIST web page and is in the public domain.
  4. ^ Clint Goss; Barry Higgins (2013). "The Warble". Flutopedia. Retrieved 2013-03-06.

External links

  • "What is a phase?". Prof. Jeffrey Hass. "An Acoustics Primer", Section 8. Indiana University, 2003. See also: (pages 1 thru 3, 2013)
  • Phase angle, phase difference, time delay, and frequency
  • ECE 209: Sources of Phase Shift — Discusses the time-domain sources of phase shift in simple linear time-invariant circuits.
  • Open Source Physics JavaScript HTML5
  • Phase Difference Java Applet

phase, waves, physics, mathematics, phase, periodic, function, displaystyle, some, real, variable, displaystyle, such, time, angle, like, quantity, representing, fraction, cycle, covered, displaystyle, denoted, displaystyle, expressed, such, scale, that, varie. In physics and mathematics the phase of a periodic function F displaystyle F of some real variable t displaystyle t such as time is an angle like quantity representing the fraction of the cycle covered up to t displaystyle t It is denoted ϕ t displaystyle phi t and expressed in such a scale that it varies by one full turn as the variable t displaystyle t goes through each period and F t displaystyle F t goes through each complete cycle It may be measured in any angular unit such as degrees or radians thus increasing by 360 or 2 p displaystyle 2 pi as the variable t displaystyle t completes a full period 1 Plot of one cycle of a sinusoidal function The phase for each argument value relative to the start of the cycle is shown at the bottom in degrees from 0 to 360 and in radians from 0 to 2p This convention is especially appropriate for a sinusoidal function since its value at any argument t displaystyle t then can be expressed as ϕ t displaystyle phi t the sine of the phase multiplied by some factor the amplitude of the sinusoid The cosine may be used instead of sine depending on where one considers each period to start Usually whole turns are ignored when expressing the phase so that ϕ t displaystyle phi t is also a periodic function with the same period as F displaystyle F that repeatedly scans the same range of angles as t displaystyle t goes through each period Then F displaystyle F is said to be at the same phase at two argument values t 1 displaystyle t 1 and t 2 displaystyle t 2 that is ϕ t 1 ϕ t 2 displaystyle phi t 1 phi t 2 if the difference between them is a whole number of periods The numeric value of the phase ϕ t displaystyle phi t depends on the arbitrary choice of the start of each period and on the interval of angles that each period is to be mapped to The term phase is also used when comparing a periodic function F displaystyle F with a shifted version G displaystyle G of it If the shift in t displaystyle t is expressed as a fraction of the period and then scaled to an angle f displaystyle varphi spanning a whole turn one gets the phase shift phase offset or phase difference of G displaystyle G relative to F displaystyle F If F displaystyle F is a canonical function for a class of signals like sin t displaystyle sin t is for all sinusoidal signals then f displaystyle varphi is called the initial phase of G displaystyle G Contents 1 Mathematical definition 1 1 Consequences 2 Adding and comparing phases 3 Phase shift 3 1 For sinusoids 3 2 For shifted signals 3 3 For sinusoids with same frequency 4 Phase comparison 5 Formula for phase of an oscillation or a periodic signal 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksMathematical definition EditLet F displaystyle F be a periodic signal that is a function of one real variable and T displaystyle T be its period that is the smallest positive real number such that F t T F t displaystyle F t T F t for all t displaystyle t Then the phase ofF displaystyle F at any argument t displaystyle t is ϕ t 2 p t t 0 T displaystyle phi t 2 pi left left frac t t 0 T right right Here displaystyle cdot denotes the fractional part of a real number discarding its integer part that is x x x displaystyle x x left lfloor x right rfloor and t 0 displaystyle t 0 is an arbitrary origin value of the argument that one considers to be the beginning of a cycle This concept can be visualized by imagining a clock with a hand that turns at constant speed making a full turn every T displaystyle T seconds and is pointing straight up at time t 0 displaystyle t 0 The phase ϕ t displaystyle phi t is then the angle from the 12 00 position to the current position of the hand at time t displaystyle t measured clockwise The phase concept is most useful when the origin t 0 displaystyle t 0 is chosen based on features of F displaystyle F For example for a sinusoid a convenient choice is any t displaystyle t where the function s value changes from zero to positive The formula above gives the phase as an angle in radians between 0 and 2 p displaystyle 2 pi To get the phase as an angle between p displaystyle pi and p displaystyle pi one uses instead ϕ t 2 p t t 0 T 1 2 1 2 displaystyle phi t 2 pi left left left frac t t 0 T frac 1 2 right right frac 1 2 right The phase expressed in degrees from 0 to 360 or from 180 to 180 is defined the same way except with 360 in place of 2p Consequences Edit With any of the above definitions the phase ϕ t displaystyle phi t of a periodic signal is periodic too with the same period T displaystyle T ϕ t T ϕ t displaystyle phi t T phi t quad quad for all t displaystyle t The phase is zero at the start of each period that is ϕ t 0 k T 0 displaystyle phi t 0 kT 0 quad quad for any integer k displaystyle k Moreover for any given choice of the origin t 0 displaystyle t 0 the value of the signal F displaystyle F for any argument t displaystyle t depends only on its phase at t displaystyle t Namely one can write F t f ϕ t displaystyle F t f phi t where f displaystyle f is a function of an angle defined only for a single full turn that describes the variation of F displaystyle F as t displaystyle t ranges over a single period In fact every periodic signal F displaystyle F with a specific waveform can be expressed as F t A w ϕ t displaystyle F t A w phi t where w displaystyle w is a canonical function of a phase angle in 0 to 2p that describes just one cycle of that waveform and A displaystyle A is a scaling factor for the amplitude This claim assumes that the starting time t 0 displaystyle t 0 chosen to compute the phase of F displaystyle F corresponds to argument 0 of w displaystyle w Adding and comparing phases EditSince phases are angles any whole full turns should usually be ignored when performing arithmetic operations on them That is the sum and difference of two phases in degrees should be computed by the formulas 360 a b 360 displaystyle 360 left left frac alpha beta 360 right right quad quad and 360 a b 360 displaystyle quad quad 360 left left frac alpha beta 360 right right respectively Thus for example the sum of phase angles 190 200 is 30 190 200 390 minus one full turn and subtracting 50 from 30 gives a phase of 340 30 50 20 plus one full turn Similar formulas hold for radians with 2 p displaystyle 2 pi instead of 360 Phase shift Edit Illustration of phase shift The horizontal axis represents an angle phase that is increasing with time Phase shifter using IQ modulator The difference f t ϕ G t ϕ F t displaystyle varphi t phi G t phi F t between the phases of two periodic signals F displaystyle F and G displaystyle G is called the phase difference or phase shift of G displaystyle G relative to F displaystyle F 1 At values of t displaystyle t when the difference is zero the two signals are said to be in phase otherwise they are out of phase with each other In the clock analogy each signal is represented by a hand or pointer of the same clock both turning at constant but possibly different speeds The phase difference is then the angle between the two hands measured clockwise The phase difference is particularly important when two signals are added together by a physical process such as two periodic sound waves emitted by two sources and recorded together by a microphone This is usually the case in linear systems when the superposition principle holds For arguments t displaystyle t when the phase difference is zero the two signals will have the same sign and will be reinforcing each other One says that constructive interference is occurring At arguments t displaystyle t when the phases are different the value of the sum depends on the waveform For sinusoids Edit For sinusoidal signals when the phase difference f t displaystyle varphi t is 180 p displaystyle pi radians one says that the phases are opposite and that the signals are in antiphase Then the signals have opposite signs and destructive interference occurs Conversely a phase reversal or phase inversion implies a 180 degree phase shift 2 When the phase difference f t displaystyle varphi t is a quarter of turn a right angle 90 p 2 or 90 270 p 2 3p 2 sinusoidal signals are sometimes said to be in quadrature e g in phase and quadrature components If the frequencies are different the phase difference f t displaystyle varphi t increases linearly with the argument t displaystyle t The periodic changes from reinforcement and opposition cause a phenomenon called beating For shifted signals Edit The phase difference is especially important when comparing a periodic signal F displaystyle F with a shifted and possibly scaled version G displaystyle G of it That is suppose that G t a F t t displaystyle G t alpha F t tau for some constants a t displaystyle alpha tau and all t displaystyle t Suppose also that the origin for computing the phase of G displaystyle G has been shifted too In that case the phase difference f displaystyle varphi is a constant independent of t displaystyle t called the phase shift or phase offset of G displaystyle G relative to F displaystyle F In the clock analogy this situation corresponds to the two hands turning at the same speed so that the angle between them is constant In this case the phase shift is simply the argument shift t displaystyle tau expressed as a fraction of the common period T displaystyle T in terms of the modulo operation of the two signals and then scaled to a full turn f 2 p t T displaystyle varphi 2 pi left left frac tau T right right If F displaystyle F is a canonical representative for a class of signals like sin t displaystyle sin t is for all sinusoidal signals then the phase shift f displaystyle varphi called simply the initial phase of G displaystyle G Therefore when two periodic signals have the same frequency they are always in phase or always out of phase Physically this situation commonly occurs for many reasons For example the two signals may be a periodic soundwave recorded by two microphones at separate locations Or conversely they may be periodic soundwaves created by two separate speakers from the same electrical signal and recorded by a single microphone They may be a radio signal that reaches the receiving antenna in a straight line and a copy of it that was reflected off a large building nearby A well known example of phase difference is the length of shadows seen at different points of Earth To a first approximation if F t displaystyle F t is the length seen at time t displaystyle t at one spot and G displaystyle G is the length seen at the same time at a longitude 30 west of that point then the phase difference between the two signals will be 30 assuming that in each signal each period starts when the shadow is shortest For sinusoids with same frequency Edit For sinusoidal signals and a few other waveforms like square or symmetric triangular a phase shift of 180 is equivalent to a phase shift of 0 with negation of the amplitude When two signals with these waveforms same period and opposite phases are added together the sum F G displaystyle F G is either identically zero or is a sinusoidal signal with the same period and phase whose amplitude is the difference of the original amplitudes The phase shift of the co sine function relative to the sine function is 90 It follows that for two sinusoidal signals F displaystyle F and G displaystyle G with same frequency and amplitudes A displaystyle A and B displaystyle B and G displaystyle G has phase shift 90 relative to F displaystyle F the sum F G displaystyle F G is a sinusoidal signal with the same frequency with amplitude C displaystyle C and phase shift 90 lt f lt 90 displaystyle 90 circ lt varphi lt 90 circ from F displaystyle F such that C A 2 B 2 displaystyle C sqrt A 2 B 2 quad quad and sin f B C displaystyle quad quad sin varphi B C In phase signals Out of phase signals Representation of phase comparison 3 Left the real part of a plane wave moving from top to bottom Right the same wave after a central section underwent a phase shift for example by passing through a glass of different thickness than the other parts Out of phase AE A real world example of a sonic phase difference occurs in the warble of a Native American flute The amplitude of different harmonic components of same long held note on the flute come into dominance at different points in the phase cycle The phase difference between the different harmonics can be observed on a spectrogram of the sound of a warbling flute 4 Phase comparison EditPhase comparison is a comparison of the phase of two waveforms usually of the same nominal frequency In time and frequency the purpose of a phase comparison is generally to determine the frequency offset difference between signal cycles with respect to a reference 3 A phase comparison can be made by connecting two signals to a two channel oscilloscope The oscilloscope will display two sine signals as shown in the graphic to the right In the adjacent image the top sine signal is the test frequency and the bottom sine signal represents a signal from the reference If the two frequencies were exactly the same their phase relationship would not change and both would appear to be stationary on the oscilloscope display Since the two frequencies are not exactly the same the reference appears to be stationary and the test signal moves By measuring the rate of motion of the test signal the offset between frequencies can be determined Vertical lines have been drawn through the points where each sine signal passes through zero The bottom of the figure shows bars whose width represents the phase difference between the signals In this case the phase difference is increasing indicating that the test signal is lower in frequency than the reference 3 Formula for phase of an oscillation or a periodic signal EditThe phase of an oscillation or signal refers to a sinusoidal function such as the following x t A cos 2 p f t f y t A sin 2 p f t f A cos 2 p f t f p 2 displaystyle begin aligned x t amp A cdot cos 2 pi ft varphi y t amp A cdot sin 2 pi ft varphi A cdot cos left 2 pi ft varphi tfrac pi 2 right end aligned where A displaystyle textstyle A f displaystyle textstyle f and f displaystyle textstyle varphi are constant parameters called the amplitude frequency and phase of the sinusoid These signals are periodic with period T 1 f displaystyle textstyle T frac 1 f and they are identical except for a displacement of T 4 displaystyle textstyle frac T 4 along the t displaystyle textstyle t axis The term phase can refer to several different things It can refer to a specified reference such as cos 2 p f t displaystyle textstyle cos 2 pi ft in which case we would say the phase of x t displaystyle textstyle x t is f displaystyle textstyle varphi and the phase of y t displaystyle textstyle y t is f p 2 displaystyle textstyle varphi frac pi 2 It can refer to f displaystyle textstyle varphi in which case we would say x t displaystyle textstyle x t and y t displaystyle textstyle y t have the same phase but are relative to their own specific references In the context of communication waveforms the time variant angle 2 p f t f displaystyle textstyle 2 pi ft varphi or its principal value is referred to as instantaneous phase often just phase See also EditAbsolute phase AC phase In phase and quadrature components Instantaneous phase Lissajous curve Phase cancellation Phase problem Phase spectrum Phase velocity Phasor Polarization Coherence the quality of a wave to display a well defined phase relationship in different regions of its domain of definition Hilbert Transform A method of changing phase by 90 Reflection phase shift A phase change that happens when a wave is reflected off of a boundary from fast medium to slow mediumReferences Edit a b Ballou Glen 2005 Handbook for sound engineers 3 ed Focal Press Gulf Professional Publishing p 1499 ISBN 978 0 240 80758 4 Federal Standard 1037C Glossary of Telecommunications Terms a b c Time and Frequency from A to Z 2010 05 12 Phase Nist National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST Retrieved 12 June 2016 This content has been copied and pasted from an NIST web page and is in the public domain Clint Goss Barry Higgins 2013 The Warble Flutopedia Retrieved 2013 03 06 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phase waves What is a phase Prof Jeffrey Hass An Acoustics Primer Section 8 Indiana University 2003 See also pages 1 thru 3 2013 Phase angle phase difference time delay and frequency ECE 209 Sources of Phase Shift Discusses the time domain sources of phase shift in simple linear time invariant circuits Open Source Physics JavaScript HTML5 Phase Difference Java Applet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phase waves amp oldid 1117761851, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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