130 lines
		
	
	
		
			6.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			130 lines
		
	
	
		
			6.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
|   | <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> | ||
|  | <html> | ||
|  | <!-- This manual is for FFTW
 | ||
|  | (version 3.3.10, 10 December 2020). | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Copyright (C) 2003 Matteo Frigo. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Copyright (C) 2003 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this | ||
|  | manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are | ||
|  | preserved on all copies. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this | ||
|  | manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the | ||
|  | entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a | ||
|  | permission notice identical to this one. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual | ||
|  | into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, | ||
|  | except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation | ||
|  | approved by the Free Software Foundation. --> | ||
|  | <!-- Created by GNU Texinfo 6.7, http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ --> | ||
|  | <head> | ||
|  | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> | ||
|  | <title>The Discrete Hartley Transform (FFTW 3.3.10)</title> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | <meta name="description" content="The Discrete Hartley Transform (FFTW 3.3.10)"> | ||
|  | <meta name="keywords" content="The Discrete Hartley Transform (FFTW 3.3.10)"> | ||
|  | <meta name="resource-type" content="document"> | ||
|  | <meta name="distribution" content="global"> | ||
|  | <meta name="Generator" content="makeinfo"> | ||
|  | <link href="index.html" rel="start" title="Top"> | ||
|  | <link href="Concept-Index.html" rel="index" title="Concept Index"> | ||
|  | <link href="index.html#SEC_Contents" rel="contents" title="Table of Contents"> | ||
|  | <link href="More-DFTs-of-Real-Data.html" rel="up" title="More DFTs of Real Data"> | ||
|  | <link href="Other-Important-Topics.html" rel="next" title="Other Important Topics"> | ||
|  | <link href="Real-even_002fodd-DFTs-_0028cosine_002fsine-transforms_0029.html" rel="prev" title="Real even/odd DFTs (cosine/sine transforms)"> | ||
|  | <style type="text/css"> | ||
|  | <!--
 | ||
|  | a.summary-letter {text-decoration: none} | ||
|  | blockquote.indentedblock {margin-right: 0em} | ||
|  | div.display {margin-left: 3.2em} | ||
|  | div.example {margin-left: 3.2em} | ||
|  | div.lisp {margin-left: 3.2em} | ||
|  | kbd {font-style: oblique} | ||
|  | pre.display {font-family: inherit} | ||
|  | pre.format {font-family: inherit} | ||
|  | pre.menu-comment {font-family: serif} | ||
|  | pre.menu-preformatted {font-family: serif} | ||
|  | span.nolinebreak {white-space: nowrap} | ||
|  | span.roman {font-family: initial; font-weight: normal} | ||
|  | span.sansserif {font-family: sans-serif; font-weight: normal} | ||
|  | ul.no-bullet {list-style: none} | ||
|  | --> | ||
|  | </style> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | </head> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | <body lang="en"> | ||
|  | <span id="The-Discrete-Hartley-Transform"></span><div class="header"> | ||
|  | <p> | ||
|  | Previous: <a href="Real-even_002fodd-DFTs-_0028cosine_002fsine-transforms_0029.html" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Real even/odd DFTs (cosine/sine transforms)</a>, Up: <a href="More-DFTs-of-Real-Data.html" accesskey="u" rel="up">More DFTs of Real Data</a>   [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Concept-Index.html" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p> | ||
|  | </div> | ||
|  | <hr> | ||
|  | <span id="The-Discrete-Hartley-Transform-1"></span><h4 class="subsection">2.5.3 The Discrete Hartley Transform</h4> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | <p>If you are planning to use the DHT because you’ve heard that it is | ||
|  | “faster” than the DFT (FFT), <strong>stop here</strong>.  The DHT is not | ||
|  | faster than the DFT.  That story is an old but enduring misconception | ||
|  | that was debunked in 1987. | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <p>The discrete Hartley transform (DHT) is an invertible linear transform | ||
|  | closely related to the DFT.  In the DFT, one multiplies each input by | ||
|  | <em>cos - i * sin</em> (a complex exponential), whereas in the DHT each | ||
|  | input is multiplied by simply <em>cos + sin</em>.  Thus, the DHT | ||
|  | transforms <code>n</code> real numbers to <code>n</code> real numbers, and has the | ||
|  | convenient property of being its own inverse.  In FFTW, a DHT (of any | ||
|  | positive <code>n</code>) can be specified by an r2r kind of <code>FFTW_DHT</code>. | ||
|  | <span id="index-FFTW_005fDHT"></span> | ||
|  | <span id="index-discrete-Hartley-transform"></span> | ||
|  | <span id="index-DHT"></span> | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <p>Like the DFT, in FFTW the DHT is unnormalized, so computing a DHT of | ||
|  | size <code>n</code> followed by another DHT of the same size will result in | ||
|  | the original array multiplied by <code>n</code>. | ||
|  | <span id="index-normalization-4"></span> | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <p>The DHT was originally proposed as a more efficient alternative to the | ||
|  | DFT for real data, but it was subsequently shown that a specialized DFT | ||
|  | (such as FFTW’s r2hc or r2c transforms) could be just as fast.  In FFTW, | ||
|  | the DHT is actually computed by post-processing an r2hc transform, so | ||
|  | there is ordinarily no reason to prefer it from a performance | ||
|  | perspective.<a id="DOCF5" href="#FOOT5"><sup>5</sup></a> | ||
|  | However, we have heard rumors that the DHT might be the most appropriate | ||
|  | transform in its own right for certain applications, and we would be | ||
|  | very interested to hear from anyone who finds it useful. | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <p>If <code>FFTW_DHT</code> is specified for multiple dimensions of a | ||
|  | multi-dimensional transform, FFTW computes the separable product of 1d | ||
|  | DHTs along each dimension.  Unfortunately, this is not quite the same | ||
|  | thing as a true multi-dimensional DHT; you can compute the latter, if | ||
|  | necessary, with at most <code>rank-1</code> post-processing passes | ||
|  | [see e.g. H. Hao and R. N. Bracewell, <i>Proc. IEEE</i> <b>75</b>, 264–266 (1987)]. | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <p>For the precise mathematical definition of the DHT as used by FFTW, see | ||
|  | <a href="What-FFTW-Really-Computes.html">What FFTW Really Computes</a>. | ||
|  | </p> | ||
|  | <div class="footnote"> | ||
|  | <hr> | ||
|  | <h4 class="footnotes-heading">Footnotes</h4> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | <h5><a id="FOOT5" href="#DOCF5">(5)</a></h3> | ||
|  | <p>We provide the DHT mainly as a byproduct of some | ||
|  | internal algorithms. FFTW computes a real input/output DFT of | ||
|  | <em>prime</em> size by re-expressing it as a DHT plus post/pre-processing | ||
|  | and then using Rader’s prime-DFT algorithm adapted to the DHT.</p> | ||
|  | </div> | ||
|  | <hr> | ||
|  | <div class="header"> | ||
|  | <p> | ||
|  | Previous: <a href="Real-even_002fodd-DFTs-_0028cosine_002fsine-transforms_0029.html" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Real even/odd DFTs (cosine/sine transforms)</a>, Up: <a href="More-DFTs-of-Real-Data.html" accesskey="u" rel="up">More DFTs of Real Data</a>   [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Concept-Index.html" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p> | ||
|  | </div> | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | </body> | ||
|  | </html> |