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Find signal power in a band by integrating the PSD in a frequency band (and zeroing the out-of-band DFT bins)

Signal Processing Asked by ecook on October 24, 2021

I know that directly zero DFT bins outside a frequency band has the side effect of introducing ringing, as this post says Why is it a bad idea to filter by zeroing out FFT bins?. But what about calculating the power by summing the PSD in a frequency band. In my opinion, this is similar to first setting the out-band PSD amplitudes to zeros (which may cause ringing in time domain) and then summing the remainning nonzero amplitudes.

I guess it is different from first applying a bandpass filter to the time domain signal(which has no ringing) and calculating the power by averaging the squared time domain samples. Can you point out how much error the frequency domain method has? or maybe these two methods are equivalent?

One Answer

For a DFT that was computed with only a rectangular window (no further windowing beyond the selection), the power in the "out of band" bins contains signal energy from "in-band", so by zeroing those out, you are not including the power that should be in the computation. The challenge however is that if there is energy out of band, it will similarly have components within your band of interest! Here we see that the real flaw is trying to comput the power within a bandwidth without windowing the signal in the time domain first to reduce the effects of sidelobes in the DFT.

More details on doing this accurately, and specifically accounting for the power loss due to the windowing, and the change in the equivalent noise bandwidth of each bin, please see this post here:

How can I get the power of a specific frequency band after FFT?

and

How to calculate resolution of DFT with Hamming/Hann window?

Answered by Dan Boschen on October 24, 2021

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