A collocation method for the numerical Fourier analysis of quasi-periodic functions. I: Numerical tests and examples (Q986639): Difference between revisions

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A collocation method for the numerical Fourier analysis of quasi-periodic functions. I: Numerical tests and examples
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    A collocation method for the numerical Fourier analysis of quasi-periodic functions. I: Numerical tests and examples (English)
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    11 August 2010
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    This paper, the first one in a series of two consecutive papers in this journal, describes the implementation of a very accurate and efficient method for the numerical computation of frequencies and amplitudes of quasi-periodic functions. In the second paper of the series a complete error analysis of the methodology is presented. For most of the details the paper is self-contained. After an introduction, Section 2 introduces notation and considers in detail issues like leakage and aliasing that have to be taken into account in the procedure. Section 3 is devoted to the methodology and algorithmics. The Fourier analysis procedure consists of essentially three steps: {\parindent=6mm \begin{itemize}\item[1.] First approximation of frequencies by means of a FFT conveniently filtered. \item[2.] Computation of approximate amplitudes from the approximated frequencies by means of a collocation method in the frequency domain. \item[3.] Simultaneous improvement of frequencies and amplitudes by means of an iterative algorithm. \end{itemize}} The iterative part prevents some frequencies to hide nearby ones of lower amplitude, and the whole procedure is exact in the determination of the spectrum for finite trigonometric polynomials (except for roundoff). In the case of an infinite number of frequencies (linear combination of a basic set), the procedure provides high accuracy when determining a finite set of the important ones. Also an algorithm for the determination of the basic frequencies is given. Section 4 of the paper provides a couple of very illustrative and detailed examples to show the robustness of the procedure, the first and simplest one considering a short trigonometric polynomial and the second one for a two-parameter family of quasi-periodic functions including Gaussian noise in the data. Using the procedure, in Section 5 and 6 the paper analyzes a couple of examples where the purpose is to illustrate the use of frequency analysis as an indicator of regular and chaotic orbits in Taylor-Chirikov-like standard maps and the analysis of the stability region about \(L_5\) for a Sun-Jupiter RTBP. The discussions about results and numerical computations of these sections and others given in Section 7 are worth reading independently.
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    numerical Fourier analysis
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    fast Fourier transform
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    collocation method
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    quasi-periodic functions
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