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Published March 2017 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Minimum number of possibly non-contiguous samples to distinguish two periods

Abstract

Given that a sequence x(n) is periodic with period P belonging to a known integer set {P_1, P_2, … P_L}, what is the minimum number of samples of x(n) required to find the period? For the special case where the samples of x(n) are constrained to be contiguous in time, this problem has recently been solved. More generally, when the samples are allowed to be non-contiguous, the problem is quite difficult. This paper provides the answer for the restricted situation where P ∈ {P_1, P_2}. With P_1 < P_2, the necessary and sufficient number of (possibly noncontiguous) samples for period estimation turns out to be (a) P_1, if P_1 is not a divisor of P_2, and (b) P_2 otherwise. While the proof is quite involved even in this restricted case, it is likely to form the basis for addressing the more general situation where P ∈ {P_1, P_2, … P_L}.

Additional Information

© 2017 IEEE. This work was supported by the ONR grant N00014-15-1-2118, and the California Institute of Technology.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023