Applied Fft to my temperature sensor readings and don't understand the result
4 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Vasco Sampaio
on 5 Mar 2018
Answered: Rijal Al Kautsar
on 17 Apr 2019
Hi everybody,
I'm reading data from my temperature sensor with arduino at a sampling frequency of 100Hz. Arduino writes data to the serial port and Matlab gets it perfectly (no data is missing). When I do the fft to see at which frequency I'm getting this result.
Second image is the zoomed graph of the 1st.
I'm new to digital signal processing, so I'm a bit confused: shouldn't DC gain be negligible? Is there an explanation for this result, or is it wrong.
Time series is plotted here also
Thanks in advance
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Christoph F.
on 5 Mar 2018
> Is there an explanation for this result, or is it wrong.
The result looks correct. The Fourier transform shows a large DC component, because the signal has a large DC component.
> I'm new to digital signal processing, so I'm a bit confused: shouldn't DC gain be negligible?
What do you mean by "DC gain"? From the graph, it looks like the average value (-> DC component) is about 32.75°C, and all other variations are in the +/- 2.5°C range. A large DC component in the frequency domain correctly represents the temperature data.
More Answers (1)
See Also
Products
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!