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Fast Wavelet Transform and Its Application to Detecting Detonation
Hisakazu KIKUCHI Makoto NAKASHIZUKA Hiromichi WATANABE Satoru WATANABE Naoki TOMISAWA
Publication
IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Fundamentals of Electronics, Communications and Computer Sciences
Vol.E75-A
No.8
pp.980-987 Publication Date: 1992/08/25 Online ISSN:
DOI: Print ISSN: 0916-8508 Type of Manuscript: Special Section PAPER (Special Section on the 6th Digital Signal Processing Symposium) Category: Keyword: digital signal processing, wavelets, signals and waves, acoustics,
Full Text: PDF(1.1MB)>>
Summary:
Fast wavelet transform is presented for realtime processing of wavelet transforms. A processor for the fast wavelet transform is of the frequency sampling structure in architectural level. The fast wavelet transform owes its parallelism both to the frequency sampling structure and parallel tapping of a series of delay elements. Computational burden of the fast transform is hence independent of specific scale values in wavelets and the parallel processing of the fast transform is readily implemented for real-time applications. This point is quite different from the computation of wavelet transforms by convolution. We applied the fast wavelet transform to detecting detonation in a vehicle engine for precise real-time control of ignition advancement. The prototype wavelet for this experiment was the Gaussian wavelet (i.e. Gabor function) which is known to have the least spread both in time and in frequency. The number of complex multiplications needed to compute the fast wavelet transform over 51 scales is 714 in this experiment, which is less than one tenth of that required for the convolution method. Experimental results have shown that detonation is successfully detected from the acoustic vibration signal picked up by a single knock sensor embedded in the outer wall of a V/8 engine and is discriminated from other environmental mechanical vibrations.
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