this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2024
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Little nitpick. Nyquist frequency is at least 2x the maximum frequency of the signal of interest.
The signal of interest could be something like ~20kHz (human hearing or thereabouts) or it could be something like a 650 kHz AM radio signal.
Nyquist will ensure that you preserve artifacts that indicate primary frequency(ies) of interest, but you'll lose nuance for signal analysis.
When we're analyzing a signal more deeply we tend to use something like 40x expected max signal frequency, it'll give you a much better look at the signal of interest.
Either way, neat project.
Double nitpick, according to Wikipedia, your definition is a "minority usage". I teach signal Processing and hadn't heard of that one, so thanks for pointing me to it!
Nyquist as half sampling rate is what I use
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyquist_frequency#Other_meanings
Neat! I've definitely originated misunderstandings based on that. I wonder if it comes from my signals class lol