Instantaneous frequency and amplitude of complex signals based on quaternion Fourier transform
Nicolas Le Bihan, Stephen J. Sangwine, Todd A. Ell

TL;DR
This paper extends the concepts of instantaneous amplitude and phase to complex signals using quaternion Fourier transform, enabling analysis of complex modulated signals with non-overlapping frequency content.
Contribution
It introduces a quaternion-based hypercomplex representation for complex signals, generalizing the analytic signal concept and providing new tools for signal analysis.
Findings
Quaternion Fourier transform is one-sided in the frequency domain.
Hypercomplex representation allows derivation of complex envelope and phase.
Frequency shift analysis applies to complex modulation with non-overlapping spectra.
Abstract
The ideas of instantaneous amplitude and phase are well understood for signals with real-valued samples, based on the analytic signal which is a complex signal with one-sided Fourier transform. We extend these ideas to signals with complex-valued samples, using a quaternion-valued equivalent of the analytic signal obtained from a one-sided quaternion Fourier transform which we refer to as the hypercomplex representation of the complex signal. We present the necessary properties of the quaternion Fourier transform, particularly its symmetries in the frequency domain and formulae for convolution and the quaternion Fourier transform of the Hilbert transform. The hypercomplex representation may be interpreted as an ordered pair of complex signals or as a quaternion signal. We discuss its derivation and properties and show that its quaternion Fourier transform is one-sided. It is shown how…
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