Sensitivity of Yield Optimized Superoscillations
Moshe Schwartz, Ehud Perlsman

TL;DR
This paper investigates how small random deviations in Fourier coefficients affect the superoscillating nature and energy yield of optimized signals, establishing practical limits on the required precision for real-world applications.
Contribution
It analyzes the robustness of superoscillation optimization against coefficient inaccuracies, providing practical precision bounds for implementation.
Findings
Superoscillation is sensitive to small coefficient deviations.
Practical precision limits for Fourier coefficients are identified.
Superoscillation properties remain stable within certain deviation bounds.
Abstract
Super oscillating signals are band limited signals that oscillate in some region faster than their largest Fourier component. Such signals have many obvious scientific and technological applications, yet their practical use is strongly limited by the fact that an overwhelming proportion of the energy goes into that part of the signal, which is not superoscillating. In a recent article the problem of optimization of such signals has been studied. In that article the concept of superoscillation yield is defined as the ratio of the energy in the super oscillations to the total energy of the signal, given the range in time and frequency of the superoscillations, which is imposed by forcing the signal to interpolate among a set of predetermined points. The optimization of the superoscillation yield consists of obtaining the Fourier coefficients of the low frequency components of which the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical and Acousto-Optic Technologies · Antenna Design and Optimization · Superconducting and THz Device Technology
