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The Morlet wavelet transform is capable of capturing short bursts of repeating and alternating music notes with a clear start and end time for each note. [citation needed] A modified morlet wavelet was proposed to extract melody from polyphonic music. [11] This methodology is designed for the detection of closed frequency.
Modified Mexican hat, Modified Morlet and Dark soliton or Darklet wavelets are derived from hyperbolic (sech) (bright soliton) and hyperbolic tangent (tanh) (dark soliton) pulses. These functions are derived intuitively from the solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation in the anomalous and normal dispersion regimes in a similar fashion ...
ECW, a wavelet-based geospatial image format designed for speed and processing efficiency; Gabor wavelet; Haar wavelet; JPEG 2000, a wavelet-based image compression standard; Least-squares spectral analysis; Morlet wavelet; Multiresolution analysis; MrSID, the image format developed from original wavelet compression research at Los Alamos ...
Most of the continuous wavelets are used for both wavelet decomposition and composition transforms. That is they are the continuous counterpart of orthogonal wavelets. [1] [2] The following continuous wavelets have been invented for various applications: [3] Poisson wavelet; Morlet wavelet; Modified Morlet wavelet; Mexican hat wavelet
Jean Morlet (French: [ʒɑ̃ mɔʁlɛ]; 13 January 1931 – 27 April 2007) was a French geophysicist who pioneered work in the field of wavelet analysis around the year 1975. He invented the term wavelet to describe the functions he was using. In 1981, Morlet worked with Alex Grossmann to develop what is now known as the Wavelet transform.
The wavelets are scaled and translated copies (known as "daughter wavelets") of a finite-length or fast-decaying oscillating waveform (known as the "mother wavelet"). Wavelet transforms have advantages over traditional Fourier transforms for representing functions that have discontinuities and sharp peaks, and for accurately deconstructing and ...
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[7] [13] The Gabor filter was modified by Morlet to form an orthonormal continuous wavelet transform. [14] Although the Gabor filter achieves a sense of optimality in terms of the space-frequency tradeoff, in certain applications it might not be an ideal filter. At certain bandwidths, the Gabor filter has a non-zero DC component.