Hello Stephen Holland
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年7月17日 GMT-4 11:48
Hi Stephen, Did you find a solution to this problem or not. I face a similar problem here.
I am just the opposite case. I am having a time dependent function and I need the frequency domain response.
Please advise.
Hossam
Hi Stephen, Did you find a solution to this problem or not. I face a similar problem here.
I am just the opposite case. I am having a time dependent function and I need the frequency domain response.
Please advise.
Hossam
Edgar J. Kaiser
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年7月17日 GMT-4 12:55
Hi,
in Stephen's case with a single frequency: he can use the phase as x-axis parameter and scale accordingly.
In the inverse case, Hossam, you can choose the frequency spectrum instead of time in the x-axis data selection.
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
www.emphys.com
Hi,
in Stephen's case with a single frequency: he can use the phase as x-axis parameter and scale accordingly.
In the inverse case, Hossam, you can choose the frequency spectrum instead of time in the x-axis data selection.
Cheers
Edgar
--
Edgar J. Kaiser
emPhys Physical Technology
http://www.emphys.com
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年11月24日 GMT-5 04:53
Dear Edgar,
Can you please provide me more details about the transformation form frequency plot to time plot. In fact, it is not clear to me how using the phase as x-axis generates a time domain plot. It is equivalent to multiply the solution by exp(j*phase*pi/180); phase [rad]. Isn't it?
We should not multiply the solution by exp(j*2*pi*frequency) to generate a time-domain plot.
Thank you in advance.
Best regards,
Nadia
Dear Edgar,
Can you please provide me more details about the transformation form frequency plot to time plot. In fact, it is not clear to me how using the phase as x-axis generates a time domain plot. It is equivalent to multiply the solution by exp(j*phase*pi/180); phase [rad]. Isn't it?
We should not multiply the solution by exp(j*2*pi*frequency) to generate a time-domain plot.
Thank you in advance.
Best regards,
Nadia
Henrik Sönnerlind
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年11月24日 GMT-5 08:13
Hi,
By using a 'Frequency to Time FFT' study step you can generate a time history from frequency domain results, even for several frequencies.
Look at the third study in this example:
www.comsol.com/model/vibration-analysis-of-a-thick-beam-20301
A plot from that model is attached.
Regards,
Henrik
Hi,
By using a 'Frequency to Time FFT' study step you can generate a time history from frequency domain results, even for several frequencies.
Look at the third study in this example:
http://www.comsol.com/model/vibration-analysis-of-a-thick-beam-20301
A plot from that model is attached.
Regards,
Henrik
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Posted:
9 years ago
2015年11月26日 GMT-5 06:11
Thank you for your reply.
Regards,
Nadia
Thank you for your reply.
Regards,
Nadia
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Posted:
8 years ago
2016年6月24日 GMT-4 19:09
Dear Edgar,
I am relatively new to comsol, and it sounds like doing this should be trivial, but I cannot figure out how to plot some result in frequency domain (AC/DC module in my case, but it should be general post-processing tool) with the "phase" in the x-axis.
Is there a direct simple way to make the phase the variable in the x-axis of the plot of a frequency domain result, without resorting to FFT study step, especially that I'm interested in a single frequency analysis?
And is there an example in the application library to do it for a frequency domain study?
Best regards,
Majd
Dear Edgar,
I am relatively new to comsol, and it sounds like doing this should be trivial, but I cannot figure out how to plot some result in frequency domain (AC/DC module in my case, but it should be general post-processing tool) with the "phase" in the x-axis.
Is there a direct simple way to make the phase the variable in the x-axis of the plot of a frequency domain result, without resorting to FFT study step, especially that I'm interested in a single frequency analysis?
And is there an example in the application library to do it for a frequency domain study?
Best regards,
Majd
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Posted:
8 years ago
2016年8月4日 GMT-4 15:18
Hello,
I am kind of new in Comsol, so I am facing difficulties in solving this problem. It might be a very silly problem though.
Problem: I have a defined antenna structure in the attachment fig.1 . I have simulated the e-field distribution on the surface. However, now I would like to see how the e-field changes with time along that path (red line) in the structure? So, it is basically a 1D plot of time-varying e-field along that path (red line).
My study type is frequency domain in this case. Please help me with this.
Hello,
I am kind of new in Comsol, so I am facing difficulties in solving this problem. It might be a very silly problem though.
Problem: I have a defined antenna structure in the attachment fig.1 . I have simulated the e-field distribution on the surface. However, now I would like to see how the e-field changes with time along that path (red line) in the structure? So, it is basically a 1D plot of time-varying e-field along that path (red line).
My study type is frequency domain in this case. Please help me with this.