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research article

Fast and precise Fourier Transforms

Buhler, J. P.
•
Shokrollahi, A.  
•
Stemann, V
2000
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory

Many applications of fast Fourier transforms (FFTs), such as computer tomography, geophysical signal processing, high-resolution imaging radars, and prediction filters, require high-precision output. An error analysis reveals that the usual method of fixed-point computation of FFTs of vectors of length 2l leads to an average loss of l/2 bits of precision. This phenomenon, often referred to as computational noise, causes major problems for arithmetic units with limited precision which are often used for real-time applications. Several researchers have noted that calculation of FFTs with algebraic integers avoids computational noise entirely. We combine a new algorithm for approximating complex numbers by cyclotomic integers with Chinese remaindering strategies to give an efficient algorithm to compute b-bit precision FFTs of length L. More precisely, we approximate complex numbers by cyclotomic integers in $Z[e^(2pi i/2n)]$ whose coefficients, when expressed as polynomials in e(2 pi i/2n), are bounded in absolute value by some integer M. For fixed n our algorithm runs in time $(log(M))$, and produces an approximation with worst case error of $O(1/M(2n-2-1))$. We prove that this algorithm has optimal worst case error by proving a corresponding lower bound on the worst case error of any approximation algorithm for this task. The main tool for designing the algorithms is the use of the cyclotomic units, a subgroup of finite index in the unit group of the cyclotomic field. First implementations of our algorithms indicate that they are fast enough to be used for the design of low-cost high-speed/high-precision FFT chips

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1109/18.817519
Author(s)
Buhler, J. P.
Shokrollahi, A.  
Stemann, V
Date Issued

2000

Published in
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
Volume

46

Issue

1

Start page

213

End page

228

Subjects

algoweb_sigproc

•

algoweb_numbertheory

•

algoweb_compalg

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
ALGO  
Available on Infoscience
January 16, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/239467
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