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Christopher Johnson
Postby Chris Wolkersdorfer » 2009-09-25, 22:47
Welcome Christopher,
what did you do with wavelet analyses and mine water?
Kind regards
Chris
PS: looking forward to seeing you next year!
Towards the “Zero Waste Mineâ€.
Re: Christopher Johnson
Postby CJ@RESPEC » 2009-09-26, 12:09
Hello Chris,
I have used wavelet analysis with mine water problems in a few different ways. I sometimes use it for cleaning up data sets and removing noise. In some cases, traditional filtering or cleaning of data (e.g., moving average) wipes out important detail that wavelet analysis sometimes can maintain while still cleaning the data. I also use it for decomposition of signals. For example, wavelet analysis allows me to extract earth tide responses from aquifer pressure data.
Regards,
CJ
CJ@RESPEC
Re: Christopher Johnson
Postby Chris Wolkersdorfer » 2009-09-26, 12:33
Dear Christopher,
why don't you use Fast Fourier Aanlyses instead? Which Software do you use?
Chris
PS: I am not questioning that wavelets are an excellent way to do things - I just wondered why you used the more complicated way to do things.
Towards the “Zero Waste Mineâ€.
Re: Christopher Johnson
Postby CJ@RESPEC » 2009-09-26, 13:59
Good question! Fast Fourier transform were tried, but wasn't as successful. Fast Fourier transforms doesn't "see" the data in time series and is the advantage of Wavelet Analysis (in my opinion). I use Matlab and its add in Wavelet Package.
Have you had good experience using Fast Fourier transforms and have you used Wavelets to do the same thing?
Cheers,
CJ
CJ@RESPEC
Re: Christopher Johnson
Postby Chris Wolkersdorfer » 2009-09-27, 19:18
Dear Christopher,
did you remove a trend in your time series? Did you normalize your data. Both procedures usually help. Wavelets analyse the time series time dependat, while FFT does not. In most cases it is not necessary to analyse fluctuations time dependen, therefore I didn't use wavelets so far - which does not mean that I analysed my time series by using them.
I use the Software Autosignal - excellent for all types of time series.
Glückauf
Christian
Towards the “Zero Waste Mineâ€.
Re: Christopher Johnson
Postby CJ@RESPEC » 2009-09-30, 09:45
Hello Chris,
I have tried removing trend, but haven't tried normalizing. When I have removed the trend, it has been on a data set with an apparent trend that is easy to remove. In some of the data sets I want to "clean", there are numerous different trends and slopes (formation pressure changes resulting from inflow increases and decreases) making it difficult to remove trend. This is where I use wavelet analysis to help pull out these complex trends. Usually, it is easy to see the general trend, but sometimes it is very important to know exactly when the trend changed which is where the difficulty comes in.
I will look into normalizing a data set.
Regards,
CJ
CJ@RESPEC