Zak transform

In mathematics, the Zak transform[1][2] (also known as the Gelfand mapping) is a certain operation which takes as input a function of one variable and produces as output a function of two variables. The output function is called the Zak transform of the input function. The transform is defined as an infinite series in which each term is a product of a dilation of a translation by an integer of the function and an exponential function. In applications of Zak transform to signal processing the input function represents a signal and the transform will be a mixed timefrequency representation of the signal. The signal may be real valued or complex-valued, defined on a continuous set (for example, the real numbers) or a discrete set (for example, the integers or a finite subset of integers). The Zak transform is a generalization of the discrete Fourier transform.[1][2]

The Zak transform had been discovered by several people in different fields and was called by different names. It was called the "Gelfand mapping" because Israel Gelfand introduced it in his work on eigenfunction expansions. The transform was rediscovered independently by Joshua Zak in 1967 who called it the "k-q representation". There seems to be a general consensus among experts in the field to call it the Zak transform, since Zak was the first to systematically study that transform in a more general setting and recognize its usefulness.[1][2]

  1. ^ a b c "Zak transform". Encyclopedia of Mathematics. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Alexander D. Poularikas, ed. (2010). Transforms and Applications Handbook (3rd ed.). CRC Press. pp. 16.1–16.21. ISBN 978-1-4200-6652-4.