scholarly journals Spectral Analysis of Irregularly Sampled Data with Time Series Models

2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piet M.T. Broersen
2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 1175-1192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Zhang ◽  
Ciaran J. Harman ◽  
James W. Kirchner

Abstract. River water-quality time series often exhibit fractal scaling, which here refers to autocorrelation that decays as a power law over some range of scales. Fractal scaling presents challenges to the identification of deterministic trends because (1) fractal scaling has the potential to lead to false inference about the statistical significance of trends and (2) the abundance of irregularly spaced data in water-quality monitoring networks complicates efforts to quantify fractal scaling. Traditional methods for estimating fractal scaling – in the form of spectral slope (β) or other equivalent scaling parameters (e.g., Hurst exponent) – are generally inapplicable to irregularly sampled data. Here we consider two types of estimation approaches for irregularly sampled data and evaluate their performance using synthetic time series. These time series were generated such that (1) they exhibit a wide range of prescribed fractal scaling behaviors, ranging from white noise (β  =  0) to Brown noise (β  =  2) and (2) their sampling gap intervals mimic the sampling irregularity (as quantified by both the skewness and mean of gap-interval lengths) in real water-quality data. The results suggest that none of the existing methods fully account for the effects of sampling irregularity on β estimation. First, the results illustrate the danger of using interpolation for gap filling when examining autocorrelation, as the interpolation methods consistently underestimate or overestimate β under a wide range of prescribed β values and gap distributions. Second, the widely used Lomb–Scargle spectral method also consistently underestimates β. A previously published modified form, using only the lowest 5 % of the frequencies for spectral slope estimation, has very poor precision, although the overall bias is small. Third, a recent wavelet-based method, coupled with an aliasing filter, generally has the smallest bias and root-mean-squared error among all methods for a wide range of prescribed β values and gap distributions. The aliasing method, however, does not itself account for sampling irregularity, and this introduces some bias in the result. Nonetheless, the wavelet method is recommended for estimating β in irregular time series until improved methods are developed. Finally, all methods' performances depend strongly on the sampling irregularity, highlighting that the accuracy and precision of each method are data specific. Accurately quantifying the strength of fractal scaling in irregular water-quality time series remains an unresolved challenge for the hydrologic community and for other disciplines that must grapple with irregular sampling.


2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (10) ◽  
pp. 2217-2229
Author(s):  
Christopher Dupuis ◽  
Courtney Schumacher

AbstractThe Lomb–Scargle discrete Fourier transform (LSDFT) is a well-known technique for analyzing time series. In this study, a solution for empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) based on irregularly sampled data is derived from the LSDFT. It is demonstrated that this particular algorithm has no hard limit on its accuracy and yields results comparable to those of complex Hilbert EOF analysis. Two LSDFT algorithms are compared in terms of their performance in evaluating EOFs for precipitation observations from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite. Both are shown to be able to capture the pattern of the diurnal cycle of rainfall over the complex topography and diverse land cover of South America, and both also show other consistent features in the 0–12-day frequency band.


2015 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ibrahim Ozken ◽  
Deniz Eroglu ◽  
Thomas Stemler ◽  
Norbert Marwan ◽  
G. Baris Bagci ◽  
...  

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