xorbits.numpy.fft.ifft#

xorbits.numpy.fft.ifft(a, n=None, axis=- 1, norm=None)[source]#

Compute the one-dimensional inverse discrete Fourier Transform.

This function computes the inverse of the one-dimensional n-point discrete Fourier transform computed by fft. In other words, ifft(fft(a)) == a to within numerical accuracy. For a general description of the algorithm and definitions, see numpy.fft.

The input should be ordered in the same way as is returned by fft, i.e.,

  • a[0] should contain the zero frequency term,

  • a[1:n//2] should contain the positive-frequency terms,

  • a[n//2 + 1:] should contain the negative-frequency terms, in increasing order starting from the most negative frequency.

For an even number of input points, A[n//2] represents the sum of the values at the positive and negative Nyquist frequencies, as the two are aliased together. See numpy.fft for details.

Parameters
  • a (array_like) – Input array, can be complex.

  • n (int, optional) – Length of the transformed axis of the output. If n is smaller than the length of the input, the input is cropped. If it is larger, the input is padded with zeros. If n is not given, the length of the input along the axis specified by axis is used. See notes about padding issues.

  • axis (int, optional) – Axis over which to compute the inverse DFT. If not given, the last axis is used.

  • norm ({"backward", "ortho", "forward"}, optional) –

    New in version 1.10.0(numpy.fft).

    Normalization mode (see numpy.fft). Default is “backward”. Indicates which direction of the forward/backward pair of transforms is scaled and with what normalization factor.

    New in version 1.20.0(numpy.fft): The “backward”, “forward” values were added.

Returns

out – The truncated or zero-padded input, transformed along the axis indicated by axis, or the last one if axis is not specified.

Return type

complex ndarray

Raises

IndexError – If axis is not a valid axis of a.

See also

numpy.fft

An introduction, with definitions and general explanations.

fft

The one-dimensional (forward) FFT, of which ifft is the inverse

ifft2

The two-dimensional inverse FFT.

ifftn

The n-dimensional inverse FFT.

Notes

If the input parameter n is larger than the size of the input, the input is padded by appending zeros at the end. Even though this is the common approach, it might lead to surprising results. If a different padding is desired, it must be performed before calling ifft.

Examples

>>> np.fft.ifft([0, 4, 0, 0])  
array([ 1.+0.j,  0.+1.j, -1.+0.j,  0.-1.j]) # may vary

Create and plot a band-limited signal with random phases:

>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt  
>>> t = np.arange(400)  
>>> n = np.zeros((400,), dtype=complex)  
>>> n[40:60] = np.exp(1j*np.random.uniform(0, 2*np.pi, (20,)))  
>>> s = np.fft.ifft(n)  
>>> plt.plot(t, s.real, label='real')  
[<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at ...>]
>>> plt.plot(t, s.imag, '--', label='imaginary')  
[<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at ...>]
>>> plt.legend()  
<matplotlib.legend.Legend object at ...>
>>> plt.show()  

This docstring was copied from numpy.fft.