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Unwrap lower than the default value (pi)

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Pranjal Agrawal
Pranjal Agrawal on 7 Aug 2023
Commented: Bryan Wingert on 16 Jul 2024 at 20:49
Hi! Can anyone please elaborate on how to eliminate jumps that are less than pi?I have a function which varies from (0,pi/2). I want to unwrap the values in between that range. Can anyone please suggest on how to use this.
Thanks
  2 Comments
Stephen23
Stephen23 on 7 Aug 2023
multiply by four, UNWRAP, divide by four
Bryan Wingert
Bryan Wingert on 16 Jul 2024 at 20:49
This is a pretty clever hack of the unwrap function. It scales jumps from the threshold (pi/2 in this case) up to 2*pi, which guarantees that it gets unwrapped, since the unwrap function looks for jumps of 2*pi. (The threshold represents the bidirectional bound, e.g. [-pi,pi] for the default.) More specifically, the scaling factor is approximately 2*pi/threshold. Approximately because numerical error can throw it off sometimes.

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Answers (1)

Sanjana
Sanjana on 21 Aug 2023
Hi Pranjal,
I understand that you are looking for a way to eliminate jumps that are less than pi. As per the official documentation of the,”unwrap” function, if a jump threshold less than pi is specified, then unwrap function uses the default jump threshold pi.
For eliminating jumps that are less than pi, a custom unwrapping algorithm can be implemented as follows,
% Let P be the phase vector
%Intialize unwrapped phase vector
unwrapped = zeros(size(P));
unwrapped (1) = P(1);
for i = 2:length(P)
diff = P(i)-P(i-1);%Calculating the jump
%check if jump is greater than threshold T
if diff > T
unwrapped(i) = P(i) - 2*pi;
elseif diff < -T
unwrapped(i) = P(i) + 2*pi;
else
unwrapped(i) = P(i);
end
end
Please refer to this following link, for further information,
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Sanjana
  1 Comment
Bryan Wingert
Bryan Wingert on 16 Jul 2024 at 20:31
This only unwraps the point next to the jump, and leaves the rest of the vector untouched. The unwrap function cumulatively shifts the rest of the vector. Use Stephen23's hack above.

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