Abstract :
In this paper, the class of the spectrally correlated stochastic processes is introduced. Processes belonging to this class exhibit a Loe`ve (1963) bifrequency spectrum with spectral masses concentrated on a countable set of support curves in the bifrequency plane. Thus, such processes have spectral components that are correlated. The introduced class generalizes the almost-cyclostationary (ACS) processes that are obtained as a special case when the separation between correlated spectral components assumes values only in a countable set. In such a case, the support curves are lines with unit slope. For the spectrally correlated processes, the amount of spectral correlation existing between two separate spectral components is characterized by the bifrequency spectral correlation density function, which is the density of the Loe`ve bifrequency spectrum on its support curves. It is shown that, in general, when the location of the support curves is unknown, the time-smoothed cross-periodogram can provide a reliable (low bias and variance) single sample-path-based estimate of the bifrequency spectral correlation density function in those points of the bifrequency plane where the slope of the support curves is not too far from unity. Moreover, there exists a tradeoff between the departure of the nonstationarity from the almost-cyclostationarity and the reliability of spectral correlation measurements obtainable by a single sample-path. Furthermore, in general, the estimate accuracy cannot be improved as wished by increasing the data-record length and the spectral resolution.
Keywords :
correlation methods; measurement errors; spectral analysis; stochastic processes; Loeve bifrequency spectrum; almost-cyclostationary processes; bifrequency plane; bifrequency spectral correlation density function; correlated spectral components; data-record length; estimate accuracy; measurement uncertainty; sample-path-based estimate; spectral components; spectral correlation measurements; spectral masses; spectral resolution; spectrally correlated stochastic processes; support curves; time-smoothed cross-periodogram; unit slope lines; Autocorrelation; Band pass filters; Density functional theory; Fourier series; Frequency estimation; Measurement uncertainty; Passband; Spectral analysis; Stochastic processes; Telecommunication computing;