Why does hilbert tranformer give a phase-shifted but amplitude-reduced signal?
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    Yuzhen Lu
 el 10 de Nov. de 2017
  
    
    
    
    
    Comentada: 叶
 el 12 de Dic. de 2022
            I have performed hilbert transform by using a FIR hilbert filter rather than the matlab built-in hilbert function. An example code is as follows:
fx = 10;
t = linspace(0,1,512);
x = 0.5*cos(2*pi*fx*t); %sampled signal
h = firpm(26,[0.1 0.8],[1 1],'h');   % hilbert filter
xh = conv(x,h,'same'); %hilbert transform of x
figure;
plot(t, [x;xh]); legend('Original','Transformed');
The resulting figure is given as follows:

How to address the problem to obtain the result equivalent to that by using hilbert function ?
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  Honglei Chen
    
      
 el 13 de Nov. de 2017
        The phase shift is expected so I assume you are talking about the amplitude? This is because the filter is not ideal. If you do a
fvtool(h)
You can see that the magnitude response is not unity when the frequency is close to DC or Nyquest. In your case, the signal frequency is 10 and the sampling rate is 512, so that is close to DC so you see the attenuation. if you change your sampling rate to, say, 128, then the result would be similar to what you get from hilbert.
HTH
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  叶
 el 12 de Dic. de 2022
				Do you have any idea to solve this problem?I mean if signal amplitude decreased,how can I get the normal ampliude?what should I do ?
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