The Hamming was named for R. W. Hamming, an associate of J. W. Tukey
and is described in Blackman and Tukey. It was recommended for
smoothing the truncated autocovariance function in the time domain.
Most references to the Hamming window come from the signal processing
literature, where it is used as one of many windowing functions for
smoothing values. It is also known as an apodization (which means
"removing the foot", i.e. smoothing discontinuities at the beginning
and end of the sampled signal) or tapering function.
References
[1]
Blackman, R.B. and Tukey, J.W., (1958) The measurement of power
spectra, Dover Publications, New York.
[2]
E.R. Kanasewich, "Time Sequence Analysis in Geophysics", The
University of Alberta Press, 1975, pp. 109-110.
plt.figure()A=fft(window,2048)/25.5mag=np.abs(fftshift(A))freq=np.linspace(-0.5,0.5,len(A))response=20*np.log10(mag)response=np.clip(response,-100,100)plt.plot(freq,response)plt.title("Frequency response of Hamming window")plt.ylabel("Magnitude [dB]")plt.xlabel("Normalized frequency [cycles per sample]")plt.axis('tight')plt.show()