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Modulation spaces are defined as follows. For , a non-negative function on and a test function , the modulation space
is defined by
In the above equation, denotes the short-time Fourier transform of with respect to evaluated at , namely
In other words, is equivalent to . The space is the same, independent of the test function chosen. The canonical choice is a Gaussian.
We also have a Besov-type definition of modulation spaces as follows.[3]
,
where is a suitable unity partition. If , then .
Feichtinger's algebra
For and , the modulation space is known by the name Feichtinger's algebra and often denoted by for being the minimal Segal algebra invariant under time-frequency shifts, i.e. combined translation and modulation operators. is a Banach space embedded in , and is invariant under the Fourier transform. It is for these and more properties that is a natural choice of test function space for time-frequency analysis. Fourier transform is an automorphism on .