Least-squares Spectral Analysis - Historical Background

Historical Background

The close connections between Fourier analysis, the periodogram, and least-squares fitting of sinusoids have long been known. Most developments, however, are restricted to complete data sets of equally spaced samples. In 1963, J. F. M. Barning of Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam, handled unequally spaced data by similar techniques, including both a periodogram analysis equivalent to what is now referred to the Lomb method, and least-squares fitting of selected frequencies of sinusoids determined from such periodograms, connected by a procedure that is now known as matching pursuit with post-backfitting or orthogonal matching pursuit.

Petr Vaníček, a Canadian geodesist of the University of New Brunswick, also proposed the matching-pursuit approach, which he called "successive spectral analysis", but with equally spaced data, in 1969. He further developed this method, and analyzed the treatment of unequally spaced samples, in 1971.

The Vaníček method was then simplified in 1976 by Nicholas R. Lomb of the University of Sydney, who pointed out its close connection to periodogram analysis. The definition of a periodogram of unequally spaced data was subsequently further modified and analyzed by Jeffrey D. Scargle of NASA Ames Research Center, who showed that with minor changes it could be made identical to Lomb's least-squares formula for fitting individual sinusoid frequencies.

Scargle states that his paper "does not introduce a new detection technique, but instead studies the reliability and efficiency of detection with the most commonly used technique, the periodogram, in the case where the observation times are unevenly spaced," and further points out in reference to least-squares fitting of sinusoids compared to periodogram analysis, that his paper "establishes, apparently for the first time, that (with the proposed modifications) these two methods are exactly equivalent."

Press summarizes the development this way:

A completely different method of spectral analysis for unevenly sampled data, one that mitigates these difficulties and has some other very desirable properties, was developed by Lomb, based in part on earlier work by Barning and Vanicek, and additionally elaborated by Scargle.

Michael Korenberg of Queen's University in 1989 developed the "fast orthogonal search" method of more quickly finding a near-optimal decomposition of spectra or other problems, similar to the technique that later became known as orthogonal matching pursuit. In 1994, Scott Chen and David Donoho of Stanford University have developed the "basis pursuit" method using minimization of the L1 norm of coefficients to cast the problem as a linear programming problem, for which efficient solutions are available.

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