Spiral waves propagating in Saturn's rings have wavelengths that vary with radial position within the disc. The best-quality observations of these waves have the form of radial profiles centred on… Click to show full abstract
Spiral waves propagating in Saturn's rings have wavelengths that vary with radial position within the disc. The best-quality observations of these waves have the form of radial profiles centred on a particular azimuth. In that context, the wavelength of a given spiral wave is seen to change substantially with position along the one-dimensional profile. In this paper, we review the use of Morlet wavelet analysis to understand these waves. When signal to noise is high and the cause of the wave is well understood, wavelet analysis has been used to solve for wave parameters that are diagnostic of local disc properties. Waves that are not readily perceptible in the spatial domain signal can be clearly identified. Furthermore, filtering in wavelet space, followed by the reverse wavelet transform, has been used to isolate the part of the signal that is of interest. When the cause of the wave is not known, comparing the phases of the complex-valued wavelet transforms from many profiles has been used to determine wave parameters that cannot be determined from any single profile. When signal to noise is low, co-adding wavelet transforms while manipulating the phase has been used to boost a wave's signal above detection limits. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Redundancy rules: the continuous wavelet transform comes of age’.
               
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