phasewraps
Phasewraps refer to the representation of a phase angle constrained to a principal interval by modulo 2π, which leads to abrupt discontinuities when the true phase crosses multiples of 2π. In many measurements, the phase is inherently cyclic and is typically reported as a wrapped phase φ that satisfies φ = θ mod 2π, where θ is the true phase. Common ranges for wrapped phase include (-π, π] or [0, 2π). The wrapping occurs because phase is typically defined only modulo 2π, due to the sinusoidal nature of measurement signals or the use of trigonometric encoders.
Phase wrap artifacts appear in plots and analyses as sudden jumps of size 2π, even though the
Phase unwrapping is the process of reconstructing an unwrapped, continuous phase by adding or subtracting integer
Applications include synthetic aperture radar and other interferometric imaging, MRI phase imaging, optical coherence tomography, wavefront