Phoenix: Synthetic Time Series Generator
Phoenix is Kronts's synthetic time series data generator, designed to help you create realistic test data for developing, testing, and validating data processing pipelines and algorithms.
What is Phoenix?
Phoenix allows you to generate configurable synthetic time series data that mimics real-world sensor data from industrial environments. Whether you need simple signals for quick testing or complex multi-channel datasets with correlations and quality issues, Phoenix provides the tools to create exactly what you need.
Key Capabilities
- Single and Multi-Channel Generation - Create up to 10 independent channels with shared timestamps
- Flexible Signal Components - Combine mean values, noise, trends, oscillations, and transient events
- Channel Correlations - Define statistical relationships between channels for realistic multi-sensor data
- Data Quality Simulation - Add missing data points and outliers to test cleaning algorithms
- Aliasing Detection - Built-in warnings help you avoid undersampling issues
- Multiple Export Formats - Save to database, export as CSV/Excel/JSON, or send to SENTINEL
Why Use Synthetic Time Series Data?
Development & Testing
- Controlled Testing - Test your algorithms with known characteristics
- Edge Cases - Create extreme scenarios that are rare in real data
- Repeatability - Generate the same dataset multiple times for consistent testing
- No Data Privacy Concerns - Use synthetic data without exposing sensitive information
Algorithm Validation
- Ground Truth - Know the exact parameters and characteristics of your test data
- Parameter Sweeps - Systematically test how algorithms respond to different conditions
- Benchmark Creation - Create standard datasets for comparing algorithm performance
Pipeline Development
- FORGE Testing - Generate data with quality issues to test cleaning workflows
- CEREBRO Training - Create labeled event datasets for training classifiers
- Integration Testing - Validate end-to-end data workflows without production data
Quick Start: Your First Time Series
Let's generate a simple time series in under 5 minutes.
Step 1: Access Phoenix
Navigate to Phoenix from the main Kronts menu or go directly to:
http://your-kronts-instance/phoenix/generate/
[Screenshot Required: Phoenix Main Interface]
1. Navigate to /phoenix/generate/
2. Capture: Full page showing sidebar (left) and empty chart area (right)
3. Purpose: Show the main Phoenix interface before any generation
Step 2: Configure Time Settings
In the left sidebar, find the "Time Configuration" section and set:
- Duration: 1 hour
- Sampling Frequency: 1 Hz (1 sample per second)
- End Time: Leave as default (current time)
This will create a time series with 3,600 data points (1 hour × 60 minutes × 60 seconds × 1 Hz).
[Screenshot Required: Time Configuration] 1. Configure: - Hours: 1 - Days/Minutes/Seconds: 0 - Sampling Frequency: 1 2. Capture: Time Configuration section of sidebar 3. Purpose: Show how to set basic time parameters
Step 3: Set Base Signal Properties
Scroll down to "Base Signal Configuration" and set:
- Mean Value: 100
- Noise Amplitude: 5
This creates a signal centered around 100 with random fluctuations of about ±5 units.
[Screenshot Required: Base Signal Configuration] 1. Configure: - Mean Value: 100 - Noise Amplitude: 5 2. Capture: Base Signal Configuration section 3. Purpose: Show basic signal parameter setup
Step 4: Preview Your Data
Click the blue "Preview" button at the top or bottom of the sidebar.
Phoenix will: 1. Generate the time series based on your parameters 2. Display an interactive chart in the main area 3. Show statistics (min, max, mean, total points)
[Screenshot Required: First Generated Chart] 1. After clicking "Preview" with above parameters 2. Capture: Full page showing chart with generated noisy signal around mean=100 3. Purpose: Show what a basic generated time series looks like
Step 5 (Optional): Save Your Time Series
If you want to save this time series for later use:
- Click "Save Time Series" button
- Enter a name: "My First Time Series"
- Add description (optional): "Simple signal for testing"
- Click "Save"
You can now use this time series in SENTINEL or export it for external use.
What You Just Created
Your first time series contains: - 3,600 data points sampled at 1-second intervals - Mean value of 100 as the baseline - Gaussian noise with standard deviation of 5 - Random variations around the mean between approximately 85 and 115
Next Steps
Now that you've created your first time series, explore Phoenix's more advanced capabilities:
Learn Core Features
- Basic Usage Guide - Detailed walkthrough of single-channel generation
- Adding Oscillations - Create signals with periodic behavior (vibrations, rotations)
- Transient Events - Simulate impacts, shocks, and seismic arrivals
- Trends - Add gradual drift or changes over time
Explore Advanced Features
- Multi-Channel Generation - Create datasets with multiple correlated channels
- Channel Correlations - Define statistical relationships between sensors
- Data Degradation - Add missing data and outliers for testing
Understand the Theory
- Sampling and Aliasing - Learn about proper sampling rates
- Technical Reference - Mathematical models and validation rules
Integration & Workflow
- Export and Save - Work with generated data in other tools
Common Use Cases
Rotating Machinery Simulation
Generate vibration data from a motor running at 1800 RPM (30 Hz): - Base signal: Mean=0, Noise=0.1 - Main oscillation: Frequency=30 Hz, Amplitude=2 - Add 2x harmonic: Frequency=60 Hz, Amplitude=0.5
See Oscillations Guide for details.
Seismograph Recording
Simulate a vertical-component seismograph with P-wave and S-wave arrivals: - Base signal: Mean=0, Noise=0.5 mm/s - P-wave transient: Onset=5s, Amplitude=50, Frequency=8 Hz, Damping=0.06 - S-wave transient: Onset=15s, Amplitude=120, Frequency=3 Hz, Damping=0.04
See Transient Events Guide for details.
Temperature Sensor Array
Create 3 correlated temperature sensors in the same room: - 3 channels with similar means (20-22°C) - Positive correlations (0.7-0.9) between channels - Slow daily cycle oscillation (period=24 hours)
See Multi-Channel Guide and Correlations Guide.
Data Quality Testing
Generate data with realistic quality issues: - Remove 5% of data points (sensor dropouts) - Insert 2% outliers with constant value 9999 (sensor saturation) - Test your FORGE cleaning pipeline
System Limits
Be aware of these constraints when using Phoenix:
| Limit | Value | Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum channels | 10 | Multi-channel generation |
| Maximum total data points | 10,000 | Across all channels |
| Maximum saved series | 3 | Per regular user (unlimited for admins) |
| Minimum sampling frequency | 0.001 Hz | All generations |
| Minimum time step | 0.001 seconds | All generations |
See Technical Reference for complete specifications.
Tips for Success
Start Simple
Begin with basic signals and gradually add complexity. Don't try to use all features at once.
Preview Before Saving
Always preview your data before saving. This lets you verify the signal looks correct and catches configuration errors.
Watch for Aliasing Warnings
Phoenix will warn you if your oscillation frequencies are too high for your sampling rate. Pay attention to these warnings to avoid unexpected results.
Name Your Series Clearly
Use descriptive names when saving time series, especially if you're generating multiple variations for testing.
Use Appropriate Sampling Rates
Higher sampling rates create larger datasets. Use the minimum rate needed for your oscillations (generally 2.5× the highest frequency).
Troubleshooting Quick Reference
"Data point limit exceeded" - Reduce duration, decrease sampling frequency, or reduce number of channels - Maximum 10,000 total points across all channels
"Maximum series limit reached" - Delete old saved time series or contact admin for increased limits - Regular users limited to 3 saved series
"Correlation matrix is not valid" - Check that correlation values are between -1.0 and 1.0 - Ensure correlations don't create impossible mathematical constraints - See Channel Correlations Guide
Aliasing warnings appear - Increase sampling frequency to at least 2× the highest oscillation frequency - Or reduce oscillation frequencies - See Sampling and Aliasing Guide
Get More Help
- Feature-Specific Guides - See navigation links above for detailed documentation
- Technical Questions - Refer to Technical Reference
- Examples - Each guide includes real-world use cases with specific parameters
Ready to explore Phoenix in depth? Continue to the Basic Usage Guide for a comprehensive walkthrough of single-channel generation.