Questions tagged [dirac-delta]

This tag is for questions involving the Dirac delta function, either in the informal sense, or in the distribution sense. The Dirac delta function is a mathematical construct which is called a generalized function or a distribution and was originally introduced by the British theoretical physicist Paul Dirac.

Mathematically, the delta function is not a function, because it is too singular. Instead, it is said to be a “distribution.” It is a generalized idea of functions, but can be used only inside integrals.

In fact, $~\int \delta~(x)~dx~$ can be regarded as an “operator” which pulls the value of a function at zero. Put it this way, it sounds perfectly legitimate and well-defined. But as long as it is understood that the delta function is eventually integrated, we can use it as if it is a function.

Definition: The Dirac delta function or, delta function $~(~\delta~(x)~)~$ is defined by the properties $$\delta~(x) = \begin{cases} 0 \quad \text{if} \ x\not=0\\ \infty \quad \text{if} \ x=x\end{cases}\qquad \text{and}\qquad \int_0^1 \delta~(x)~dx=1$$

This function is very useful as an approximation for a tall narrow spike function, namely an impulse. For example, to calculate the dynamics of a baseball being hit by a bat, approximating the force of the bat hitting the baseball by a delta function is a useful device. The delta function not only enables the equations to be simplified, but it also allows the motion of the baseball to be calculated by only considering the total impulse of the bat against the ball, rather than requiring the details of how the bat transferred energy to the ball.

There are three main properties of the Dirac Delta function that we need to be aware of. These are,

$1.\quad$ $$~\delta \left( {t - a} \right) = 0~~~~~~~t \ne a~$$ $2.\quad$ $$~\displaystyle \int_{{a - \varepsilon }}^{{ a + \varepsilon }}{{\delta \left( {t - a} \right)~dt}} = 1,\hspace{0.25in}\varepsilon > 0~$$ $3.\quad$ $$~\displaystyle \int_{{ a - \varepsilon }}^{{ a + \varepsilon }}{{f\left( t \right)\delta \left( {t - a} \right)~dt}} = f\left( a \right),\hspace{0.25in}~~~~~~~~~~\varepsilon > 0~$$

References:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_delta_function

http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DeltaFunction.html

2057 questions
0
votes
1 answer

Measure of countour lines for function of 2 variables

Let $f: [0, l]\times[0,l] \rightarrow [0,1]$ continuous. I need a mathematical tool to obtain a 'measure' of the contour lines of $f$, where 'measure' could be meant as their length. I was not able to find any answer in the literature. Edited out…
AMel
  • 3
0
votes
1 answer

Is this proof of $\frac{d^2}{dx^2}(e^{-a|x|})$ valid?

Hello So I am currently trying to prove that $$\frac{d^2}{dx^2}(e^{-a|x|}) = a^2 e^{-a|x|} - 2a\delta(x)$$ I have made a proof and was wondering if my proof would be considered valid Proof $$\frac{d}{dx}(e^{-a|x|}) = -a e^{-a|x|} - a\delta(x)$$…
0
votes
0 answers

Question on differential Dirac's Delta, rearrange argument

If I have the distribution: $\delta'(x^3 + x)$ and I want to write it using only $x$ as argument. I have tried using $$\delta(f(x)) = \frac{\sum_{i=1}^{k} \delta(x - x_i)}{|f'(x_i)|}$$ where $f(x) = x^3 + x$ and $x_i$ are the simples roots of…
Rael
  • 85
0
votes
1 answer

Dirac's delta composition with function

Reading this I see that the statement: $ \delta \left( f(x) \right) = \sum_i \dfrac{\delta(x - a_i)}{|f'(a_i)|} $ is equivalent to showing that: $ \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} g(x)\delta \left( f(x) \right) = \sum_i \dfrac{g(a_i)}{|f'(a_i)|} $ Where $…
Amath
  • 3
0
votes
2 answers

If Dirac Delta is not a function, then what is this?

Is$$f(x)=\lim_{a\to\infty}\frac{e^{-(x/a)^2}}{a\sqrt{\pi}}$$ a function or not? If not, why not? Sorry if the question is too beginner-ish Well, you are right, I should have written $a\to 0$
High GPA
  • 3,776
  • 15
  • 44
0
votes
0 answers

The delta function in physics

In physics, do we have \begin{align} \frac{q^{-1}y-1}{y-1}-\frac{qy^{-1}-1}{q(y^{-1}-1)} =(1-q^{-1}) \delta(y)? \end{align} If $y \not\to 1$, then \begin{align} \frac{q^{-1}y-1}{y-1}-\frac{qy^{-1}-1}{q(y^{-1}-1)} = 0. \end{align} If $y \to 1$,…
LJR
  • 14,520
0
votes
1 answer

Dirac delta - virtual calculus?

Most times how the dirac delta is defined / used leaves me unsatisfied. I stumbled upon this paper, which addresses one of my concerns in the introduction ; is it worth the time to study it and the referenced publications by the same author? If…
0
votes
0 answers

Lorentzian Delta Function Sifting Property

Using the Lorentzian as the delta function $$\delta(x) ~=~ \lim_{\epsilon\rightarrow 0} \frac{1}{\pi}\frac{\epsilon^2}{\epsilon^2+x^2}$$ Is there a way to rigorously prove the sifting property, namely $$\int^{\infty}_{-\infty} f(x) \delta(x-t) dx =…
0
votes
1 answer

Why is $H(x,x')=−\frac{ℏ^2}{2m}δ''(x−x')+V(x)δ(x−x')?$

$$ \newcommand{\ddt}[1]{\frac{d #1}{dt}} $$ This is quoted from Feynman's lectures' The Schrödinger equation: In Chapter 8, we described how states varied in time in terms of the Hamiltonian $H_{ij}.$ We saw that the time variation of the various…
user142971
0
votes
2 answers

Delta Function and Unit Step Formula

I have come across the following formula: $$u(n)=\sum_{m=-\infty}^{n}\delta(m)$$ where $u(n)$ is the Unit Step and $\delta(m)$ is the Delta Function: What I can't understand is how this formula "works". Expanding the formula we…
Adam
  • 351
0
votes
1 answer

On the dirac measure and integration

Ok guys, I have a very trivial (not for me, though) question regarding the folowing statement: $u_o (x) = \exp \left ( -\int^{x}_1 \frac{M \delta(y)}{2 \epsilon} dy \right)$ ... I don't understand how the author gets to the following answers: $u_0…
Kbzon
  • 159
0
votes
1 answer

frequency domain of a delta function

I am having trouble understanding this: I have a function $$ \delta (t_1-t_2) $$ but I want to prove that in the frequency domain, it is: $$\delta(\omega_1+\omega_2) $$ So, we have: $$F(t0,w_{1})=\int _{-\infty }^{\infty }\!\delta \left( {\it…
Jackson Hart
  • 1,600
-1
votes
1 answer

What is the meaning of $\delta(ax + by - t)$

How one deals with 2D delta function $\delta(x+y)$? Is $\delta (x+y)$ same as $\delta(x,y)=\delta(x) \delta(y)$ ? It appears in radon transforms. Below is special case that I am interested in. $$\int\int \delta (ax+by-t) f(x)g(y) dx dy $$
Anonymous
  • 333
-1
votes
2 answers

Is this expression identical to just a Dirac delta?

I have come across an expression like this, $$ \frac{f(x) + f(a)}{2\sqrt{f(x)f(a)}}\,\delta(x-a), $$ where I expected to find just $\delta(x-a)$. When I thought about it, though, I realised maybe... they are identical? Because both yield $1$ when…
TeicDaun
  • 202
-1
votes
2 answers

How can i prove Delta function property with derivative?

How can i proof below delta function property? $$\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}f(t)\delta^{(n)}(t-a)dt=(-1)^{n}f^{(n)}(a)$$, where (n) denotes nth derivate.
1 2 3
11
12