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

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How to determine if a function approaches the dirac delta function?

To my question: There are many functions that represent the Dirac delta "function", like the square wave function: $$\delta_n(t)=n, -\frac{1}{2n}
Tomy
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Dirac delta of a non-invertible function with poles in the derivatives

Is there a way to define a dirac delta of the following form: $$\delta(x_0-f(x))$$ where the function $f$ is non-invertible and has poles in its derivatives.
Audrique
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Multiplying Dirac Delta Function by a Scalar

What happens when you multiply the dirac delta function, $\delta(t)$, by some scalar k? From my understanding, $\delta(t)$=0 for t≠0, and $\delta(t)$=∞ for t=0. Based on this, does k*$\delta(t)$ simply equal to $\delta(t)$ since it doesn't change…
Kyllua
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Alternatives to Dirac Delta?

In one of its lower paragraphs, Wikipedia describes the dirac delta distribution as the limit of a sequence of zero-centered normal distributions. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_delta_function I don't know much about "distributions" per se,…
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Prove various Delta function identities

In this link I found an interesting document about the properties of the Dirac delta function. Then I checked for three identities that puzzled me: \begin{equation} \begin{array} f\delta(t)e^t=\delta(t) \\ \delta(t)\cos t=\delta(t) \\ \delta(t)\sin…
Luthier415Hz
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scaling of Dirac-delta

The Dirac-delta function $$\delta(x-a)$$ goes to $\infty$ at $a$. I'm having trouble to understand what $$k\delta(x) \qquad k \in \mathbb{R}$$ then represents. How can I scale up (or down) infinity? Or does it just mean that…
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How to prove $\delta [g(x)]= \sum_i \frac{\delta (x-x_i)}{|g'(x_i)|} $

How to prove $\delta [g(x)]= \sum_i \frac{\delta (x-x_i)}{|g'(x_i)|} $ This is given as a property I came upon on MathWorld - Delta Function. This is very helpful in proving other properties of the delta function such as $\delta(ax) =…
Ian Hsiao
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Multiplication of 2 singular distributions(Dirac Delta times Shifted Dirac Delta)

I already know that $\delta^{2}(t)$ is not defined. However consider $A(t) = \delta(t) \cdot \delta(t-t_0)\ $ with $ t_0 \neq 0 $. Can I claim that $A(t) = 0$ ? If that is the case, is there a way to prove it besides just using the non rigorous…
Anonymous
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Integral of the delta distribution

What is the integral of the Dirac delta in this case? \begin{equation} \int_{0}^{a} dx \delta (x-a) \end{equation} I was working out the length of a circumference first in Euclidean space and it's completely fine if I use the spherical coordinates…
TheoPhy
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What does $f(x)\delta(x-t_0)$ really represent?

I am confused on the interpretation of $$ f(x)\delta(x-t_0) $$ where $\delta(x)$ is the Dirac delta function: $$ \delta(x-t_0)= \left\{ \begin{array}{ll} 0 & x< t_0 \\ \text{undefined} & x=t_0 \\ 0 & x>t_0\\ \end{array} \right.…
wd violet
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integral of Dirac delta over a small interval.

While solving a problem I encountered $$\int_{a-\epsilon}^{a+\epsilon} dx\,\delta(x-a)\,f(x).$$ What does this evaluate to as $\epsilon \to 0$?
RK1974
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General question about delta function

I am studying Dirac-delta function and not in a rigorous way. How to $\nabla^2 \frac{e^{-\alpha r}}{r}$ , $\alpha$ is a constant, in a delta function of spherical coordinate system? I know that we can reduce it to $\nabla^2 (\frac{1}{r})$, which is…
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Simple question about the Dirac delta function.

I'm a bit confused by the dirac delta function. It may sound quite silly, but i'm not quite sure about this. Let's consider $p(x) = \frac{\delta(x-x_1)}{\delta(x-x_1) + \delta(x-x_2)}$ where $x_1$ and $x_2$ is real number and $x_1 \neq x_2$. My…
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integral of delta function from zero to infinity

I would appreciate it if someone could help me with the following problem. I can not understand how a delta function $\delta(x)$ is integrated from zero to infinity. Because the integration interval should contain zero.
Spr2
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Dirac delta convolution

How can this identity convolution be shown? $$\int^\infty_{-\infty} f(\tau)\delta(t-\tau)d\tau=f(t)$$ I keep getting stuck in traps when trying to show this and need a bit of assistance
j.stex
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