Differentiation
The Laplace transform of the derivative of a signal will be used widely. Consider
this can be integrated by parts:
which gives
therefore we have,
Higher order derivatives
The previous derivation can be extended to higher order derivatives. Consider
it follows that
which leads to
This process can be iterated to get the Laplace transform of arbitrary higher order derivatives, giving
where it should be understood that
Integration
Let
it follows that
and
. Moreover, we have
therefore
but since
we have
Now suppose
has a non-zero integral over negative values of
. We have
The quantity
is a constant for positive values of
, and can be expressed as
it follows that
where we have used the fact that
The initial value theorem
The initial value theorem makes it possible to determine
at
from
. From the derivative property of the Laplace transform, we can write
Taking the limit
There are two cases, the first is when
is continuous at
. In this case it is clear that
as
, so
[link] can be written as
Since
is continuous at
,
, the Initial Value Theorem follows,
The second case is when
is discontinuous at
. In this case, we use the fact that
For example, if we integrate the right-hand side of
[link] with
and
, we get the unit step function,
. Proceeding as before, we have
The left-hand side of
[link] can be written as
From the sifting property of the unit impulse, the first term in
[link] is
while the second term is zero since in the limit, the real part of
goes to infinity. Substituting these results into the left-hand side of
[link] again leads to the initial value theorem, in
[link] .
The final value theorem
The Final Value Theorem allows us to determine
from
. Taking the limit as
approaches zero in the derivative property gives
The left-hand-side of
[link] can be written as
Substituting this result back into
[link] leads to the Final Value Theorem
which is only valid as long as the limit
exists.
Property |
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Linearity |
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Time Delay |
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s-Shift |
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Multiplication by
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Multiplication by
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Convolution |
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Differentiation |
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Integration |
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Initial Value Theorem |
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Final Value Theorem |
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Laplace Transform properties.