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One way to see how a system behaves is to kick it and see how it responds.Some systems react sluggishly, barely moving away from their resting state, while othersrespond quickly and vigorously. Defining exactly what is meant mathematicallyby a “kick” is trickier than it seems because the kick must occur over a very short amount of time,yet must be energetic in order to have any effect. This section defines the impulse (or delta) function , which is a useful “kick” for the study of linear systems.
The criterion that the impulse be energetic is translated to the mathematical statement that itsintegral over all time must be nonzero, and it is typically scaled to unity, that is,
The criterion that it occur over a very short time span is translated to the statement that, for every positive ,
Thus, the impulse is explicitly defined to be equal to zero for all . On the other hand, is implicitly defined when by the requirement that its integral be unity. Together, these guarantee that is no ordinary function. The impulse is called a distribution and is the subject of considerable mathematical investigation.
The most important consequence of the definitions [link] and [link] is the sifting property
which says that the delta function picks out the value of the function from under the integral at exactly the time whenthe argument of the function is zero, that is, when . To see this, observe that is zero whenever , and hence is zero whenever . Thus,
Sometimes it is helpful to think of the impulse as a limit. For instance, define the rectangular pulseof width and height by
Then fulfills both criteria [link] and [link] . Informally, it is not unreasonable to think of as being zero everywhere except at , where it is infinite.While it is not really possible to “plot” the delta function , it can be represented in graphical form as zero everywhereexcept for an up-pointing arrow at . When the function is scaled by a constant, the value of the constant is often placedin parenthesis near the arrowhead. Sometimes, when the constant is negative, the arrow is drawn pointing down.For instance, [link] shows a graphical representation of the function .
What is the spectrum (Fourier transform) of ? This can be calculated directly from the definitionby replacing in [link] with :
Apply the sifting property [link] with and . Thus .
Alternatively, suppose that is a function of frequency, that is, a spike at zero frequency.The corresponding time domain function can be calculated analogously using the definitionof the inverse Fourier transform, that is, by substituting for in [link] and integrating:
Thus a spike at frequency zero is a “DC signal” (a constant) in time.
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