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Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
Compute the integral of the Gaussian
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[QUOTE="docnet, post: 6575803, member: 677503"] [B]Homework Statement:[/B] . [B]Relevant Equations:[/B] . [ATTACH type="full" width="580px" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-15 at 2.52.46 AM.png"]294179[/ATTACH] why does it say transforms? is there more than one Fourier transform?? we learned in class that the inverse Fourier transform of the Fourier transform of ##f## is ##f##, so there should be just one right? I'm uncertain of how to calulate this integral though.. Mr Wolfram showed me an indefinite integral involving an error function, but there has to be a different way to integrate it because we didn't learn about the error function. Mr Wolfram says $$\int_{-\infty}^\infty fe^{-ikx}dx=\sqrt{\pi}\sigma e^{(\frac{\sigma k}{2})^2}e^{-ikx_0}$$ how does one go from the beginning to the finish? [/QUOTE]
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Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
Compute the integral of the Gaussian
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