aditya23456
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I need a physical explanation of s domain..Is s-domain a higher dimensional plane..?
Vargo said:By dimensional analysis, you have e^(-st), so s should have units inverse to t. In other words, it is still frequency.
And of course, if you set s = i omega, you have exactly the frequency of the Fourier transform. So you can say that s is in the complex angular frequency domain.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laplace_transform
This sentence in particular might help put meaning to the Laplace transform:
"The Laplace transform is related to the Fourier transform, but whereas the Fourier transform expresses a function or signal as a series of modes of vibration (frequencies), the Laplace transform resolves a function into its moments."