How Do I Find the Inverse Laplace Transform for These Functions?

Patton84
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I'm having some trouble getting the inverse Laplace to the following problems...I need some help

F(s)=24/s^5

F(s)= 4/[((s-2)^2)+25

F(s)= s/(s-1)(s+1)
 
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For the first one, consider L{tn} works out to be for n>0.

For the second one what is

L^{-1} (\frac{1}{s^2+k^2)

for the third one, split into partial fractions.
 
rock.freak667 said:
For the first one, consider L{tn} works out to be for n>0.

For the second one what is

L^{-1} (\frac{1}{s^2+k^2)

for the third one, split into partial fractions.


would this be right for the third one

A/s-1 + B/s+1 = s
 
Patton84 said:
would this be right for the third one

A/s-1 + B/s+1 = s

Yes that's correct.
 
djeitnstine said:
Yes that's correct.

No that is wrong, the right formula is:

\frac{s}{(s-1)(s+1)}=\frac{A}{s-1}+\frac{B}{s+1}

from which you need to determine A and B.

coomast
 
coomast said:
No that is wrong, the right formula is:

\frac{s}{(s-1)(s+1)}=\frac{A}{s-1}+\frac{B}{s+1}

from which you need to determine A and B.

coomast


Oops I thought he multiplied it out and set it equal to s:rolleyes:
 

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