Inverse Fourier Transform of Inverse Square Root Function

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the inverse Fourier transform of the function (a^2 + (bk)^2)^{-1}. Participants clarify the relationship between known Fourier transforms and the given function, particularly referencing the transform of e^{-|x|}. There is a consensus that a and b are arbitrary constants, and the transformation can be expressed in terms of the known results. The conversation also highlights the need for normalization factors and adjustments to achieve the correct form. Overall, the exchange aids in understanding the application of Fourier transforms to the specific function in question.
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Homework Statement


calculate the inverse Fourier transform of \left( a^2 + \left( bk \right)^2 \right)^{-1}

The Attempt at a Solution



I know that FT[e^{-|x|)}](k) = ( \pi (k^2 + 1 ) )^{-1}. I've tried to to concatenate the shift FT or the strech FT, but the "+1" in the known FT is in the way.

Sorry for my bad English, it's not my native language.

thanks.
 
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I can't quite read what you're writing here. The FT you've quoted is supposed to be F[e^{-\alpha|x|}] = \frac{2\alpha}{\alpha^2+ \omega^2}, correct?

Are a and b supposed to be arbitrary constants? If so, then I take k=\omega. You must then express the question in terms of the result above.

Note that \frac{1}{a^2 + b^2 \omega^2} = \frac{1}{b^2} \ \frac{1}{\frac{a^2}{b^2} + \omega^2}.

A factor of 2 is still required. Can you see it now?
 
thanks for answering. You helped me "getting it" :)

I think our normalization factors are different. I know that F[e^{-|x|}]=\frac{1}{\pi (\omega^2 +1)}, so if a,b>0 (i assume it, since it's the only way to get to the following result) i can write F[e^{-\frac{a}{b} |x|}]=\frac{b}{a} \hat{f}(\frac{\omega b}{a}) = \frac{a b e^{i \omega \frac{b}{a}}{\pi (\omega^2 b^2 + a^2)}

i'm using F[f(x)]=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(x) e^{-i\omega x} dx

thanks.
 
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