Representation of Delta Function

poonintoon
Messages
17
Reaction score
0
Hopefully people are still prowling the forums this close to christmas :)

I want to show that sin(ax)/x is a representation of a delta function in the limit a->infinty i.e
1) It equals 0 unless x=0
2) integrated from plus minus infinity it equals 1 and
3) multiplying by an arbitrary function f(x) and integrating gives f(0)

but I cannot show any of these. I have tried series representation, writing out as exponentials, looking up definite integrals etc but cannot make any headway.

Cheers
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The integral of your representation can be found by employing residue calculus. I believe you have a factor of \pi missing.
 
Hi,

Thanks, you are right about the pi factor. But what if the function f(x) was say x then there would not be a pole and residue calculus wouldn't make sense would it?
 
Not every function is allowed as a test function. See

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_(mathematics )
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top