Solving an equation with Dirac delta functions

eliotsbowe
Messages
34
Reaction score
0
Hello, I'm dealing with the following equation:

A e^{jat} + B e^{jbt} = C e^{jct} \forall t \in \mathbb{R}

My book says: given nonzero constants A,B,C, if the above equation yelds for any real t, then the a,b,c constants must be equal.

The above statement is prooved by taking the Fourier transform of the complex exponentials:
A2\pi \delta(t+a) + B2\pi \delta(t+b) = C2\pi \delta(t+c)A \delta(t+a) + B \delta(t+b) = C \delta(t+c)

But I don't really get how such an equation as the last one can force a,b,c to be equal.

Any help would be appreciated, thanks in advance.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The left side of the equation has a spike at -a and at -b and is 0 everywhere else. The right side has a spike at -c and is 0 everywhere else.
 
I think I got it, thanks!
 
ellotsbowe, that is a truly marvelous proof, using distributions to get more or less a result of elementary algebra. What book did you get it from?
 
I thought the same thing! My first thought was successive derivatives and set ## t=0 ##. This is very slick.
 
A sphere as topological manifold can be defined by gluing together the boundary of two disk. Basically one starts assigning each disk the subspace topology from ##\mathbb R^2## and then taking the quotient topology obtained by gluing their boundaries. Starting from the above definition of 2-sphere as topological manifold, shows that it is homeomorphic to the "embedded" sphere understood as subset of ##\mathbb R^3## in the subspace topology.
Back
Top