Tricky DeltaFunction integration

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sukharef
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Hey!
There is a question.
Here is the integral:
13613fa34e60.jpg

What I'm trying to do is starting with the third integral over zi and with the help of integral definition of DeltaFunction i want to calculate it. As you can see f(yi) has no influence on the integral. Am i right here?
 
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No, you're wrong

First, in the step \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} dk \exp{(i(z^{'}-z_i)k)}=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \exp{(i(z^{'}-z_i)k)} \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} dk, you can't take the exponential out of the integral w.r.t. k because it contains a k.

Second, you don't need such calculations. The integral \int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z^{'}-z_i) is zero if -z^{'} \epsilon\!\!/\ (0,f(y_i)) and is one otherwise.
 
Shyan said:
No, you're wrong

First, in the step \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} dk \exp{(i(z^{'}-z_i)k)}=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \exp{(i(z^{'}-z_i)k)} \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} dk, you can't take the exponential out of the integral w.r.t. k because it contains a k.
I don't think you are right. If you've got something like that:
6c1dc3d304da.jpg

you can calculate the integral over x thinking that y is a constant. Then you come back to integral over y. Maybe i misunderstood something?

Shyan said:
No, you're wrong
Second, you don't need such calculations. The integral \int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z^{'}-z_i) is zero if -z^{'} \epsilon\!\!/\ (0,f(y_i)) and is one otherwise.
I know, but i'd like to write it down analytically. That's why i use integral definition of DeltaFunction.
 
sukharef said:
I don't think you are right. If you've got something like that:
proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fs020.radikal.ru%2Fi723%2F1409%2F51%2F6c1dc3d304da.jpg

you can calculate the integral over x thinking that y is a constant. Then you come back to integral over y. Maybe i misunderstood something?
Oh yeah...you're right. I thought you were going to integrate w.r.t. k.

sukharef said:
I know, but i'd like to write it down analytically. That's why i use integral definition of DeltaFunction.
Well, then you certainly should know that there is something wrong with your calculations. Because f(y_i) does affect the value of the integral. But I don't see any problem!
I should say such calculations can be very tricky but since we know that your result is wrong, you should either find what's wrong with your calculations or abandon them.

EDIT:
One more piece of information.
Dirac delta is an even distribution meaning \delta(-x)=\delta(x), so you can write \int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z^{'}-z_i)=\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z_i-z^{'}). The first is non-zero only when -z^{'}\epsilon [0,f(y_i)] \Rightarrow z^{'}\epsilon [-f(y_i),0] and the second one is non-zero only when z^{'}\epsilon[0,f(y_i)], So the integral is non-zero only when z^{'}=0. That's what you should assume from the first place, before doing any other calculation.
 
Last edited:
Shyan said:
EDIT:
One more piece of information.
Dirac delta is an even distribution meaning δ(−x)=δ(x) \delta(-x)=\delta(x) , so you can write ∫f(yi)0dziδ(z′−zi)=∫f(yi)0dziδ(ziz′) \int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z^{'}-z_i)=\int_0^{f(y_i)} dz_i \delta(z_i-z^{'}) . The first is non-zero only when −zϵ[0,f(yi)]⇒zϵ[−f(yi),0] -z^{'}\epsilon [0,f(y_i)] \Rightarrow z^{'}\epsilon [-f(y_i),0] and the second one is non-zero only when zϵ[0,f(yi)] z^{'}\epsilon[0,f(y_i)] , So the integral is non-zero only when z′=0 z^{'}=0 . That's what you should assume from the first place, before doing any other calculation.
if the integral is non-zero only when z′=0 z^{'}=0 , it is a little bit weird . and f(yi) has no influence on the integral as it was supposed, but i doubt it.
 

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