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OK, I'm currently reading Hughes' Finite Element Method book, and I'm stuck on a chapter the goal of which is to prove that the Galerkin solution to a boundary value problem is exact at the nodes.
So, the author first speaks about the Dirac delta function: "Let \delta_{y}(x) = \delta(x-y) denote the Dirac delta function." Now, what exactle does this mean? Is it simply an operator, where \delta can be any function, and y any real number?
Further on, the author points out that, for a continuous function w on [0, 1], we write: "(w, \delta_{y}) = \int_{0}^1 w(x)\delta(x-y)dx = w(y)", so "\delta_{y} sifts out the value of w at y". I don't understand where this result comes from.
Any help is highly appreciated.
So, the author first speaks about the Dirac delta function: "Let \delta_{y}(x) = \delta(x-y) denote the Dirac delta function." Now, what exactle does this mean? Is it simply an operator, where \delta can be any function, and y any real number?
Further on, the author points out that, for a continuous function w on [0, 1], we write: "(w, \delta_{y}) = \int_{0}^1 w(x)\delta(x-y)dx = w(y)", so "\delta_{y} sifts out the value of w at y". I don't understand where this result comes from.
Any help is highly appreciated.