somewhere near the beginning.

Laplace Transforms

Filed under: General — Alex @ 8:14 pm 11/4/2003

I just got out of my circuits and systems class, in which I paying no attention. Instead, I was fiddling around trying to find the inverse laplace transforms of some functions. It all started when a guy asked me what the ILT of \frac{s}{s+1} is; it took me a short while, but I soon worked it out by using division to rewrite it as 1 - \frac{1}{s+1} and taking the term by term inverse to get \delta(t) - e^{-t}. I originally tried using the derivative rule, that L\{df/dt\} = sF(s) - f(0^-), but I started confusing myself. Then I was intrigued, and tried generalizing the division process to help me find the ILT of a function in the form of a polynomial in s over s+1. This led me to consider the inverses of s^n, which turned out to be the n-th derivatives of \delta(t), from the derivative rule.

Near the end of class, I started trying more exotic functions like cos(s) and tan(s), e^s, which I suspect don’t have ILTs. I had the thought of expanding them into Taylor Series and using the term by term inverses, but is that sensible? I mean, does the linearity of the transform extend to cover infinite sums? I suspected not, just because that would make life too simple :) And after checking the Internet just now for the conditions under which an IFT exists, I think I was right for suspecting so; certainly, e^s doesn’t have an IFT, because it doesn’t satisfy the two necessary conditions:

  • \lim_{s \rightarrow \infty} F(s) = 0
  • \lim_{s \rightarrow \infty} sF(s) is finite

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