824 B
824 B
#Calculus #Math
Background - Analytic Continuation
\int _0^\infty e^{-st} dt = \frac 1 {s}
is used as an analytic continuation of the function. For the Laplace Transform to work, most of the integrals used must be extended to analytic continuations.
Definition - Laplace Transform
F(s) = \int _0^\infty f(x) e^{-st} dt
Intuition - The e^{sx} Finding Machine
Take f(x) as \sum c_n e^{at}. Plugging into the Laplace Transform:
F(s) = \int _0^\infty \sum c_ne^{(a - s)t} dt
= \sum c_n \int _0^\infty e^{-(s - a)t} dt
= \sum \frac {c_n} {s - a}
Therefore the Laplace Transform of a function reveals both c_n and s in the sum based upon the parts that make up the transform: poles reveal all s values, while the "magnitude" of each pole reveals the magnitude of each e^{sx} term.