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Dirac comb

In mathematics, a Dirac comb (also known as sha function, impulse train or sampling function) is a periodic function with the formula

The graph of the Dirac comb function is an infinite series of Dirac delta functions spaced at intervals of T
for some given period .[1] Here t is a real variable and the sum extends over all integers k. The Dirac delta function and the Dirac comb are tempered distributions.[2][3] The graph of the function resembles a comb (with the s as the comb's teeth), hence its name and the use of the comb-like Cyrillic letter sha (Ш) to denote the function.

The symbol , where the period is omitted, represents a Dirac comb of unit period. This implies[1]

Because the Dirac comb function is periodic, it can be represented as a Fourier series based on the Dirichlet kernel:[1]

The Dirac comb function allows one to represent both continuous and discrete phenomena, such as sampling and aliasing, in a single framework of continuous Fourier analysis on tempered distributions, without any reference to Fourier series. The Fourier transform of a Dirac comb is another Dirac comb. Owing to the Convolution Theorem on tempered distributions which turns out to be the Poisson summation formula, in signal processing, the Dirac comb allows modelling sampling by multiplication with it, but it also allows modelling periodization by convolution with it.[4]

Dirac-comb identity edit

The Dirac comb can be constructed in two ways, either by using the comb operator (performing sampling) applied to the function that is constantly  , or, alternatively, by using the rep operator (performing periodization) applied to the Dirac delta  . Formally, this yields (Woodward 1953; Brandwood 2003)

 
where
 
and
 

In signal processing, this property on one hand allows sampling a function   by multiplication with  , and on the other hand it also allows the periodization of   by convolution with   (Bracewell 1986). The Dirac comb identity is a particular case of the Convolution Theorem for tempered distributions.

Scaling edit

The scaling property of the Dirac comb follows from the properties of the Dirac delta function. Since  [5] for positive real numbers  , it follows that:

 
 
Note that requiring positive scaling numbers   instead of negative ones is not a restriction because the negative sign would only reverse the order of the summation within  , which does not affect the result.

Fourier series edit

It is clear that   is periodic with period  . That is,

 
for all t. The complex Fourier series for such a periodic function is
 
where the Fourier coefficients are (symbolically)
 

All Fourier coefficients are 1/T resulting in

 

When the period is one unit, this simplifies to

 

Remark: Most rigorously, Riemann or Lebesgue integration over any products including a Dirac delta function yields zero. For this reason, the integration above (Fourier series coefficients determination) must be understood "in the generalized functions sense". It means that, instead of using the characteristic function of an interval applied to the Dirac comb, one uses a so-called Lighthill unitary function as cutout function, see Lighthill 1958, p.62, Theorem 22 for details.

Fourier transform edit

The Fourier transform of a Dirac comb is also a Dirac comb. For the Fourier transform   expressed in frequency domain (Hz) the Dirac comb   of period   transforms into a rescaled Dirac comb of period   i.e. for

 
 

is proportional to another Dirac comb, but with period   in frequency domain (radian/s). The Dirac comb   of unit period   is thus an eigenfunction of   to the eigenvalue  

This result can be established (Bracewell 1986) by considering the respective Fourier transforms   of the family of functions   defined by

 

Since   is a convergent series of Gaussian functions, and Gaussians transform into Gaussians, each of their respective Fourier transforms   also results in a series of Gaussians, and explicit calculation establishes that

 

The functions   and   are thus each resembling a periodic function consisting of a series of equidistant Gaussian spikes   and   whose respective "heights" (pre-factors) are determined by slowly decreasing Gaussian envelope functions which drop to zero at infinity. Note that in the limit   each Gaussian spike becomes an infinitely sharp Dirac impulse centered respectively at   and   for each respective   and  , and hence also all pre-factors   in   eventually become indistinguishable from  . Therefore the functions   and their respective Fourier transforms   converge to the same function and this limit function is a series of infinite equidistant Gaussian spikes, each spike being multiplied by the same pre-factor of one, i.e. the Dirac comb for unit period:

  and  

Since  , we obtain in this limit the result to be demonstrated:

 

The corresponding result for period   can be found by exploiting the scaling property of the Fourier transform,

 

Another manner to establish that the Dirac comb transforms into another Dirac comb starts by examining continuous Fourier transforms of periodic functions in general, and then specialises to the case of the Dirac comb. In order to also show that the specific rule depends on the convention for the Fourier transform, this will be shown using angular frequency with   for any periodic function   its Fourier transform

  obeys:
 

because Fourier transforming   and   leads to   and   This equation implies that   nearly everywhere with the only possible exceptions lying at   with   and   When evaluating the Fourier transform at   the corresponding Fourier series expression times a corresponding delta function results. For the special case of the Fourier transform of the Dirac comb, the Fourier series integral over a single period covers only the Dirac function at the origin and thus gives   for each   This can be summarised by interpreting the Dirac comb as a limit of the Dirichlet kernel such that, at the positions   all exponentials in the sum   point into the same direction and add constructively. In other words, the continuous Fourier transform of periodic functions leads to

  with  

and

 

The Fourier series coefficients   for all   when  , i.e.

 

is another Dirac comb, but with period   in angular frequency domain (radian/s).

As mentioned, the specific rule depends on the convention for the used Fourier transform. Indeed, when using the scaling property of the Dirac delta function, the above may be re-expressed in ordinary frequency domain (Hz) and one obtains again:

 

such that the unit period Dirac comb transforms to itself:

 

Finally, the Dirac comb is also an eigenfunction of the unitary continuous Fourier transform in angular frequency space to the eigenvalue 1 when   because for the unitary Fourier transform

 

the above may be re-expressed as

 

Sampling and aliasing edit

Multiplying any function by a Dirac comb transforms it into a train of impulses with integrals equal to the value of the function at the nodes of the comb. This operation is frequently used to represent sampling.

 

Due to the self-transforming property of the Dirac comb and the convolution theorem, this corresponds to convolution with the Dirac comb in the frequency domain.

 

Since convolution with a delta function   is equivalent to shifting the function by  , convolution with the Dirac comb corresponds to replication or periodic summation:

 

This leads to a natural formulation of the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem. If the spectrum of the function   contains no frequencies higher than B (i.e., its spectrum is nonzero only in the interval  ) then samples of the original function at intervals   are sufficient to reconstruct the original signal. It suffices to multiply the spectrum of the sampled function by a suitable rectangle function, which is equivalent to applying a brick-wall lowpass filter.

 
 

In time domain, this "multiplication with the rect function" is equivalent to "convolution with the sinc function" (Woodward 1953, p.33-34). Hence, it restores the original function from its samples. This is known as the Whittaker–Shannon interpolation formula.

Remark: Most rigorously, multiplication of the rect function with a generalized function, such as the Dirac comb, fails. This is due to undetermined outcomes of the multiplication product at the interval boundaries. As a workaround, one uses a Lighthill unitary function instead of the rect function. It is smooth at the interval boundaries, hence it yields determined multiplication products everywhere, see Lighthill 1958, p.62, Theorem 22 for details.

Use in directional statistics edit

In directional statistics, the Dirac comb of period   is equivalent to a wrapped Dirac delta function and is the analog of the Dirac delta function in linear statistics.

In linear statistics, the random variable   is usually distributed over the real-number line, or some subset thereof, and the probability density of   is a function whose domain is the set of real numbers, and whose integral from   to   is unity. In directional statistics, the random variable   is distributed over the unit circle, and the probability density of   is a function whose domain is some interval of the real numbers of length   and whose integral over that interval is unity. Just as the integral of the product of a Dirac delta function with an arbitrary function over the real-number line yields the value of that function at zero, so the integral of the product of a Dirac comb of period   with an arbitrary function of period   over the unit circle yields the value of that function at zero.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "The Dirac Comb and its Fourier Transform - DSPIllustrations.com". dspillustrations.com. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
  2. ^ Schwartz, L. (1951), Théorie des distributions, vol. Tome I, Tome II, Hermann, Paris
  3. ^ Strichartz, R. (1994), A Guide to Distribution Theory and Fourier Transforms, CRC Press, ISBN 0-8493-8273-4
  4. ^ Bracewell, R. N. (1986), The Fourier Transform and Its Applications (revised ed.), McGraw-Hill; 1st ed. 1965, 2nd ed. 1978.
  5. ^ Rahman, M. (2011), Applications of Fourier Transforms to Generalized Functions, WIT Press Southampton, Boston, ISBN 978-1-84564-564-9.

Further reading edit

  • Brandwood, D. (2003), Fourier Transforms in Radar and Signal Processing, Artech House, Boston, London.
  • Córdoba, A (1989), "Dirac combs", Letters in Mathematical Physics, 17 (3): 191–196, Bibcode:1989LMaPh..17..191C, doi:10.1007/BF00401584, S2CID 189883287
  • Woodward, P. M. (1953), Probability and Information Theory, with Applications to Radar, Pergamon Press, Oxford, London, Edinburgh, New York, Paris, Frankfurt.
  • Lighthill, M.J. (1958), An Introduction to Fourier Analysis and Generalized Functions, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K..

dirac, comb, mathematics, also, known, function, impulse, train, sampling, function, periodic, function, with, formulathe, graph, function, infinite, series, dirac, delta, functions, spaced, intervals, displaystyle, operatorname, text, infty, infty, delta, som. In mathematics a Dirac comb also known as sha function impulse train or sampling function is a periodic function with the formulaThe graph of the Dirac comb function is an infinite series of Dirac delta functions spaced at intervals of TSh T t k d t kT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t sum k infty infty delta t kT for some given period T displaystyle T 1 Here t is a real variable and the sum extends over all integers k The Dirac delta function d displaystyle delta and the Dirac comb are tempered distributions 2 3 The graph of the function resembles a comb with the d displaystyle delta s as the comb s teeth hence its name and the use of the comb like Cyrillic letter sha Sh to denote the function The symbol Sh t displaystyle operatorname text Sh t where the period is omitted represents a Dirac comb of unit period This implies 1 Sh T t 1TSh tT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t frac 1 T operatorname text Sh left frac t T right Because the Dirac comb function is periodic it can be represented as a Fourier series based on the Dirichlet kernel 1 Sh T t 1T n ei2pntT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t frac 1 T sum n infty infty e i2 pi n frac t T The Dirac comb function allows one to represent both continuous and discrete phenomena such as sampling and aliasing in a single framework of continuous Fourier analysis on tempered distributions without any reference to Fourier series The Fourier transform of a Dirac comb is another Dirac comb Owing to the Convolution Theorem on tempered distributions which turns out to be the Poisson summation formula in signal processing the Dirac comb allows modelling sampling by multiplication with it but it also allows modelling periodization by convolution with it 4 Contents 1 Dirac comb identity 2 Scaling 3 Fourier series 4 Fourier transform 5 Sampling and aliasing 6 Use in directional statistics 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Further readingDirac comb identity editThe Dirac comb can be constructed in two ways either by using the comb operator performing sampling applied to the function that is constantly 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp or alternatively by using the rep operator performing periodization applied to the Dirac delta d displaystyle delta nbsp Formally this yields Woodward 1953 Brandwood 2003 combT 1 ShT repT d displaystyle operatorname comb T 1 operatorname text Sh T operatorname rep T delta nbsp where combT f t k f kT d t kT displaystyle operatorname comb T f t triangleq sum k infty infty f kT delta t kT nbsp and repT g t k g t kT displaystyle operatorname rep T g t triangleq sum k infty infty g t kT nbsp In signal processing this property on one hand allows sampling a function f t displaystyle f t nbsp by multiplication with Sh T displaystyle operatorname text Sh T nbsp and on the other hand it also allows the periodization of f t displaystyle f t nbsp by convolution with ShT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T nbsp Bracewell 1986 The Dirac comb identity is a particular case of the Convolution Theorem for tempered distributions Scaling editThe scaling property of the Dirac comb follows from the properties of the Dirac delta function Since d t 1a d ta displaystyle delta t frac 1 a delta left frac t a right nbsp 5 for positive real numbers a displaystyle a nbsp it follows that Sh T t 1TSh tT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T left t right frac 1 T operatorname text Sh left frac t T right nbsp Sh aT t 1aTSh taT 1aSh T ta displaystyle operatorname text Sh aT left t right frac 1 aT operatorname text Sh left frac t aT right frac 1 a operatorname text Sh T left frac t a right nbsp Note that requiring positive scaling numbers a displaystyle a nbsp instead of negative ones is not a restriction because the negative sign would only reverse the order of the summation within Sh T displaystyle operatorname text Sh T nbsp which does not affect the result Fourier series editSee also Dirichlet kernel It is clear that Sh T t displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t nbsp is periodic with period T displaystyle T nbsp That is Sh T t T Sh T t displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t T operatorname text Sh T t nbsp for all t The complex Fourier series for such a periodic function is Sh T t n cnei2pntT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t sum n infty infty c n e i2 pi n frac t T nbsp where the Fourier coefficients are symbolically cn 1T t0t0 TSh T t e i2pntTdt lt t0 lt 1T T2T2Sh T t e i2pntTdt 1T T2T2d t e i2pntTdt 1Te i2pn0T 1T displaystyle begin aligned c n amp frac 1 T int t 0 t 0 T operatorname text Sh T t e i2 pi n frac t T dt quad infty lt t 0 lt infty amp frac 1 T int frac T 2 frac T 2 operatorname text Sh T t e i2 pi n frac t T dt amp frac 1 T int frac T 2 frac T 2 delta t e i2 pi n frac t T dt amp frac 1 T e i2 pi n frac 0 T amp frac 1 T end aligned nbsp All Fourier coefficients are 1 T resulting inSh T t 1T n ei2pntT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t frac 1 T sum n infty infty e i2 pi n frac t T nbsp When the period is one unit this simplifies toSh x n ei2pnx displaystyle operatorname text Sh x sum n infty infty e i2 pi nx nbsp Remark Most rigorously Riemann or Lebesgue integration over any products including a Dirac delta function yields zero For this reason the integration above Fourier series coefficients determination must be understood in the generalized functions sense It means that instead of using the characteristic function of an interval applied to the Dirac comb one uses a so called Lighthill unitary function as cutout function see Lighthill 1958 p 62 Theorem 22 for details Fourier transform editThe Fourier transform of a Dirac comb is also a Dirac comb For the Fourier transform F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp expressed in frequency domain Hz the Dirac comb ShT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T nbsp of period T displaystyle T nbsp transforms into a rescaled Dirac comb of period 1 T displaystyle 1 T nbsp i e for F f 3 dtf t e 2pi3t displaystyle mathcal F left f right xi int infty infty dtf t e 2 pi i xi t nbsp F ShT 3 1T k d 3 k1T 1TSh 1T 3 displaystyle mathcal F left operatorname text Sh T right xi frac 1 T sum k infty infty delta xi k frac 1 T frac 1 T operatorname text Sh frac 1 T xi nbsp is proportional to another Dirac comb but with period 1 T displaystyle 1 T nbsp in frequency domain radian s The Dirac comb Sh displaystyle operatorname text Sh nbsp of unit period T 1 displaystyle T 1 nbsp is thus an eigenfunction of F displaystyle mathcal F nbsp to the eigenvalue 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp This result can be established Bracewell 1986 by considering the respective Fourier transforms St 3 F st 3 displaystyle S tau xi mathcal F s tau xi nbsp of the family of functions st x displaystyle s tau x nbsp defined by st x t 1e pt2x2 n e pt 2 x n 2 displaystyle s tau x tau 1 e pi tau 2 x 2 sum n infty infty e pi tau 2 x n 2 nbsp Since st x displaystyle s tau x nbsp is a convergent series of Gaussian functions and Gaussians transform into Gaussians each of their respective Fourier transforms St 3 displaystyle S tau xi nbsp also results in a series of Gaussians and explicit calculation establishes that St 3 t 1 m e pt2m2e pt 2 3 m 2 displaystyle S tau xi tau 1 sum m infty infty e pi tau 2 m 2 e pi tau 2 xi m 2 nbsp The functions st x displaystyle s tau x nbsp and St 3 displaystyle S tau xi nbsp are thus each resembling a periodic function consisting of a series of equidistant Gaussian spikes t 1e pt 2 x n 2 displaystyle tau 1 e pi tau 2 x n 2 nbsp and t 1e pt 2 3 m 2 displaystyle tau 1 e pi tau 2 xi m 2 nbsp whose respective heights pre factors are determined by slowly decreasing Gaussian envelope functions which drop to zero at infinity Note that in the limit t 0 displaystyle tau rightarrow 0 nbsp each Gaussian spike becomes an infinitely sharp Dirac impulse centered respectively at x n displaystyle x n nbsp and 3 m displaystyle xi m nbsp for each respective n displaystyle n nbsp and m displaystyle m nbsp and hence also all pre factors e pt2m2 displaystyle e pi tau 2 m 2 nbsp in St 3 displaystyle S tau xi nbsp eventually become indistinguishable from e pt232 displaystyle e pi tau 2 xi 2 nbsp Therefore the functions st x displaystyle s tau x nbsp and their respective Fourier transforms St 3 displaystyle S tau xi nbsp converge to the same function and this limit function is a series of infinite equidistant Gaussian spikes each spike being multiplied by the same pre factor of one i e the Dirac comb for unit period limt 0st x Sh x displaystyle lim tau rightarrow 0 s tau x operatorname text Sh x nbsp and limt 0St 3 Sh 3 displaystyle lim tau rightarrow 0 S tau xi operatorname text Sh xi nbsp Since St F st displaystyle S tau mathcal F s tau nbsp we obtain in this limit the result to be demonstrated F Sh Sh displaystyle mathcal F operatorname text Sh operatorname text Sh nbsp The corresponding result for period T displaystyle T nbsp can be found by exploiting the scaling property of the Fourier transform F ShT 1TSh1T displaystyle mathcal F operatorname text Sh T frac 1 T operatorname text Sh frac 1 T nbsp Another manner to establish that the Dirac comb transforms into another Dirac comb starts by examining continuous Fourier transforms of periodic functions in general and then specialises to the case of the Dirac comb In order to also show that the specific rule depends on the convention for the Fourier transform this will be shown using angular frequency with w 2p3 displaystyle omega 2 pi xi nbsp for any periodic function f t f t T displaystyle f t f t T nbsp its Fourier transform F f w F w dtf t e iwt displaystyle mathcal F left f right omega F omega int infty infty dtf t e i omega t nbsp obeys F w 1 eiwT 0 displaystyle F omega 1 e i omega T 0 nbsp because Fourier transforming f t displaystyle f t nbsp and f t T displaystyle f t T nbsp leads to F w displaystyle F omega nbsp and F w eiwT displaystyle F omega e i omega T nbsp This equation implies that F w 0 displaystyle F omega 0 nbsp nearly everywhere with the only possible exceptions lying at w kw0 displaystyle omega k omega 0 nbsp with w0 2p T displaystyle omega 0 2 pi T nbsp and k Z displaystyle k in mathbb Z nbsp When evaluating the Fourier transform at F kw0 displaystyle F k omega 0 nbsp the corresponding Fourier series expression times a corresponding delta function results For the special case of the Fourier transform of the Dirac comb the Fourier series integral over a single period covers only the Dirac function at the origin and thus gives 1 T displaystyle 1 T nbsp for each k displaystyle k nbsp This can be summarised by interpreting the Dirac comb as a limit of the Dirichlet kernel such that at the positions w kw0 displaystyle omega k omega 0 nbsp all exponentials in the sum m e iwmT displaystyle sum nolimits m infty infty e pm i omega mT nbsp point into the same direction and add constructively In other words the continuous Fourier transform of periodic functions leads to F w 2p k ckd w kw0 displaystyle F omega 2 pi sum k infty infty c k delta omega k omega 0 nbsp with w0 2p T displaystyle omega 0 2 pi T nbsp and ck 1T T 2 T 2dtf t e i2pkt T displaystyle c k frac 1 T int T 2 T 2 dtf t e i2 pi kt T nbsp The Fourier series coefficients ck 1 T displaystyle c k 1 T nbsp for all k displaystyle k nbsp when f ShT displaystyle f rightarrow operatorname text Sh T nbsp i e F ShT w 2pT k d w k2pT displaystyle mathcal F left operatorname text Sh T right omega frac 2 pi T sum k infty infty delta omega k frac 2 pi T nbsp is another Dirac comb but with period 2p T displaystyle 2 pi T nbsp in angular frequency domain radian s As mentioned the specific rule depends on the convention for the used Fourier transform Indeed when using the scaling property of the Dirac delta function the above may be re expressed in ordinary frequency domain Hz and one obtains again Sh T t F1TSh 1T 3 n e i2p3nT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t stackrel mathcal F longleftrightarrow frac 1 T operatorname text Sh frac 1 T xi sum n infty infty e i2 pi xi nT nbsp such that the unit period Dirac comb transforms to itself Sh t FSh 3 displaystyle operatorname text Sh t stackrel mathcal F longleftrightarrow operatorname text Sh xi nbsp Finally the Dirac comb is also an eigenfunction of the unitary continuous Fourier transform in angular frequency space to the eigenvalue 1 when T 2p displaystyle T sqrt 2 pi nbsp because for the unitary Fourier transform F f w F w 12p dtf t e iwt displaystyle mathcal F left f right omega F omega frac 1 sqrt 2 pi int infty infty dtf t e i omega t nbsp the above may be re expressed asSh T t F2pTSh 2pT w 12p n e iwnT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T t stackrel mathcal F longleftrightarrow frac sqrt 2 pi T operatorname text Sh frac 2 pi T omega frac 1 sqrt 2 pi sum n infty infty e i omega nT nbsp Sampling and aliasing editMultiplying any function by a Dirac comb transforms it into a train of impulses with integrals equal to the value of the function at the nodes of the comb This operation is frequently used to represent sampling Sh T x t k x t d t kT k x kT d t kT displaystyle operatorname text Sh T x t sum k infty infty x t delta t kT sum k infty infty x kT delta t kT nbsp Due to the self transforming property of the Dirac comb and the convolution theorem this corresponds to convolution with the Dirac comb in the frequency domain Sh T x F 1TSh1T X displaystyle operatorname text Sh T x stackrel mathcal F longleftrightarrow frac 1 T operatorname text Sh frac 1 T X nbsp Since convolution with a delta function d t kT displaystyle delta t kT nbsp is equivalent to shifting the function by kT displaystyle kT nbsp convolution with the Dirac comb corresponds to replication or periodic summation Sh 1T X f k X f kT displaystyle operatorname text Sh frac 1 T X f sum k infty infty X left f frac k T right nbsp This leads to a natural formulation of the Nyquist Shannon sampling theorem If the spectrum of the function x displaystyle x nbsp contains no frequencies higher than B i e its spectrum is nonzero only in the interval B B displaystyle B B nbsp then samples of the original function at intervals 12B displaystyle tfrac 1 2B nbsp are sufficient to reconstruct the original signal It suffices to multiply the spectrum of the sampled function by a suitable rectangle function which is equivalent to applying a brick wall lowpass filter Sh 12B x F 2BSh 2B X displaystyle operatorname text Sh frac 1 2B x stackrel mathcal F longleftrightarrow 2B operatorname text Sh 2B X nbsp 12BP f2B 2BSh 2B X X displaystyle frac 1 2B Pi left frac f 2B right 2B operatorname text Sh 2B X X nbsp In time domain this multiplication with the rect function is equivalent to convolution with the sinc function Woodward 1953 p 33 34 Hence it restores the original function from its samples This is known as the Whittaker Shannon interpolation formula Remark Most rigorously multiplication of the rect function with a generalized function such as the Dirac comb fails This is due to undetermined outcomes of the multiplication product at the interval boundaries As a workaround one uses a Lighthill unitary function instead of the rect function It is smooth at the interval boundaries hence it yields determined multiplication products everywhere see Lighthill 1958 p 62 Theorem 22 for details Use in directional statistics editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In directional statistics the Dirac comb of period 2p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp is equivalent to a wrapped Dirac delta function and is the analog of the Dirac delta function in linear statistics In linear statistics the random variable x displaystyle x nbsp is usually distributed over the real number line or some subset thereof and the probability density of x displaystyle x nbsp is a function whose domain is the set of real numbers and whose integral from displaystyle infty nbsp to displaystyle infty nbsp is unity In directional statistics the random variable 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is distributed over the unit circle and the probability density of 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is a function whose domain is some interval of the real numbers of length 2p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp and whose integral over that interval is unity Just as the integral of the product of a Dirac delta function with an arbitrary function over the real number line yields the value of that function at zero so the integral of the product of a Dirac comb of period 2p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp with an arbitrary function of period 2p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp over the unit circle yields the value of that function at zero See also editComb filter Frequency comb Poisson summation formulaReferences edit a b c The Dirac Comb and its Fourier Transform DSPIllustrations com dspillustrations com Retrieved 2022 06 28 Schwartz L 1951 Theorie des distributions vol Tome I Tome II Hermann Paris Strichartz R 1994 A Guide to Distribution Theory and Fourier Transforms CRC Press ISBN 0 8493 8273 4 Bracewell R N 1986 The Fourier Transform and Its Applications revised ed McGraw Hill 1st ed 1965 2nd ed 1978 Rahman M 2011 Applications of Fourier Transforms to Generalized Functions WIT Press Southampton Boston ISBN 978 1 84564 564 9 Further reading edit Brandwood D 2003 Fourier Transforms in Radar and Signal Processing Artech House Boston London Cordoba A 1989 Dirac combs Letters in Mathematical Physics 17 3 191 196 Bibcode 1989LMaPh 17 191C doi 10 1007 BF00401584 S2CID 189883287 Woodward P M 1953 Probability and Information Theory with Applications to Radar Pergamon Press Oxford London Edinburgh New York Paris Frankfurt Lighthill M J 1958 An Introduction to Fourier Analysis and Generalized Functions Cambridge University Press Cambridge U K Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dirac comb amp oldid 1165893878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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