- #36
rbj
- 2,227
- 10
mathwonk said:why don't you read riemann some time rbj. on the next page after defining the integral, he proves a function is integrable in his (riemann's) sense if and only if it is continuous almost everywhere, [although he does not use those words].
i don't have any Riemann on my bookshelf. I'm just an Neanderthal EE ("uzed to b i cudn't even spel enjunear, now i are one.") i got my original entry-level calculus book (a nice one by Robert Seeley called "Calculus of One & Several Variables"), another one for Diff. Eq. by Kreyszig (which conveniently omits any mention of the "Dirac delta" or "unit impulse" function), another for functional analysis (also by Kreyszig) which only uses the Kronecker delta. only my EE texts seem to need a concept of an impulse function, they identify it as [itex] \delta(t) [/itex], and it has properties that it is 0 everywhere but t=0, yet has an integral of 1. i know that you don't like that, but where we agree is that
[tex] \int_{-\infty}^{+\infty} f(t) \delta(t) dt = f(0) [/tex]
and, i'll confess to you, ultimately in our EE use of the impulse function (i'll steer away from saying "Dirac delta", but we really mean the same thing when we EEs say "unit impulse function"), the impulse function ultimately ends up in an integral and it gets evaluated as above (maybe with a constant delay term in it). so, where it counts, i don't think we disagree. I've even seen some texts represent the "unit impulse" as the first derivative of the "unit step function" (that is EE-speak for "Heaviside function").
wonk, the issue for me really is almost semantic - what defines a function of a real variable. i don't see why it has to be different from the definition of the class of "generalized functions" that the Dirac is in. the issue, to me, is what you mean by the value of "undefined" for [itex]\delta(0)[/itex]. if you do not allow in definition of a function that it can remember that it was created as a limit of these nascent delta functions that all had an integral of one for any width greater than zero, if a function is only allowed to know its raw mapping, given x, what then, is f(x), if that is all you can have for a "function", then i don't know how we could pass the information to it that, although it is infinitesimally thin, it still has finite area. i think that is why our engineering concept and usage of the Dirac delta does not meet with the approval of mathematicians. we engineers would like to allow the function [itex]\delta(x)[/itex] to be allowed to remember it how it was created from a limit of nascent delta functions, all that had an area of one, no matter how thin it is.
pedagogically, for engineering students, i am convinced that students need to be introduced to a concept called the "unit impulse function" which shares basically all of the important properties of the Dirac delta function, but am still not convinced that it does any good to distract and confuse with by pointing out what differentiates a "Schwartz distribution" or a "generalized function" which is what [itex]\delta(t)[/itex] is from a regular function, which are what the nascent delta functions are, just so that we don't violate the rule that "If f=g at all but a point, then the Riemann integrals of f and g are equal if they exist." it depends on how we define what a "function" is. they'll never use it and it just makes it harder to teach them about convolution, linear system theory, probability (with any decently defined distribution function), and the Nyquist/Shannon sampling theorem.
wonk, our different disciplines really do have different ways of looking at the Dirac delta function. this is in (EE) texts. it's not just me.