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{{redirect|Delta function|other uses|Delta function (disambiguation)}}
[[Image:Dirac distribution PDF.svg|325px|thumb|Schematic representation of the Dirac delta function by a line surmounted by an arrow. The height of the arrow is usually used to specify the value of any multiplicative constant, which will give the area under the function. The other convention is to write the area next to the arrowhead.]]
[[Image:Dirac function approximation.gif|right|frame|The Dirac delta function as the limit (in the sense of [[distribution (mathematics)|distributions]]) of the sequence of zero-centered [[normal distribution]]s <math>\delta_a(x) = \frac{1}{a \sqrt{\pi}} \mathrm{e}^{-x^2/a^2}</math> {{nowrap|1=as <math>a \rightarrow 0</math>.}}]]


In mathematics, the '''Dirac delta function''', or '''{{mvar|δ}} function''', is (informally) a [[generalized function]] on the real number line that is zero everywhere except at zero, with an [[integral]] of one over the entire real line.<ref name=Dirac1958p58>{{harvnb|Dirac|1958|loc=§15 The δ function}}, p. 58</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Gel'fand|Shilov|1968|loc=Volume I, §§1.1, 1.3}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Schwartz|1950|p=3}}</ref>  The delta function is sometimes thought of as an infinitely high, infinitely thin spike at the origin, with total area one under the spike, and physically represents an idealized [[point mass]] or [[point charge]].<ref>{{harvnb|Arfken|Weber|2000|p=84}}</ref>  It was introduced by theoretical physicist [[Paul Dirac]].  In the context of [[signal processing]] it is often referred to as the '''unit impulse symbol''' (or function).<ref name="Bracewell 1986 loc=Chapter 5">{{harvnb|Bracewell|1986|loc=Chapter 5}}</ref>  Its discrete analog is the [[Kronecker delta]] function which is usually defined on a finite domain and takes values 0 and 1.


From a purely mathematical viewpoint, the Dirac delta is not strictly a [[function (mathematics)|function]], because any extended-real function that is equal to zero everywhere but a single point must have total integral zero.<ref>{{harvnb|Vladimirov|1971|loc=§5.1}}</ref>  The delta function only makes sense as a mathematical object when it appears inside an integral. While from this perspective the Dirac delta can usually be manipulated as though it were a function, formally it must be defined as a [[Distribution (mathematics)|distribution]] that is also a [[Measure (mathematics)|measure]].  In many applications, the Dirac delta is regarded as a kind of limit (a [[weak limit]]) of a [[sequence]] of functions having a tall spike at the origin. The approximating functions of the sequence are thus "approximate" or "nascent" delta functions.
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==Overview==
The [[graph of a function|graph]] of the delta function is usually thought of as following the whole ''x''-axis and the positive ''y''-axis. Despite its name, the delta function is not truly a function, at least not a usual one with range in [[real number]]s. For example,  the objects ''f''(''x'') = δ(''x'') and ''g''(''x'') = 0 are equal everywhere except at ''x'' = 0 yet have integrals that are different. According to [[Lebesgue integral#Basic theorems of the Lebesgue integral|Lebesgue integration theory]], if ''f'' and ''g'' are functions such that ''f'' = ''g'' [[almost everywhere]], then ''f'' is integrable [[if and only if]] ''g'' is integrable and the integrals of ''f'' and ''g'' are identical. Rigorous treatment of the Dirac delta requires [[measure theory]] or the theory of [[distribution (mathematics)|distribution]]s.
 
The Dirac delta is used to model a tall narrow spike function (an ''impulse''), and other similar [[abstraction]]s such as a point [[electric charge|charge]], point [[mass]] or [[electron]] point. For example, to calculate the [[dynamics (mechanics)|dynamics]] of a [[baseball]] being hit by a bat, one can approximate the [[force]] of the bat hitting the baseball by a delta function. In doing so, one not only simplifies the equations, but one also is able to calculate the [[motion (physics)|motion]] of the baseball by only considering the total impulse of the bat against the ball rather than requiring knowledge of the details of how the bat transferred energy to the ball.
 
In applied mathematics, the delta function is often manipulated as a kind of limit (a [[weak limit]]) of a [[sequence]] of functions, each member of which has a tall spike at the origin: for example, a sequence of [[Gaussian distribution]]s centered at the origin with [[variance]] tending to zero.
 
==History==
[[Joseph Fourier]] presented what is now called the [[Fourier integral theorem]] in his treatise ''Théorie analytique de la chaleur'' in the form:<ref name=Fourier>{{cite book |title=The Analytical Theory of Heat |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-N8EAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA408&dq=%22when+the+integrals+are+taken+between+infinite+limits%22+%22that+is+to+say,+that+we+have+the+equation%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=rFe-T96cEIzKiQKcyfDtDQ&ved=0CD4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22when%20the%20integrals%20are%20taken%20between%20infinite%20limits%22%20%22that%20is%20to%20say%2C%20that%20we%20have%20the%20equation%22&f=false |author=JB Fourier |year=1822 |page=408 |edition= English translation by Alexander Freeman, 1878 |publisher=The University Press}}  The original French text can be found [http://books.google.com/books?id=TDQJAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA525&dq=%22c%27est-%C3%A0-dire+qu%27on+a+l%27%C3%A9quation%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=SrC7T9yKBorYiALVnc2oDg&sqi=2&ved=0CEAQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22c%27est-%C3%A0-dire%20qu%27on%20a%20l%27%C3%A9quation%22&f=false here].</ref>
 
:<math>f(x)=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{-\infty}^\infty\ \ d\alpha f(\alpha) \ \int_{-\infty}^\infty dp\ \cos  (px-p\alpha)\ , </math>
 
which is tantamount to the introduction of the  δ-function in the form:<ref name= Kawai>{{cite book |title=Microlocal Analysis and Complex Fourier Analysis |editor=Takahiro Kawai, Keiko Fujita, eds|author=Hikosaburo Komatsu |chapter=Fourier's hyperfunctions and Heaviside's pseudodifferential operators |isbn=9812381619 |year=2002 |publisher=World Scientific |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=8GwKzEemrIcC&pg=PA200&dq=%22Fourier+introduced+the%22+%22+-function+much+earlier%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=oJa6T5L2O6SriQKGloCUBw&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22Fourier%20introduced%20the%22%20%22%20-function%20much%20earlier%22&f=false |page=200 }}</ref>
 
:<math>\delta(x-\alpha)=\frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{-\infty}^\infty dp\ \cos  (px-p\alpha) \ . </math>
 
Later, [[Augustin Cauchy]] expressed the theorem using exponentials:<ref name= Myint-U>{{cite book
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Zbz5_UvERIIC&pg=PA4&dq=%22It+was+the+work+of+Augustin+Cauchy%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=RnW6T52LNovYiQLa9-mABw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22It%20was%20the%20work%20of%20Augustin%20Cauchy%22&f=false  |author=Tyn Myint-U., Lokenath Debnath  |title=Linear Partial Differential Equations for Scientists And Engineers |isbn=0817643931 |edition=4th  |year=2007  |page=4 |publisher=Springer}}</ref><ref name=Debnath>{{cite book  |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=WbZcqdvCEfwC&pg=PA2&dq=%22It+was+the+work+of+Cauchy+that+contained%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Jym9T8L-NK6OigK-m_GYDg&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22It%20was%20the%20work%20of%20Cauchy%20that%20contained%22&f=false |title=Integral Transforms And Their Applications |author=Lokenath Debnath, Dambaru Bhatta |isbn=1584885750 |year=2007 |edition=2nd |publisher=CRC Press |page=2}}</ref>
 
:<math>f(x)=\frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{-\infty} ^ \infty \ e^{ipx}\left(\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{-ip\alpha }f(\alpha)\ d \alpha \right) \ dp. </math>
 
Cauchy pointed out that in some circumstances the ''order'' of integration in this result was significant.<ref name=Grattan-Guinness>{{cite book |title=Convolutions in French Mathematics, 1800–1840: From the Calculus and Mechanics to Mathematical Analysis and Mathematical Physics, Volume 2 |page=653 |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=_GgioErrbW8C&pg=PA653&dq=%22Further,+in+a+double+integral%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=4gC9T7KVDvDRiALq-dTLDQ&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22Further%2C%20in%20a%20double%20integral%22&f=false |isbn=3764322381 |year=2009 |publisher=Birkhäuser |author=Ivor Grattan-Guinness}}</ref><ref name=Cauchy>
 
See, for example, [http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k90181x/f387 ''Des intégrales doubles qui se présentent sous une forme indéterminèe'']</ref>
 
As justified using the [[Distribution (mathematics)|theory of distributions]], the Cauchy equation can be rearranged to resemble Fourier's original formulation and expose the δ-function as:
 
:<math>\begin{align}
f(x)&=\frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{ipx}\left(\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{-ip\alpha }f(\alpha)\ d \alpha \right) \ dp \\
&=\frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{-\infty}^\infty \left(\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{ipx} e^{-ip\alpha } \ dp \right)f(\alpha)\ d \alpha =\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta (x-\alpha) f(\alpha) \ d \alpha,
\end{align}</math>
 
where the δ-function is expressed as:
 
:<math>\delta(x-\alpha)=\frac{1}{2\pi} \int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{ip(x-\alpha)}\ dp \ . </math>
 
A rigorous interpretation of the exponential form and the various limitations upon the function ''f'' necessary for its application extended over several centuries. The problems with a classical interpretation are explained as follows:<ref name="Mitrović"> {{cite book |title=Fundamentals of Applied Functional Analysis: Distributions, Sobolev Spaces |author=Dragiša Mitrović, Darko Žubrinić |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Od5BxTEN0VsC&pg=PA62&dq=%22greatest+drawback+of+the+classical+Fourier+transformation+is+a+rather+narrow+class+of+functions%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=IKG6T_niFqWfiQLJoODdBg&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22greatest%20drawback%20of%20the%20classical%20Fourier%20transformation%20is%20a%20rather%20narrow%20class%20of%20functions%22&f=false |page=62 |isbn=0582246946 |year=1998 |publisher=CRC Press}}</ref>
:The greatest drawback of the classical Fourier transformation is a rather narrow class of functions (originals) for which it can be effectively computed. Namely, it is necessary that these functions decrease sufficiently rapidly to zero (in the neighborhood of infinity) in order to insure the existence of the Fourier integral. For example, the Fourier transform of such simple functions as polynomials does not exist in the classical sense. The extension of the classical Fourier transformation to distributions considerably enlarged the class of functions that could be transformed and this removed many obstacles.
 
Further developments included generalization of the Fourier integral, "beginning with [[Michel Plancherel|Plancherel's]] pathbreaking ''L''<sup>2</sup>-theory (1910), continuing with [[Norbert Wiener|Wiener's]] and [[Salomon Bochner|Bochner's]] works (around 1930) and culminating with the amalgamation into [[Laurent Schwartz|L. Schwartz's]] theory of [[Distribution (mathematics)|distributions]] (1945)...",<ref name=Kracht>{{cite book |title=Topics in Mathematical Analysis: A Volume Dedicated to the Memory of A.L. Cauchy |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xIsPrSiDlZIC&pg=PA553&dq=%22To+this+theory%22+%22and+even+more%22++%22that+one+was+able+to+generalize%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=RJ66T-y7JOLjiAKuoeSUBw&ved=0CDQQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22To%20this%20theory%22%20%22and%20even%20more%22%20%20%22that%20one%20was%20able%20to%20generalize%22&f=false |author=Manfred Kracht, Erwin Kreyszig |page=553 |isbn=9971506661 |editor=Themistocles M. Rassias, ed |year=1989 |publisher=World Scientific |chapter=On singular integral operators and generalizations}}</ref> and leading to the formal development of the Dirac delta function.
 
An [[infinitesimal]] formula for an infinitely tall, unit impulse delta function (infinitesimal version of [[Cauchy distribution]]) explicitly appears in an 1827 text of [[Augustin Louis Cauchy]].<ref>{{harvnb|Laugwitz|1989|p=230}}</ref> [[Siméon Denis Poisson]] considered the issue in connection with the study of wave propagation as did [[Gustav Kirchhoff]] somewhat later.  Kirchhoff and [[Hermann von Helmholtz]] also introduced the unit impulse as a limit of [[Gaussian distribution|Gaussians]], which also corresponded to [[Lord Kelvin]]'s notion of a point heat source.  At the end of the 19th century, [[Oliver Heaviside]] used formal [[Fourier series]] to manipulate the unit impulse.<ref>A more complete historical account can be found in {{harvnb|van der Pol|Bremmer|1987|loc=§V.4}}.</ref> The Dirac delta function as such was introduced as a "convenient notation" by [[Paul Dirac]] in his influential 1930 book ''Principles of Quantum Mechanics''.<ref name="Dirac 1958 loc=§15">{{harvnb|Dirac|1958|loc=§15}}</ref>  He called it the "delta function" since he used it as a continuous analogue of the discrete [[Kronecker delta]].
 
==Definitions==
The Dirac delta can be loosely thought of as a function on the real line which is zero everywhere except at the origin, where it is infinite,
 
: <math>\delta(x) = \begin{cases} +\infty, & x = 0 \\ 0, & x \ne 0 \end{cases}</math>
 
and which is also constrained to satisfy the identity
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta(x) \, dx = 1.</math><ref>{{harvnb|Gel'fand|Shilov|1968|loc=Volume I, §1.1, p. 1}}</ref>
 
This is merely a [[heuristic]] characterization. The Dirac delta is not a function in the traditional sense as no function defined on the real numbers has these properties.<ref name="Dirac 1958 loc=§15"/> The Dirac delta function can be rigorously defined either as a [[distribution (mathematics)|distribution]] or as a [[measure (mathematics)|measure]].
 
===As a measure===
One way to rigorously define the delta function is as a [[Measure (mathematics)|measure]], which accepts as an argument a subset ''A'' of the real line '''R''', and returns δ(''A'') = 1 if 0 ∈ ''A'', and δ(''A'') = 0 otherwise.<ref name="Rudin 1966 loc=§1.20">{{harvnb|Rudin|1966|loc=§1.20}}</ref>  If the delta function is conceptualized as modeling an idealized point mass at 0, then δ(''A'') represents the mass contained in the set ''A''.  One may then define the integral against δ as the integral of a function against this mass distribution.  Formally, the [[Lebesgue integral]] provides the necessary analytic device.  The Lebesgue integral with respect to the measure δ satisfies
 
: <math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x) \, \delta\{dx\} =  f(0)</math>
 
for all continuous compactly supported functions ''f''.  The measure δ is not [[absolutely continuous]] with respect to the [[Lebesgue measure]] — in fact, it is a [[singular measure]].  Consequently, the delta measure has no [[Radon–Nikodym derivative]] — no true function for which the property
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x)\delta(x)\, dx = f(0)</math>
 
holds.<ref>{{harvnb|Hewitt|Stromberg|1963|loc=§19.61}}</ref>  As a result, the latter notation is a convenient [[abuse of notation]], and not a standard ([[Riemann integral|Riemann]] or [[Lebesgue integral|Lebesgue]]) integral.
 
As a [[probability measure]] on '''R''', the delta measure is characterized by its [[cumulative distribution function]], which is the [[unit step function]]<ref>{{harvnb|Driggers|2003|p=2321}}.  See also {{harvnb|Bracewell|1986|loc=Chapter 5}} for a different interpretation.  Other conventions for the assigning the value of the Heaviside function at zero exist, and some of these are not consistent with what follows.</ref>
 
:<math>H(x) =
\begin{cases}
1 & \text{if } x\ge 0\\
0 & \text{if } x < 0.
\end{cases}</math>
 
This means that ''H''(''x'') is the integral of the cumulative [[indicator function]] '''1'''<sub>(−∞,&nbsp;''x'']</sub> with respect to the measure δ; to wit,
 
:<math>H(x) = \int_{\mathbf{R}}\mathbf{1}_{(-\infty,x]}(t)\,\delta\{dt\} = \delta(-\infty,x].</math>
 
Thus in particular the integral of the delta function against a continuous function can be properly understood as a [[Stieltjes integral]]:<ref>{{harvnb|Hewitt|Stromberg|1965|loc=§9.19}}</ref>
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x)\delta\{dx\} = \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x) \, dH(x).</math>
 
All higher [[moment (mathematics)|moments]] of δ are zero.  In particular, [[characteristic function (probability theory)|characteristic function]] and [[moment generating function]] are both equal to one.
 
===As a distribution===
In the theory of [[distribution (mathematics)|distributions]] a generalized function is thought of not as a function itself, but only in relation to how it affects other functions when it is "integrated" against them.  In keeping with this philosophy, to define the delta function properly, it is enough to say what the "integral" of the delta function against a sufficiently "good" test function is.  If the delta function is already understood as a measure, then the Lebesgue integral of a test function against that measure supplies the necessary integral.
 
A typical space of test functions consists of all [[smooth function]]s on '''R''' with [[compact support]].  As a distribution, the Dirac delta is a [[linear functional]] on the space of test functions and is defined by<ref>{{harvnb|Strichartz|1994|loc=§2.2}}</ref>
 
{{NumBlk|:| <math>\delta[\varphi] = \varphi(0)\,</math>|{{EquationRef|1}}}}
 
for every test function φ.
 
For δ to be properly a distribution, it must be "continuous" in a suitable sense.  In general, for a linear functional ''S'' on the space of test functions to define a distribution, it is necessary and sufficient that, for every positive integer ''N'' there is an integer ''M''<sub>''N''</sub> and a constant ''C''<sub>''N''</sub> such that for every test function φ, one has the inequality<ref>{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=Theorem 2.1.5}}</ref>
 
:<math>|S[\phi]| \le C_N \sum_{k=0}^{M_N}\sup_{x\in [-N,N]}|\phi^{(k)}(x)|.</math>
 
With the δ distribution, one has such an inequality (with ''C''<sub>''N''</sub>&nbsp;=&nbsp;1) with ''M''<sub>''N''</sub>&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 for all ''N''.  Thus δ is a distribution of order zero. It is, furthermore, a distribution with compact support (the [[support (mathematics)|support]] being {0}).
 
The delta distribution can also be defined in a number of equivalent ways.  For instance, it is the [[distributional derivative]] of the [[Heaviside step function]]. This means that, for every test function φ, one has
 
:<math>\delta[\phi] = -\int_{-\infty}^\infty \phi'(x)H(x)\, dx.</math>
 
Intuitively, if [[integration by parts]] were permitted, then the latter integral should simplify to
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty \phi(x)H'(x)\, dx = \int_{-\infty}^\infty \phi(x)\delta(x)\, dx,</math>
 
and indeed, a form of integration by parts is permitted for the Stieltjes integral, and in that case one does have
 
:<math>-\int_{-\infty}^\infty \phi'(x)H(x)\, dx = \int_{-\infty}^\infty \phi(x)\,dH(x).</math>
 
In the context of measure theory, the Dirac measure gives rise to a distribution by integration.  Conversely, equation ({{EquationNote|1}}) defines a [[Daniell integral]] on the space of all compactly supported continuous functions φ which, by the [[Riesz representation theorem]], can be represented as the Lebesgue integral of φ with respect to some [[Radon measure]].
 
===Generalizations===
The delta function can be defined in ''n''-dimensional [[Euclidean space]] '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> as the measure such that
 
:<math>\int_{\mathbf{R}^n} f(\mathbf{x})\delta\{d\mathbf{x}\} = f(\mathbf{0})</math>
 
for every compactly supported continuous function ''f''.  As a measure, the ''n''-dimensional delta function is the [[product measure]] of the 1-dimensional delta functions in each variable separately. Thus, formally, with '''x'''&nbsp;=&nbsp;(''x''<sub>1</sub>,''x''<sub>2</sub>,...,''x''<sub>''n''</sub>), one has<ref name="Bracewell 1986 loc=Chapter 5"/>
 
{{NumBlk|:|<math>\delta(\mathbf{x}) = \delta(x_1)\delta(x_2)\dots\delta(x_n).</math>|{{EquationRef|2}}}}
 
The delta function can also be defined in the sense of distributions exactly as above in the one-dimensional case.<ref>{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=§3.1}}</ref>  However, despite widespread use in engineering contexts, ({{EquationNote|2}}) should be manipulated with care, since the product of distributions can only be defined under quite narrow circumstances.<ref>{{harvnb|Strichartz|1994|loc=§2.3}}; {{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=§8.2}}</ref>
 
The notion of a '''[[Dirac measure]]''' makes sense on any set whatsoever.<ref name="Rudin 1966 loc=§1.20"/>  Thus if ''X'' is a set, ''x''<sub>0</sub>&nbsp;∈&nbsp;''X'' is a marked point, and Σ is any [[sigma algebra]] of subsets of ''X'', then the measure defined on sets ''A''&nbsp;∈&nbsp;Σ by
 
:<math>\delta_{x_0}(A)=\begin{cases}
1 &\rm{if\ }x_0\in A\\
0 &\rm{if\ }x_0\notin A
\end{cases}</math>
 
is the delta measure or unit mass concentrated at ''x''<sub>0</sub>.
 
Another common generalization of the delta function is to a [[differentiable manifold]] where most of its properties as a distribution can also be exploited because of the [[differentiable structure]].  The delta function on a manifold ''M'' centered at the point ''x''<sub>0</sub>&nbsp;∈&nbsp;''M'' is defined as the following distribution:
 
{{NumBlk|:|<math>\delta_{x_0}[\phi] = \phi(x_0)</math>|{{EquationRef|3}}}}
 
for all compactly supported smooth real-valued functions φ on ''M''.<ref>{{harvnb|Dieudonné|1972|loc=§17.3.3}}</ref> A common special case of this construction is when ''M'' is an [[open set]] in the Euclidean space '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>.
 
On a [[locally compact Hausdorff space]] ''X'', the Dirac delta measure concentrated at a point ''x'' is the [[Radon measure]] associated with the Daniell integral ({{EquationNote|3}}) on compactly supported continuous functions φ.  At this level of generality, calculus as such is no longer possible, however a variety of techniques from abstract analysis are available.  For instance, the mapping <math>x_0\mapsto \delta_{x_0}</math> is a continuous embedding of ''X'' into the space of finite Radon measures on ''X'', equipped with its [[vague topology]].  Moreover, the [[convex hull]] of the image of ''X'' under this embedding is [[dense set|dense]] in the space of probability measures on ''X''.<ref>{{harvnb|Federer|1969|loc=§2.5.19}}</ref>
 
==Properties==
===Scaling and symmetry===
The delta function satisfies the following scaling property for a non-zero scalar α:<ref>{{harvnb|Strichartz|1994|loc=Problem 2.6.2}}</ref>
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta(\alpha x)\,dx
=\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta(u)\,\frac{du}{|\alpha|}
=\frac{1}{|\alpha|}</math>
 
and so
 
{{NumBlk|:|<math>\delta(\alpha x) = \frac{\delta(x)}{|\alpha|}.</math>|{{EquationRef|4}}}}
 
In particular, the delta function is an [[even function|even]] distribution, in the sense that
 
:<math>\delta(-x) = \delta(x)</math>
 
which is [[homogeneous function|homogeneous]] of degree −1.
 
===Algebraic properties===
The [[distribution (mathematics)|distributional product]] of δ with ''x'' is equal to zero:
 
:<math>x\delta(x) = 0.</math>
 
Conversely, if ''xf''(''x'')&nbsp;=&nbsp;''xg''(''x''), where ''f'' and ''g'' are distributions, then
 
:<math>f(x) = g(x) +c \delta(x)</math>
 
for some constant ''c''.<ref>{{harvnb|Vladimirov|1971|loc=Chapter 2, Example 3(d)}}</ref>
 
===Translation===
The integral of the time-delayed Dirac delta is given by''':'''
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty f(t) \delta(t-T)\,dt = f(T).</math>
 
This is sometimes referred to as the ''sifting property''<ref>{{MathWorld|urlname=SiftingProperty|title=Sifting Property}}</ref> or the ''sampling property''. The delta function is said to "sift out" the value at ''t'' = ''T''.
 
It follows that the effect of [[Convolution|convolving]] a function ''f''(''t'') with the time-delayed Dirac delta is to time-delay ''f''(''t'') by the same amount''':'''
 
:{|
|<math>(f(t) * \delta(t-T))\,</math>
|<math> \ \stackrel{\mathrm{def}}{=}\  \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(\tau) \delta(t-T-\tau) \, d\tau</math>
|-
|
|<math>= \int\limits_{-\infty}^\infty f(\tau)  \delta(\tau-(t-T)) \, d\tau</math> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; (using &nbsp;({{EquationNote|4}}): <math>\delta(-x)=\delta(x)</math>)
|-
|
|<math>= f(t-T).\,</math>
|}
 
This holds under the precise condition that ''f'' be a [[Distribution (mathematics)#Tempered distributions and Fourier transform|tempered distribution]] (see the discussion of the Fourier transform [[#Fourier transform|below]]). As a special case, for instance, we have the identity (understood in the distribution sense)
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta (\xi-x) \delta(x-\eta) \, dx = \delta(\xi-\eta).</math>
 
===Composition with a function===
More generally, the delta distribution may be [[distribution (mathematics)#Composition with a smooth function|composed]] with a smooth function ''g''(''x'') in such a way that the familiar change of variables formula holds, that
 
:<math>\int_{\mathbf{R}} \delta\bigl(g(x)\bigr) f\bigl(g(x)\bigr) |g'(x)|\,dx = \int_{g(\mathbf{R})} \delta(u)f(u)\, du</math>
 
provided that ''g'' is a [[continuously differentiable]] function with ''g''′ nowhere zero.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{harvnb|Gel'fand|Shilov|1966–1968|loc=Vol. 1, §II.2.5}}</ref> That is, there is a unique way to assign meaning to the distribution <math>\delta\circ g</math> so that this identity holds for all compactly supported test functions ''f''.  This distribution satisfies δ(''g''(''x'')) = 0 if ''g'' is nowhere zero, and otherwise if ''g'' has a real [[root of a function|root]] at ''x''<sub>0</sub>, then
 
: <math>\delta(g(x)) = \frac{\delta(x-x_0)}{|g'(x_0)|}.</math>
 
It is natural therefore to ''define'' the composition δ(''g''(''x'')) for continuously differentiable functions ''g'' by
 
:<math>\delta(g(x)) = \sum_i \frac{\delta(x-x_i)}{|g'(x_i)|}</math>
 
where the sum extends over all roots of ''g''(''x''), which are assumed to be simple.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>  Thus, for example
 
:<math>\delta\left(x^2-\alpha^2\right) = \frac{1}{2|\alpha|}\Big[\delta\left(x+\alpha\right)+\delta\left(x-\alpha\right)\Big].</math>
 
In the integral form the generalized scaling property may be written as
 
: <math> \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x) \, \delta(g(x)) \, dx = \sum_{i}\frac{f(x_i)}{|g'(x_i)|}. </math>
 
===Properties in ''n'' dimensions===
The delta distribution in an ''n''-dimensional space satisfies the following scaling property instead:
 
:<math>\delta(\alpha\mathbf{x}) = |\alpha|^{-n}\delta(\mathbf{x})</math>
 
so that δ is a [[homogeneous function|homogeneous]] distribution of degree −''n''.  Under any [[reflection (mathematics)|reflection]] or [[rotation (mathematics)|rotation]] ρ, the delta function is invariant:
 
:<math>\delta(\rho \mathbf{x}) = \delta(\mathbf{x}).</math>
 
As in the one-variable case, it is possible to define the composition of δ with a [[Lipschitz function|bi-Lipschitz function]]<ref>Further refinement is possible, namely to [[submersion (mathematics)|submersions]], although these require a more involved change of variables formula.</ref> ''g'': '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> → '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> uniquely so that the identity
 
:<math>\int_{\mathbf{R}^n} \delta(g(\mathbf{x}))\, f(g(\mathbf{x}))\, |\det g'(\mathbf{x})|\, d\mathbf{x} = \int_{g(\mathbf{R}^n)} \delta(\mathbf{u}) f(\mathbf{u})\,d\mathbf{u}</math>
 
for all compactly supported functions ''f''.
 
Using the [[coarea formula]] from [[geometric measure theory]], one can also define the composition of the delta function with a [[submersion (mathematics)|submersion]] from one Euclidean space to another one of different dimension; the result is a type of [[current (mathematics)|current]].  In the special case of a continuously differentiable function ''g'': '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> → '''R''' such that the [[gradient]] of ''g'' is nowhere zero, the following identity holds<ref>{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=§6.1}}</ref>
 
: <math>\int_{\mathbf{R}^n} f(\mathbf{x}) \, \delta(g(\mathbf{x})) \, d\mathbf{x} = \int_{g^{-1}(0)}\frac{f(\mathbf{x})}{|\mathbf{\nabla}g|}\,d\sigma(\mathbf{x}) </math>
 
where the integral on the right is over ''g''<sup>−1</sup>(0), the ''n'' − 1 dimensional surface defined by ''g''('''x''')&nbsp;=&nbsp;0 with respect to the [[Minkowski content]] measure.  This is known as a [[simple layer]] integral.
 
More generally, if ''S'' is a smooth hypersurface of '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>, then we can associated to ''S'' the distribution that integrates any compactly supported smooth function ''g'' over ''S'':
:<math>\delta_S[g] = \int_S g(\mathbf{s})\,d\sigma(\mathbf{s})</math>
 
where σ is the hypersurface measure associated to ''S''.  This generalization is associated with the [[potential theory]] of [[simple layer potential]]s on ''S''.  If ''D'' is a [[domain (mathematical analysis)|domain]] in '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup> with smooth boundary ''S'', then δ<sub>''S''</sub> is equal to the [[normal derivative]] of the [[indicator function]] of ''D'' in the distribution sense:
 
:<math>-\int_{\mathbf{R}^n}g(\mathbf{x})\,\frac{\partial 1_D(\mathbf{x})}{\partial n}\;d\mathbf{x}=\int_S\,g(\mathbf{s})\;d\sigma(\mathbf{s}),</math>
 
where ''n'' is the outward normal.<ref>{{harvnb|Lange|2012|loc=pp.29–30}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Gelfand|Shilov|p=212}}</ref> For a proof, see e.g. the article on the [[Laplacian of the indicator#Surface Dirac delta function|normal derivative of the indicator function]].
 
==Fourier transform==
The delta function is a [[Distribution (mathematics)#Tempered distributions and Fourier transform|tempered distribution]], and therefore it has a well-defined [[Fourier transform]].  Formally, one finds<ref>In some conventions for the Fourier transform.</ref>
 
:<math>\hat{\delta}(\xi)=\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{-2\pi i x \xi}\delta(x)\,dx = 1.</math>
 
Properly speaking, the Fourier transform of a distribution is defined by imposing [[self-adjoint]]ness of the Fourier transform under the duality pairing <math>\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle</math> of tempered distributions with [[Schwartz functions]].  Thus <math>\hat{\delta}</math> is defined as the unique tempered distribution satisfying
 
:<math>\langle\hat{\delta},\phi\rangle = \langle\delta,\hat{\phi}\rangle</math>
 
for all Schwartz functions φ.  And indeed it follows from this that <math>\hat{\delta}=1.</math>
 
As a result of this identity, the [[convolution]] of the delta function with any other tempered distribution ''S'' is simply ''S'':
 
:<math>S*\delta = S.\,</math>
 
That is to say that δ is an [[identity element]] for the convolution on tempered distributions, and in fact the space of compactly supported distributions under convolution is an [[associative algebra]] with identity the delta function.  This property is fundamental in [[signal processing]], as convolution with a tempered distribution is a [[linear time-invariant system]], and applying the linear time-invariant system measures its [[impulse response]].  The impulse response can be computed to any desired degree of accuracy by choosing a suitable approximation for δ, and once it is known, it characterizes the system completely. See [[LTI system theory#Impulse response and convolution|''LTI system theory:Impulse response and convolution'']].
 
The inverse Fourier transform of the tempered distribution ''f''(ξ) = 1 is the delta function.  Formally, this is expressed
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty 1 \cdot e^{2\pi i x\xi}\,d\xi = \delta(x)</math>
 
and more rigorously, it follows since
 
:<math>\langle 1, f^\vee\rangle = f(0) = \langle\delta,f\rangle</math>
 
for all Schwartz functions ''f''.
 
In these terms, the delta function provides a suggestive statement of the orthogonality property of the Fourier kernel on '''R'''.  Formally, one has
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{i 2\pi \xi_1 t}  \left[e^{i 2\pi \xi_2 t}\right]^*\,dt = \int_{-\infty}^\infty e^{-i 2\pi (\xi_2 - \xi_1) t} \,dt = \delta(\xi_2 - \xi_1).</math>
 
This is, of course, shorthand for the assertion that the Fourier transform of the tempered distribution
 
:<math>f(t) = e^{i2\pi\xi_1 t}</math>
 
is
 
:<math>\hat{f}(\xi_2) = \delta(\xi_1-\xi_2)</math>
 
which again follows by imposing self-adjointness of the Fourier transform.
 
By [[analytic continuation]] of the Fourier transform, the [[Laplace transform]] of the delta function is found to be<ref>{{harvnb|Bracewell|1986}}</ref>
 
: <math> \int_{0}^{\infty}\delta (t-a)e^{-st} \, dt=e^{-sa}.</math>
 
==Distributional derivatives==
The distributional derivative of the Dirac delta distribution is the distribution δ′ defined on compactly supported smooth test functions φ by<ref>{{harvnb|Gel'fand|Shilov|1966|p=26}}</ref>
 
:<math>\delta'[\varphi] = -\delta[\varphi']=-\varphi'(0).</math>
 
The first equality here is a kind of integration by parts, for if δ were a true function then
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta'(x)\varphi(x)\,dx = -\int_{-\infty}^\infty \delta(x)\varphi'(x)\,dx.</math>
 
The ''k''-th derivative of δ is defined similarly as the distribution given on test functions by
 
:<math>\delta^{(k)}[\varphi] = (-1)^k \varphi^{(k)}(0).</math>
 
In particular δ is an infinitely differentiable distribution.
 
The first derivative of the delta function is the distributional limit of the difference quotients:<ref>{{harvnb|Gel'fand|Shilov|1966|loc=§2.1}}</ref>
 
:<math>\delta'(x) = \lim_{h\to 0} \frac{\delta(x+h)-\delta(x)}{h}.</math>
 
More properly, one has
 
:<math>\delta' = \lim_{h\to 0} \frac{1}{h}(\tau_h\delta - \delta)</math>
 
where τ<sub>''h''</sub> is the translation operator, defined on functions by τ<sub>''h''</sub>φ(x)&nbsp;=&nbsp;φ(x+h), and on a distribution ''S'' by
 
:<math>(\tau_h S)[\varphi] = S[\tau_{-h}\varphi].</math>
 
In the theory of [[electromagnetism]], the first derivative of the delta function represents a point magnetic [[dipole]] situated at the origin.  Accordingly, it is referred to as a dipole or the [[unit doublet|doublet function]].<ref>{{MathWorld|title=Doublet Function|urlname=DoubletFunction}}</ref>
 
The derivative of the delta function satisfies a number of basic properties, including:
 
*<math>\frac{d}{dx}\delta(-x) = \frac{d}{dx}\delta(x)</math>
*<math>\delta'(-x) = -\delta'(x)</math>
*<math>x\delta'(x) = -\delta(x).</math><ref>The property follows by applying a test function and integration by parts.</ref>
 
Furthermore, the convolution of δ' with a compactly supported smooth function ''f'' is
 
:<math>\delta'*f = \delta*f' = f',</math>
 
which follows from the properties of the distributional derivative of a convolution.
 
===Higher dimensions===
More generally, on an [[open set]] ''U'' in the ''n''-dimensional [[Euclidean space]] '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>, the Dirac delta distribution centered at a point ''a''&nbsp;∈&nbsp;''U'' is defined by<ref name="Hörmander 1983 56">{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|p=56}}</ref>
 
:<math>\delta_a[\phi]=\phi(a)</math>
 
for all φ&nbsp;∈&nbsp;''S''(''U''), the space of all smooth compactly supported functions on ''U''.  If ''α'' = (α<sub>1</sub>, ..., α<sub>''n''</sub>) is any [[multi-index]] and ∂<sup>α</sup> denotes the associated mixed [[partial derivative]] operator, then the α<sup>th</sup> derivative ∂<sup>α</sup>δ<sub>''a''</sub> of δ<sub>''a''</sub> is given by<ref name="Hörmander 1983 56"/>
 
:<math>\left\langle \partial^{\alpha} \delta_{a}, \varphi \right\rangle = (-1)^{| \alpha |} \left\langle \delta_{a}, \partial^{\alpha} \varphi \right\rangle = \left. (-1)^{| \alpha |} \partial^{\alpha} \varphi (x) \right|_{x = a} \mbox{ for all } \varphi \in S(U).</math>
 
That is, the α<sup>th</sup> derivative of δ<sub>''a''</sub> is the distribution whose value on any test function φ is the α<sup>th</sup> derivative of φ at ''a'' (with the appropriate positive or negative sign).
 
The first partial derivatives of the delta function are thought of as [[double layer potential|double layers]] along the coordinate planes.  More generally, the [[normal derivative]] of a simple layer supported on a surface is a double layer supported on that surface, and represents a laminar magnetic monopole.  Higher derivatives of the delta function are known in physics as [[multipole]]s.
 
Higher derivatives enter into mathematics naturally as the building blocks for the complete structure of distributions with point support.  If ''S'' is any distribution on ''U'' supported on the set {''a''} consisting of a single point, then there is an integer ''m'' and coefficients ''c''<sub>α</sub> such that<ref>{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|p=56}}; {{harvnb|Rudin|1991|loc=Theorem 6.25}}</ref>
 
:<math>S = \sum_{|\alpha|\le m} c_\alpha \partial^\alpha\delta_a.</math>
 
==Representations of the delta function==
The delta function can be viewed as the limit of a sequence of functions
 
:<math>\delta (x) = \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+} \eta_\varepsilon(x), \,</math>
 
where η<sub>ε</sub>(''x'') is sometimes called a '''nascent delta function'''{{anchor|nascent delta function}}. This limit is meant in a weak sense: either that
 
{{NumBlk|:|<math> \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+} \int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\eta_\varepsilon(x)f(x) \, dx = f(0) \ </math>|{{EquationRef|5}}}}
 
for all [[continuous function|continuous]] functions ''f'' having [[compact support]], or that this limit holds for all [[smooth function|smooth]] functions ''f'' with compact support.  The difference between these two slightly different modes of weak convergence is often subtle: the former is convergence in the [[vague topology]] of measures, and the latter is convergence in the sense of [[distribution (mathematics)|distributions]].
 
===Approximations to the identity===
Typically a nascent delta function η<sub>ε</sub> can be constructed in the following manner.  Let η be an absolutely integrable function on '''R''' of total integral 1, and define
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x) = \varepsilon^{-1} \eta \left (\frac{x}{\varepsilon} \right). </math>
 
In ''n'' dimensions, one uses instead the scaling
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x) = \varepsilon^{-n} \eta \left (\frac{x}{\varepsilon} \right). </math>
 
Then a simple change of variables shows that η<sub>ε</sub> also has integral 1.<ref>{{harvnb|Stein|Weiss|loc=Theorem 1.18}}</ref>  One shows easily that ({{EquationNote|5}}) holds for all continuous compactly supported functions ''f'', and so η<sub>ε</sub> converges weakly to δ in the sense of measures.
 
The η<sub>ε</sub> constructed in this way are known as an '''approximation to the identity'''.<ref>{{harvnb|Rudin|1991|loc=§II.6.31}}</ref>  This terminology is because the space ''L''<sup>1</sup>('''R''') of absolutely integrable functions is closed under the operation of [[convolution]] of functions: ''f''∗''g'' ∈ ''L''<sup>1</sup>('''R''') whenever ''f'' and ''g'' are in ''L''<sup>1</sup>('''R''').  However, there is no identity in ''L''<sup>1</sup>('''R''') for the convolution product: no element ''h'' such that ''f''∗''h'' = ''f'' for all ''f''.  Nevertheless, the sequence η<sub>ε</sub> does approximate such an identity in the sense that
 
:<math>f*\eta_\varepsilon \to f\quad\rm{as\ }\varepsilon\to 0.</math>
 
This limit holds in the sense of [[mean convergence]] (convergence in ''L''<sup>1</sup>).  Further conditions on the η<sub>ε</sub>, for instance that it be a mollifier associated to a compactly supported function,<ref>More generally, one only needs η = η<sub>1</sub> to have an integrable radially symmetric decreasing rearrangement.</ref> are needed to ensure pointwise convergence [[almost everywhere]].
 
If the initial η = η<sub>1</sub> is itself smooth and compactly supported then the sequence is called a [[mollifier]].  The standard mollifier is obtained by choosing η to be a suitably normalized [[bump function]], for instance
 
:<math>\eta(x) = \begin{cases} e^{-\frac{1}{1-|x|^2}}& \text{ if } |x| < 1\\
                0& \text{ if } |x|\geq 1.
                \end{cases}</math>
 
In some situations such as [[numerical analysis]], a [[piecewise linear function|piecewise linear]] approximation to the identity is desirable.  This can be obtained by taking η<sub>1</sub> to be a [[hat function]].  With this choice of η<sub>1</sub>, one has
 
:<math> \eta_\varepsilon(x) = \varepsilon^{-1}\max \left (1-|\frac{x}{\varepsilon}|,0 \right) </math>
 
which are all continuous and compactly supported, although not smooth and so not a mollifier.
 
===Probabilistic considerations===
In the context of [[probability theory]], it is natural to impose the additional condition that the initial η<sub>1</sub> in an approximation to the identity should be positive, as such a function then represents a [[probability distribution]].  Convolution with a probability distribution is sometimes favorable because it does not result in [[overshoot (signal)|overshoot]] or undershoot, as the output is a [[convex combination]] of the input values, and thus falls between the maximum and minimum of the input function.  Taking η<sub>1</sub> to be any probability distribution at all, and letting η<sub>ε</sub>(''x'') = η<sub>1</sub>(''x''/ε)/ε as above will give rise to an approximation to the identity.  In general this converges more rapidly to a delta function if, in addition, η has mean 0 and has small higher moments. For instance, if η<sub>1</sub> is the [[uniform distribution (continuous)|uniform distribution]] on [−1/2, 1/2], also known as the [[rectangular function]], then:<ref>{{harvnb|Saichev|Woyczyński|1997|loc=§1.1 The "delta function" as viewed by a physicist and an engineer, p. 3}}</ref>
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x) = \frac{1}{\varepsilon}\ \textrm{rect}\left(\frac{x}{\varepsilon}\right)=
\begin{cases}
\frac{1}{\varepsilon},&-\frac{\varepsilon}{2}<x<\frac{\varepsilon}{2}\\
0,&\text{otherwise}.
\end{cases}</math>
 
Another example is with the [[Wigner semicircle distribution]]
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x)= \begin{cases}
\frac{2}{\pi \varepsilon^2}\sqrt{\varepsilon^2 - x^2}, & -\varepsilon < x < \varepsilon \\
0, & \text{otherwise}
\end{cases}</math>
 
This is continuous and compactly supported, but not a mollifier because it is not smooth.
 
===Semigroups===
Nascent delta functions often arise as convolution [[semigroup]]s.  This amounts to the further constraint that the convolution of η<sub>ε</sub> with η<sub>δ</sub> must satisfy
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon * \eta_\delta = \eta_{\varepsilon+\delta}</math>
 
for all ε, δ > 0.  Convolution semigroups in ''L''<sup>1</sup> that form a nascent delta function are always an approximation to the identity in the above sense, however the semigroup condition is quite a strong restriction.
 
In practice, semigroups approximating the delta function arise as [[fundamental solution]]s or [[Green's function]]s to physically motivated [[elliptic partial differential equation|elliptic]] or [[parabolic partial differential equation|parabolic]] [[partial differential equations]].  In the context of [[applied mathematics]], semigroups arise as the output of a [[linear time-invariant system]].  Abstractly, if ''A'' is a linear operator acting on functions of ''x'', then a convolution semigroup arises by solving the [[initial value problem]]
 
:<math>\begin{cases}
\frac{\partial}{\partial t}\eta(t,x) = A\eta(t,x), \quad t>0 \\
\displaystyle\lim_{t\to 0^+} \eta(t,x) = \delta(x)
\end{cases}</math>
 
in which the limit is as usual understood in the weak sense.  Setting η<sub>ε</sub>(''x'')&nbsp;=&nbsp;η(ε, ''x'') gives the associated nascent delta function.
 
Some examples of physically important convolution semigroups arising from such a fundamental solution include the following.
 
;The heat kernel
The [[heat kernel]], defined by
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\pi\varepsilon}} \mathrm{e}^{-\frac{x^2}{2\varepsilon}}</math>
 
represents the temperature in an infinite wire at time ''t'' > 0, if a unit of heat energy is stored at the origin of the wire at time ''t'' = 0.  This semigroup evolves according to the one-dimensional [[heat equation]]:
 
:<math>\frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = \frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 u}{\partial x^2}.</math>
 
In [[probability theory]], η<sub>ε</sub>(''x'') is a [[normal distribution]] of [[variance]] ε and mean 0.  It represents the [[probability density function|probability density]] at time ''t''&nbsp;=&nbsp;ε of the position of a particle starting at the origin following a standard [[Brownian motion]].  In this context, the semigroup condition is then an expression of the [[Markov property]] of Brownian motion.
 
In higher dimensional Euclidean space '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>, the heat kernel is
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon = \frac{1}{(2\pi\varepsilon)^{n/2}}\mathrm{e}^{-\frac{x\cdot x}{2\varepsilon}},</math>
 
and has the same physical interpretation, ''[[mutatis mutandis]]''.  It also represents a nascent delta function in the sense that η<sub>ε</sub>&nbsp;→&nbsp;δ in the distribution sense as ε&nbsp;→&nbsp;0.
 
;The Poisson kernel
The [[Poisson kernel]]
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x) = \frac{1}{\pi} \frac{\varepsilon}{\varepsilon^2 + x^2}=\int_{-\infty}^{\infty}\mathrm{e}^{2\pi\mathrm{i} \xi x-|\varepsilon \xi|}\;d\xi</math>
 
is the fundamental solution of the [[Laplace equation]] in the upper half-plane.<ref>{{harvnb|Stein|Weiss|1971|loc=§I.1}}</ref>  It represents the [[electrostatic potential]] in a semi-infinite plate whose potential along the edge is held at fixed at the delta function. The Poisson kernel is also closely related to the [[Cauchy distribution]].  This semigroup evolves according to the equation
 
:<math>\frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = -\left (-\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2} \right)^{\frac{1}{2}}u(t,x)</math>
 
where the operator is rigorously defined as the [[Fourier multiplier]]
 
:<math>\mathcal{F}\left[\left(-\frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2} \right)^{\frac{1}{2}}f\right](\xi) = |2\pi\xi|\mathcal{F}f(\xi).</math>
 
===Oscillatory integrals===
In areas of physics such as [[wave propagation]] and [[wave|wave mechanics]], the equations involved are [[hyperbolic partial differential equations|hyperbolic]] and so may have more singular solutions.  As a result, the nascent delta functions that arise as fundamental solutions of the associated [[Cauchy problem]]s are generally [[oscillatory integral]]s.  An example, which comes from a solution of the [[Euler–Tricomi equation]] of [[transonic]] [[gas dynamics]],<ref>{{harvnb|Vallée|Soares|2004|loc=§7.2}}</ref> is the rescaled [[Airy function]]
 
:<math>\varepsilon^{-\frac{1}{3}}\operatorname{Ai}\left (x\varepsilon^{-\frac{1}{3}} \right). </math>
 
Although using the Fourier transform, it is easy to see that this generates a semigroup in some sense, it is not absolutely integrable and so cannot define a semigroup in the above strong sense.  Many nascent delta functions constructed as oscillatory integrals only converge in the sense of distributions (an example is the [[Dirichlet kernel]] below), rather than in the sense of measures.
 
Another example is the Cauchy problem for the [[wave equation]] in '''R'''<sup>1+1</sup>:<ref>{{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=§7.8}}</ref>
 
:<math> \begin{align}
c^{-2}\frac{\partial^2u}{\partial t^2} - \Delta u &= 0\\
u=0,\quad \frac{\partial u}{\partial t} = \delta &\qquad \text{for }t=0.
\end{align} </math>
 
The solution ''u'' represents the displacement from equilibrium of an infinite elastic string, with an initial disturbance at the origin.
 
Other approximations to the identity of this kind include the [[sinc function]] (used widely in electronics and telecommunications)
 
:<math>\eta_\varepsilon(x)=\frac{1}{\pi x}\sin\left(\frac{x}{\varepsilon}\right)=\frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{-\frac{1}{\varepsilon}}^{\frac{1}{\varepsilon}} \cos(kx)\;dk </math>
 
and the [[Bessel function]]
 
:<math>  \eta_\varepsilon(x) =  \frac{1}{\varepsilon}J_{\frac{1}{\varepsilon}} \left(\frac{x+1}{\varepsilon}\right). </math>
 
===Plane wave decomposition===
One approach to the study of a linear partial differential equation
 
:<math>L[u]=f,\,</math>
 
where ''L'' is a [[differential operator]] on '''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>, is to seek first a fundamental solution, which is a solution of the equation
 
:<math>L[u]=\delta.\,</math>
 
When ''L'' is particularly simple, this problem can often be resolved using the Fourier transform directly (as in the case of the Poisson kernel and heat kernel already mentioned).  For more complicated operators, it is sometimes easier first to consider an equation of the form
 
:<math>L[u]=h\,</math>
 
where ''h'' is a [[plane wave]] function, meaning that it has the form
 
:<math>h = h(x\cdot\xi)</math>
 
for some vector ξ.  Such an equation can be resolved (if the coefficients of ''L'' are [[analytic function]]s) by the [[Cauchy–Kovalevskaya theorem]] or (if the coefficients of ''L'' are constant) by quadrature.  So, if the delta function can be decomposed into plane waves, then one can in principle solve linear partial differential equations.
 
Such a decomposition of the delta function into plane waves was part of a general technique first introduced essentially by [[Johann Radon]], and then developed in this form by [[Fritz John]] ([[#CITEREFJohn1955|1955]]).<ref>See also {{harvnb|Courant|Hilbert|1962|loc=§14}}.</ref>  Choose ''k'' so that ''n''&nbsp;+&nbsp;''k'' is an even integer, and for a real number ''s'', put
 
:<math>g(s) = \operatorname{Re}\left[\frac{-s^k\log(-is)}{k!(2\pi i)^n}\right]
=\begin{cases}
\frac{|s|^k}{4k!(2\pi i)^{n-1}}&n \text{ odd}\\
&\\
-\frac{|s|^k\log|s|}{k!(2\pi i)^{n}}&n \text{ even.}
\end{cases}</math>
 
Then δ is obtained by applying a power of the [[Laplacian]] to the integral with respect to the unit [[sphere measure]] dω of ''g''(''x'' · ξ) for ξ in the [[unit sphere]] ''S''<sup>''n''−1</sup>:
 
:<math>\delta(x) = \Delta_x^{\frac{n+k}{2}} \int_{S^{n-1}} g(x\cdot\xi)\,d\omega_\xi.</math>
 
The Laplacian here is interpreted as a weak derivative, so that this equation is taken to mean that, for any test function φ,
 
:<math>\varphi(x) = \int_{\mathbf{R}^n}\varphi(y)\,dy\,\Delta_x^{\frac{n+k}{2}} \int_{S^{n-1}} g((x-y)\cdot\xi)\,d\omega_\xi.</math>
 
The result follows from the formula for the [[Newtonian potential]] (the fundamental solution of Poisson's equation). This is essentially a form of the inversion formula for the [[Radon transform]], because it recovers the value of φ(''x'') from its integrals over hyperplanes.  For instance, if ''n'' is odd and ''k''&nbsp;=&nbsp;1, then the integral on the right hand side is
 
:<math>c_n \Delta^{\frac{n+1}{2}}_x\int\int_{S^{n-1}} \varphi(y)|(y-x)\cdot\xi|\,d\omega_\xi\,dy = c_n\Delta^{\frac{n+1}{2}}_x\int_{S^{n-1}} \, d\omega_\xi \int_{-\infty}^\infty |p|R\varphi(\xi,p+x\cdot\xi)\,dp</math>
 
where ''R''φ(ξ, ''p'') is the Radon transform of φ:
 
:<math>R\varphi(\xi,p) = \int_{x\cdot\xi=p} f(x)\,d^{n-1}x.</math>
 
An alternative equivalent expression of the plane wave decomposition, from {{harvtxt|Gel'fand|Shilov|1966–1968|loc=I, §3.10}}, is
 
:<math>\delta(x) = \frac{(n-1)!}{(2\pi i)^n}\int_{S^{n-1}}(x\cdot\xi)^{-n}\,d\omega_\xi</math>
 
for ''n'' even, and
 
:<math>\delta(x) = \frac{1}{2(2\pi i)^{n-1}}\int_{S^{n-1}}\delta^{(n-1)}(x\cdot\xi)\,d\omega_\xi</math>
 
for ''n'' odd.
 
===Fourier kernels===
{{See also|Convergence of Fourier series}}
In the study of [[Fourier series]], a major question consists of determining whether and in what sense the Fourier series associated with a [[periodic function]] converges to the function.  The ''n''<sup>th</sup> partial sum of the Fourier series of a function ''f'' of period 2π is defined by convolution (on the interval [−π,π]) with the [[Dirichlet kernel]]:
:<math>D_N(x) = \sum_{n=-N}^N e^{inx} = \frac{\sin\left((N+\tfrac12)x\right)}{\sin(x/2)}.</math>
Thus,
:<math>s_N(f)(x) = D_N*f(x) = \sum_{n=-N}^N a_n e^{inx}</math>
where
:<math>a_n = \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{-\pi}^\pi f(y)e^{-iny}\,dy.</math>
A fundamental result of elementary Fourier series states that the Dirichlet kernel tends to the a multiple of the delta function as ''N''&nbsp;→&nbsp;∞.  This is interpreted in the distribution sense, that
:<math>s_N(f)(0) = \int_{\mathbf{R}} D_N(x)f(x)\,dx \to 2\pi f(0)</math>
for every compactly supported ''smooth'' function ''f''.  Thus, formally one has
:<math>\delta(x) = \frac1{2\pi} \sum_{n=-\infty}^\infty e^{inx}</math>
on the interval [−π,π].
 
In spite of this, the result does not hold for all compactly supported ''continuous'' functions: that is ''D<sub>N</sub>'' does not converge weakly in the sense of measures. The lack of convergence of the Fourier series has led to the introduction of a variety of [[summability methods]] in order to produce convergence.  The method of [[Cesàro summation]] leads to the [[Fejér kernel]]<ref>{{harvnb|Lang|1997|p=312}}</ref>
 
:<math>F_N(x) = \sum_{n=0}^N D_n(x) = \frac{1}{N}\left(\frac{\sin \frac{Nx}{2}}{\sin \frac{x}{2}}\right)^2.</math>
 
The [[Fejér kernel]]s tend to the delta function in a stronger sense that<ref>In the terminology of {{harvtxt|Lang|1997}}, the Fejér kernel is a Dirac sequence, whereas the Dirichlet kernel is not.</ref>
 
:<math>\int_{\mathbf{R}} F_N(x)f(x)\,dx \to 2\pi f(0)</math>
 
for every compactly supported ''continuous'' function ''f''.  The implication is that the Fourier series of any continuous function is Cesàro summable to the value of the function at every point.
 
===Hilbert space theory===
The Dirac delta distribution is a [[densely defined]] [[unbounded operator|unbounded]] [[linear functional]] on the [[Hilbert space]] [[Lp space|L<sup>2</sup>]] of [[square integrable function]]s.  Indeed, smooth compactly support functions are [[dense set|dense]] in ''L''<sup>2</sup>, and the action of the delta distribution on such functions is well-defined.  In many applications, it is possible to identify subspaces of ''L''<sup>2</sup> and to give a stronger [[topology]] on which the delta function defines a [[bounded linear functional]].
 
;Sobolev spaces
The [[Sobolev embedding theorem]] for [[Sobolev space]]s on the real line '''R''' implies that any square-integrable function ''f'' such that
 
:<math>\|f\|_{H^1}^2 = \int_{-\infty}^\infty |\hat{f}(\xi)|^2 (1+|\xi|^2)\,d\xi < \infty</math>
 
is automatically continuous, and satisfies in particular
 
:<math>\delta[f]=|f(0)| < C \|f\|_{H^1}.</math>
 
Thus δ is a bounded linear functional on the Sobolev space ''H''<sup>1</sup>.  Equivalently δ is an element of the [[continuous dual space]] ''H''<sup>−1</sup> of ''H''<sup>1</sup>. More generally, in ''n'' dimensions, one has {{nowrap|δ ∈ ''H''<sup>−''s''</sup>('''R'''<sup>''n''</sup>)}} provided&nbsp;{{nowrap|''s'' > ''n'' / 2}}.
 
====Spaces of holomorphic functions====
In [[complex analysis]], the delta function enters via [[Cauchy's integral formula]] which asserts that if ''D'' is a domain in the [[complex plane]] with smooth boundary, then
 
:<math>f(z) = \frac{1}{2\pi i} \oint_{\partial D} \frac{f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{\zeta-z},\quad z\in D</math>
 
for all [[holomorphic function]]s ''f'' in ''D'' that are continuous on the closure of ''D''.  As a result, the delta function δ<sub>''z''</sub> is represented on this class of holomorphic functions by the Cauchy integral:
 
:<math>\delta_z[f] = f(z) = \frac{1}{2\pi i} \oint_{\partial D} \frac{f(\zeta)\,d\zeta}{\zeta-z}.</math>
 
More generally, let ''H''<sup>2</sup>(∂''D'') be the [[Hardy space]] consisting of the closure in [[Lp space|''L''<sup>2</sup>(∂''D'')]] of all holomorphic functions in ''D'' continuous up to the boundary of ''D''.  Then functions in ''H''<sup>2</sup>(∂''D'') uniquely extend to holomorphic functions in ''D'', and the Cauchy integral formula continues to hold.  In particular for ''z''&nbsp;∈&nbsp;''D'', the delta function δ<sub>''z''</sub> is a continuous linear functional on ''H''<sup>2</sup>(∂''D'').  This is a special case of the situation in [[several complex variables]] in which, for smooth domains ''D'', the [[Szegő kernel]] plays the role of the Cauchy integral.
 
====Resolutions of the identity====
Given a complete [[orthonormal basis]] set of functions {φ<sub>''n''</sub>} in a separable Hilbert space, for example, the normalized [[eigenvector]]s of a [[Compact operator on Hilbert space#Spectral theorem|compact self-adjoint operator]], any vector ''f'' can be expressed as:
:<math>f = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \alpha_n \varphi_n. </math>
The coefficients {α<sub>n</sub>} are found as:
:<math>\alpha_n = \langle \varphi_n, f \rangle,</math>
which may be represented by the notation:
:<math>\alpha_n =  \varphi_n^\dagger f, </math>
a form of the [[bra-ket notation]] of Dirac.<ref>
 
The development of this section in bra-ket notation is found in {{harv|Levin|2002|loc= Coordinate-space wave functions and completeness, pp.=109''ff''}}</ref> Adopting this notation, the expansion of ''f'' takes the [[Dyadic tensor|dyadic]] form:<ref>{{harvnb|Davis|Thomson|2000|loc=Perfect operators, p.344}}</ref>
 
:<math>f =  \sum_{n=1}^\infty \varphi_n \left ( \varphi_n^\dagger f \right). </math>
 
Letting ''I'' denote the [[identity operator]] on the Hilbert space, the expression
 
:<math>I = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \varphi_n \varphi_n^\dagger, </math>
 
is called a [[Resolution_of_the_identity#Resolution_of_the_identity|resolution of the identity]]. When the Hilbert space is the space ''L''<sup>2</sup>(''D'') of square-integrable functions on a domain ''D'', the quantity:
 
:<math>\varphi_n \varphi_n^\dagger, </math>
 
is an integral operator, and the expression for ''f'' can be rewritten as:
 
:<math>f(x) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty \int_D\, \left( \varphi_n (x) \varphi_n^*(\xi)\right) f(\xi) \, d \xi.</math>
 
The right-hand side converges to ''f'' in the ''L''<sup>2</sup> sense.  It need not hold in a pointwise sense, even when ''f'' is a continuous function.  Nevertheless, it is common to abuse notation and write
 
:<math>f(x) = \int \, \delta(x-\xi) f (\xi)\, d\xi, </math>
 
resulting in the representation of the delta function:<ref>{{harvnb|Davis|Thomson|2000|loc=Equation 8.9.11, p. 344}}</ref>
 
:<math>\delta(x-\xi) = \sum_{n=1}^\infty  \varphi_n (x) \varphi_n^*(\xi). </math>
 
With a suitable [[rigged Hilbert space]] (Φ, ''L''<sup>2</sup>(''D''), Φ*) where Φ&nbsp;⊂&nbsp;''L''<sup>2</sup>(''D'') contains all compactly supported smooth functions, this summation may converge in Φ*, depending on the properties of the basis φ<sub>''n''</sub>.  In most cases of practical interest, the orthonormal basis comes from an integral or differential operator, in which case the series converges in the [[Distribution_(mathematics)#Distributions|distribution]] sense.<ref>{{harvnb|de la Madrid|Bohm|Gadella|2002}}</ref>
 
===Infinitesimal delta functions===
[[Cauchy]] used an infinitesimal α to write down a unit impulse, infinitely tall and narrow Dirac-type delta function δ<sub>α</sub> satisfying <math>\int F(x)\delta_\alpha(x) = F(0)</math> in a number of articles in 1827.<ref>See {{harvtxt|Laugwitz|1989}}.</ref> Cauchy defined an infinitesimal in Cours d'Analyse (1827) in terms of a sequence tending to zero.  Namely, such a null sequence becomes an infinitesimal in Cauchy's and [[Lazare Carnot]]'s terminology.
 
Modern set-theoretic approaches allow one to define infinitesimals via the [[ultrapower]] construction, where a null sequence becomes an infinitesimal in the sense of an equivalence class modulo a relation defined in terms of a suitable [[ultrafilter]]. The article by {{harvtxt|Yamashita|2007}} contains a bibliography on modern Dirac delta functions in the context of an infinitesimal-enriched continuum provided by the [[hyperreal number|hyperreals]].  Here the Dirac delta can be given by an actual function, having the property that for every real function ''F'' one has <math>\int F(x)\delta_\alpha(x) = F(0)</math> as anticipated by Fourier and Cauchy.
 
==Dirac comb==
{{Main|Dirac comb}}
[[Image:Dirac comb.svg|thumb|A Dirac comb is an infinite series of Dirac delta functions spaced at intervals of ''T'']]
A so-called uniform "pulse train" of Dirac delta measures, which is known as a [[Dirac comb]], or as the Shah distribution, creates a [[sampling (signal processing)|sampling]] function, often used in [[digital signal processing]] (DSP) and discrete time signal analysis.  The Dirac comb is given as the [[infinite sum]], whose limit is understood in the distribution sense,
 
:<math>\Delta(x) = \sum_{n=-\infty}^\infty \delta(x-n),</math>
 
which is a sequence of point masses at each of the integers.
 
Up to an overall normalizing constant, the Dirac comb is equal to its own Fourier transform.  This is significant because if ''f'' is any [[Schwartz space|Schwartz function]], then the [[Wrapped distribution|periodization]] of ''f'' is given by the convolution
:<math>(f*\Delta)(x) = \sum_{n=-\infty}^\infty f(x-n).</math>
In particular,
:<math>(f*\Delta)^\wedge = \hat{f}\widehat{\Delta} = \hat{f}\Delta</math>
is precisely the [[Poisson summation formula]].<ref>{{harvnb|Córdoba|1988}}; {{harvnb|Hörmander|1983|loc=§7.2}}</ref>
 
==Sokhotski–Plemelj theorem==
The [[Sokhotski–Plemelj theorem]], important in quantum mechanics, relates the delta function to the distribution p.v.1/''x'', the [[Cauchy principal value]] of the function 1/''x'', defined by
:<math>\left\langle\operatorname{p.v.}\frac{1}{x}, \phi\right\rangle = \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+}\int_{|x|>\varepsilon} \frac{\phi(x)}{x}\,dx.</math>
Sokhatsky's formula states that<ref>{{harvnb|Vladimirov|1971|loc=§5.7}}</ref>
:<math>\lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+} \frac{1}{x\pm i\varepsilon} = \operatorname{p.v.}\frac{1}{x} \mp i\pi\delta(x),</math>
Here the limit is understood in the distribution sense, that for all compactly supported smooth functions ''f'',
:<math>\lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+} \int_{-\infty}^\infty\frac{f(x)}{x\pm i\varepsilon}\,dx = \mp i\pi f(0) + \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+} \int_{|x|>\varepsilon}\frac{f(x)}{x}\,dx.</math>
 
==Relationship to the Kronecker delta==
The [[Kronecker delta]] δ<sub>ij</sub> is the quantity defined by
 
:<math>\delta_{ij} = \begin{cases} 1 & i=j\\ 0 &i\not=j \end{cases} </math>
 
for all integers ''i'', ''j''.  This function then satisfies the following analog of the sifting property: if <math>(a_i)_{i \in \mathbf{Z}}</math> is any [[Infinite_sequence#Doubly-infinite_sequences|doubly infinite sequence]], then
 
:<math>\sum_{i=-\infty}^\infty a_i \delta_{ik}=a_k.</math>
 
Similarly, for any real or complex valued continuous function ''f'' on '''R''', the Dirac delta satisfies the sifting property
 
:<math>\int_{-\infty}^\infty f(x)\delta(x-x_0)\,dx=f(x_0).</math>
 
This exhibits the Kronecker delta function as a discrete analog of the Dirac delta function.<ref>{{harvnb|Hartmann|1997|loc=pp. 154–155}}</ref>
 
==Applications==
===Probability theory===
In [[probability theory]] and [[statistics]], the Dirac delta function is often used to represent a [[discrete distribution]], or a partially discrete, partially [[continuous distribution|continuous]] distribution, using a [[probability density function]] (which is normally used to represent fully continuous distributions).  For example, the probability density function ''f''(''x'') of a discrete distribution consisting of points '''x''' = {''x''<sub>1</sub>, ..., ''x<sub>n</sub>''}, with corresponding probabilities ''p''<sub>1</sub>, ..., ''p<sub>n</sub>'', can be written as
 
:<math>f(x) = \sum_{i=1}^n p_i \delta(x-x_i).</math>
 
As another example, consider a distribution which 6/10 of the time returns a standard [[normal distribution]], and 4/10 of the time returns exactly the value 3.5 (i.e. a partly continuous, partly discrete [[mixture distribution]]).  The density function of this distribution can be written as
 
:<math>f(x) = 0.6 \, \frac {1}{\sqrt{2\pi}} e^{-\frac{x^2}{2}} + 0.4 \, \delta(x-3.5).</math>
 
The delta function is also used in a completely different way to represent the [[local time (mathematics)|local time]] of a [[diffusion process]] (like [[Brownian motion]]).  The local time of a stochastic process ''B''(''t'') is given by
:<math>\ell(x,t) = \int_0^t \delta(x-B(s))\,ds</math>
and represents the amount of time that the process spends at the point ''x'' in the range of the process.  More precisely, in one dimension this integral can be written
:<math>\ell(x,t) = \lim_{\varepsilon\to 0^+}\frac{1}{2\varepsilon}\int_0^t \mathbf{1}_{[x-\varepsilon,x+\varepsilon]}(B(s))\,ds</math>
where '''1'''<sub>[''x''−ε, ''x''+ε]</sub> is the [[indicator function]] of the interval [''x''−ε, ''x''+ε].
 
===Quantum mechanics===
We give an example of how the delta function is expedient in [[quantum mechanics]]. The [[wave function]] of a particle gives the probability amplitude of finding a particle within a given region of space.  Wave functions are assumed to be elements of the Hilbert space ''L''<sup>2</sup> of [[square-integrable function]]s, and the total probability of finding a particle within a given interval is the integral of the magnitude of the wave function squared over the interval. A set {φ<sub>''n''</sub>} of wave functions is orthonormal if they are normalized by
 
:<math>\langle\phi_n|\phi_m\rangle = \delta_{nm}</math>
 
where δ here refers to the Kronecker delta.  A set of orthonormal wave functions is complete in the space of square-integrable functions if any wave function ''ψ'' can be expressed as a combination of the φ<sub>''n''</sub>:
 
: <math> \psi = \sum c_n \phi_n, </math>
 
with <math> c_n = \langle \phi_n | \psi \rangle </math>.  Complete orthonormal systems of wave functions appear naturally as the [[eigenfunction]]s of the [[Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)|Hamiltonian]] (of a [[bound state|bound system]]) in quantum mechanics that measures the energy levels, which are called the eigenvalues.  The set of eigenvalues, in this case, is known as the [[spectrum]] of the Hamiltonian.  In [[bra-ket notation]], as [[#Resolutions of the identity|above]], this equality implies the resolution of the identity:
 
: <math>I = \sum |\phi_n\rangle\langle\phi_n|.</math>
 
Here the eigenvalues are assumed to be discrete, but the set of eigenvalues of an [[observable]] may be continuous rather than discrete.  An example is the [[position operator|position observable]], ''Qψ''(''x'')&nbsp;=&nbsp;''x''ψ(''x'').  The spectrum of the position (in one dimension) is the entire real line, and is called a [[continuous spectrum]].  However, unlike the Hamiltonian, the position operator lacks proper eigenfunctions.  The conventional way to overcome this shortcoming is to widen the class of available functions by allowing distributions as well: that is, to replace the Hilbert space of quantum mechanics by an appropriate [[rigged Hilbert space]].<ref>{{harvnb|Isham|1995|loc=§6.2}}</ref>  In this context, the position operator has a complete set of eigen-distributions, labeled by the points ''y'' of the real line, given by
 
:<math>\phi_y(x) = \delta(x-y).\;</math>
 
The eigenfunctions of position are denoted by <math>\phi_y = |y\rangle</math> in Dirac notation, and are known as position eigenstates.
 
Similar considerations apply to the eigenstates of the [[momentum operator]], or indeed any other self-adjoint [[unbounded operator]] ''P'' on the Hilbert space, provided the spectrum of ''P'' is continuous and there are no degenerate eigenvalues.  In that case, there is a set Ω of real numbers (the spectrum), and a collection φ<sub>''y''</sub> of distributions indexed by the elements of Ω, such that
 
:<math>P\phi_y = y\phi_y.\;</math>
 
That is, φ<sub>''y''</sub> are the eigenvectors of ''P''.  If the eigenvectors are normalized so that
 
:<math>\langle \phi_y,\phi_{y'}\rangle = \delta(y-y')</math>
 
in the distribution sense, then for any test function ψ,
 
: <math> \psi(x) = \int_\Omega  c(y) \phi_y(x) \, dy</math>
 
where
 
: <math>c(y) = \langle \psi, \phi_y \rangle.</math>
 
That is, as in the discrete case, there is a resolution of the identity
 
:<math>I = \int_\Omega |\phi_y\rangle\, \langle\phi_y|\,dy</math>
 
where the operator-valued integral is again understood in the weak sense.  If the spectrum of ''P'' has both continuous and discrete parts, then the resolution of the identity involves a summation over the discrete spectrum ''and'' an integral over the continuous spectrum.
 
The delta function also has many more specialized applications in quantum mechanics, such as the [[delta potential]] models for a single and double potential well.
 
===Structural mechanics===
The delta function can be used in [[structural mechanics]] to describe transient loads or point loads acting on structures. The governing equation of a simple [[Harmonic oscillator|mass–spring system]] excited by a sudden force [[impulse (physics)|impulse]] ''I'' at time ''t'' = 0 can be written
 
:<math>m \frac{\mathrm{d}^2 \xi}{\mathrm{d} t^2} + k \xi = I \delta(t),</math>
 
where ''m'' is the mass, ξ the deflection and ''k'' the [[spring constant]].
 
As another example, the equation governing the static deflection of a slender [[beam (structure)|beam]] is, according to [[Euler-Bernoulli beam equation|Euler-Bernoulli theory]],
 
:<math>EI \frac{\mathrm{d}^4 w}{\mathrm{d} x^4} = q(x),\,</math>
 
where ''EI'' is the [[bending stiffness]] of the beam, ''w'' the [[deflection (engineering)|deflection]], ''x'' the spatial coordinate and ''q''(''x'') the load distribution. If a beam is loaded by a point force ''F'' at ''x'' = ''x''<sub>0</sub>, the load distribution is written
 
:<math>q(x) = F \delta(x-x_0).\,</math>
 
As integration of the delta function results in the [[Heaviside step function]], it follows that the static deflection of a slender beam subject to multiple point loads is described by a set of piecewise [[polynomial]]s.
 
Also a point [[bending moment|moment]] acting on a beam can be described by delta functions. Consider two opposing point forces ''F'' at a distance ''d'' apart. They then produce a moment ''M'' = ''Fd'' acting on the beam. Now, let the distance ''d'' approach the [[Limit of a function|limit]] zero, while ''M'' is kept constant. The load distribution, assuming a clockwise moment acting at ''x'' = 0, is written
 
:<math>\begin{align}
q(x) &= \lim_{d \to 0} \Big( F \delta(x) - F \delta(x-d) \Big) \\
&= \lim_{d \to 0} \left( \frac{M}{d} \delta(x) - \frac{M}{d} \delta(x-d) \right) \\
&= M \lim_{d \to 0} \frac{\delta(x) - \delta(x - d)}{d}\\
&= M \delta'(x).
\end{align}</math>
 
Point moments can thus be represented by the [[derivative]] of the delta function. Integration of the beam equation again results in piecewise [[polynomial]] deflection.
 
==See also==
*[[Atom (measure theory)]]
*[[Delta potential]]
*[[Dirac measure]]
*[[Fundamental solution]]
*[[Green's function]]
*[[Laplacian of the indicator]]
 
==Notes==
{{clear}}
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
 
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==External links==
*{{springer|title=Delta-function|id=p/d030950}}
*[http://www.khanacademy.org/video/dirac-delta-function KhanAcademy.org video lesson]
*[http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=73447 The Dirac Delta function], a tutorial on the Dirac delta function.
*[http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/mathematics/18-03-differential-equations-spring-2010/video-lectures/lecture-23-use-with-impulse-inputs Video Lectures – Lecture 23], a lecture by [[Arthur Mattuck]].
*[http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/DiracDeltaFunction.html Dirac Delta Function] on [[PlanetMath]]
*[http://www.osaka-kyoiku.ac.jp/~ashino/pdf/chinaproceedings.pdf The Dirac delta measure is a hyperfunction]
*[http://www.ing-mat.udec.cl/~rodolfo/Papers/BGR-3.pdf We show the existence of a unique solution and analyze a finite element approximation when the source term is a Dirac delta measure]
*[http://www.mathematik.uni-muenchen.de/~lerdos/WS04/FA/content.html Non-Lebesgue measures on R. Lebesgue-Stieltjes measure, Dirac delta measure.]
 
{{ProbDistributions|miscellaneous}}
{{Infinitesimal navbox}}
 
{{good article}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dirac Delta Function}}
[[Category:Fourier analysis]]
[[Category:Generalized functions]]
[[Category:Measure theory]]
[[Category:Digital signal processing]]
[[Category:Paul Dirac|Delta function]]

Revision as of 18:05, 7 February 2014


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