Difference between revisions of "Bilateral Laplace transform"

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*{{PaperReference|Bilateral Laplace Transforms on Time Scales: Convergence, Convolution, and the Characterization of Stationary Stochastic Time Series|2009|John M. Davis|author2=Ian A. Gravagne|author3=Robert J. Marks II|prev=findme|next=findme}}: $(3.1)$
 
*{{PaperReference|Bilateral Laplace Transforms on Time Scales: Convergence, Convolution, and the Characterization of Stationary Stochastic Time Series|2009|John M. Davis|author2=Ian A. Gravagne|author3=Robert J. Marks II|prev=findme|next=findme}}: $(3.1)$
 
*{{PaperReference|Analysis of the bilateral Laplace transform on time scales with applications|2021|Tom Cuchta|author2=Svetlin Georgiev|prev=|next=}}: Section 1
 
*{{PaperReference|Analysis of the bilateral Laplace transform on time scales with applications|2021|Tom Cuchta|author2=Svetlin Georgiev|prev=|next=}}: Section 1
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[[Category:Definition]]

Revision as of 12:53, 16 January 2023

Let $\mathbb{T}$ be a time scale. The Bilateral Laplace transform of a function $f \colon \mathbb{T} \rightarrow \mathbb{T}$ centered at $s$ is given by $$\mathscr{L}_{\mathbb{T}}^b(z;s)=\displaystyle\int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(t)e_{\ominus z}(\sigma(t),s) \Delta t,$$ where $e_{\ominus z}$ denotes the delta exponential and $\ominus z$ denotes forward circle minus.

See also

Laplace transform
Cuchta-Georgiev Fourier transform

References