Difference between revisions of "Unilateral Laplace transform"

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[[Unilateral Laplace transform is a linear operator]]<br />
 
[[Unilateral Laplace transform is a linear operator]]<br />
 
[[Unilateral Laplace transform of delta derivative]]<br />
 
[[Unilateral Laplace transform of delta derivative]]<br />
 
 
 
  
 
=Table of Laplace transforms=
 
=Table of Laplace transforms=

Revision as of 15:12, 21 January 2023

If $\mathbb{T}$ is a time scale, $s \in \mathbb{T}$, and $f$ is rd-continuous, then we define the unilateral Laplace transform of $f$ about $s$ by the formula $$\mathscr{L}_{\mathbb{T}}\{f\}(z;s) = \displaystyle\int_s^{\infty} f(t) e_{\ominus z}(\sigma(t),s) \Delta t,$$ for all $z$ for which the integral converges, where $\displaystyle\int$ denotes the delta integral, $e_{\ominus z}$ denotes a delta exponential whose subscript is the forward circle minus of the constant $z$, and $\sigma$ is the forward jump.

Properties of Laplace Transforms

Unilateral Laplace transform is a linear operator
Unilateral Laplace transform of delta derivative

Table of Laplace transforms

Formula for unilateral Laplace transform
$\mathbb{T}=$ Unilateral Laplace transform
$\mathbb{R}$ $\mathscr{L}_{\mathbb{R}}\{f\}(z;s)=\displaystyle\int_s^{\infty} f(\tau) e^{-z\tau} \mathrm{d}\tau$
$\mathbb{Z}$
$h\mathbb{Z}$
$\mathbb{Z}^2$
$\overline{q^{\mathbb{Z}}}, q > 1$
$\overline{q^{\mathbb{Z}}}, q < 1$
$\mathbb{H}$
Laplace Transforms of special functions
$f(t;s)$ $\mathscr{L}\{f(\cdot;s)\}(z)$
$e_{\alpha}(t;s)$ $\dfrac{1}{z-\alpha}$
$h_n(t;s)$ $\dfrac{1}{z^{n+1}}$
$\sinh_{\alpha}(t;s)$ $\dfrac{\alpha}{z^2-\alpha^2}$
$\cosh_{\alpha}(t;s)$ $\dfrac{z}{z^2-\alpha^2}$
$\sin_{\alpha}(t;s)$ $\dfrac{\alpha}{z^2+\alpha^2}$
$\cos_{\alpha}(t;s)$ $\dfrac{z}{z^2+\alpha^2}$

See also

Bilateral Laplace transform
Unilateral convolution

References