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

Laplace Transforms

Convert differential equations into algebra — then transform back.

Definition & Key Transforms

ℒ{f(t)} = F(s) = ∫₀^∞ e⁻ˢᵗ f(t) dt

ℒ{1} = 1/s  |  ℒ{tⁿ} = n!/sⁿ⁺¹
ℒ{eᵃᵗ} = 1/(s−a)  |  ℒ{sin(bt)} = b/(s²+b²)
ℒ{cos(bt)} = s/(s²+b²)

The Laplace transform converts time-domain functions to s-domain using an improper integral. The exponential kernel e⁻ˢᵗ ensures convergence for suitable s.

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

Properties

Linearity: ℒ{af + bg} = aF + bG
Derivative: ℒ{f'(t)} = sF(s) − f(0)
Second derivative: ℒ{f''(t)} = s²F(s) − sf(0) − f'(0)
Shift: ℒ{eᵃᵗf(t)} = F(s − a)

The derivative property is the key insight: differentiation becomes multiplication by s. This turns second-order DEs into algebraic equations in s — much easier to solve!

Solving DEs with Laplace

Example: y'' + 3y' + 2y = 0, y(0) = 1, y'(0) = 0

Transform: s²Y − s − 0 + 3(sY − 1) + 2Y = 0

(s² + 3s + 2)Y = s + 3 → Y = (s + 3)/((s + 1)(s + 2))

Partial fractions: Y = 2/(s + 1) − 1/(s + 2)

Inverse: y(t) = 2e⁻ᵗ − e⁻²ᵗ

The workflow: (1) transform the DE, (2) solve the algebraic equation for Y(s), (3) use partial fractions and the table to invert.

Step & Impulse Functions

Unit step: u(t − a) = 0 for t < a, 1 for t ≥ a
ℒ{u(t − a)·f(t − a)} = e⁻ᵃˢF(s)

Dirac delta: δ(t − a) — impulse at t = a
ℒ{δ(t − a)} = e⁻ᵃˢ

Step functions model sudden switches (turning on a force). The delta function models instantaneous impulses (a hammer strike). These are essential in engineering and signal processing.

The Laplace transform is part of a family of integral transforms. The Fourier transform (using e⁻ⁱωᵗ instead of e⁻ˢᵗ) decomposes signals into frequencies — connecting to trigonometric series. The Z-transform does the same for discrete-time systems.