The Dirac delta or Dirac's delta is a mathematical construct introduced by the British theoretical physicist Paul Dirac. Informally, it is a function representing an infinitely sharp peak bounding unit area: a function δ(x) that has the value zero everywhere except at x = 0 where its value is infinitely large in such a way that its total integral is 1. It is a continuous analogue of the discreteKronecker delta. In the context of signal processing it is often referred to as the unit impulse function. Note that the Dirac delta is not strictly a function. While for many purposes it can be manipulated as such, formally it can be defined as a distribution that is also a measure.
Overview
A Dirac function can be of any size in which case its 'strength' A is defined by duration multiplied by amplitude. The graph of the delta function is usually thought of as following the whole x-axis and the positive y-axis. (This informal picture can sometimes be misleading, for example in the limiting case of the sinc function.)
Despite its name, the delta function is not truly a function, at least not a usual one with domain in reals. 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 integration theory, if f and g are functions such that f = galmost everywhere, then f is integrable if and only ifg is integrable and the integrals of f and g are identical. Rigorous treatment of the Dirac delta requires measure theory or the theory of distributions.
The Dirac delta is very useful as an approximation for a tall narrow spike function (an impulse). It is the same type of abstraction as a point charge, point mass or electron point. For example, in calculating the dynamics of a baseball being hit by a bat, approximating the force of the bat hitting the baseball by a delta function is a helpful trick. In doing so, one not only simplifies the equations, but one also is able to calculate the 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.
The Dirac delta function was named after the Kronecker delta , since it can be used 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,
and which is also constrained to satisfy the identity
This heuristic definition should not be taken too seriously though. The Dirac delta is not a function, as no function has the above properties. Moreover there exist descriptions of the delta function which differ from the above conceptualization. For example, (where sinc is the sinc function) behaves as a delta function in the limit of , yet this function does not approach zero for values of x outside the origin, rather it oscillates between 1/x and -1/x more and more rapidly as a approaches infinity.
The defining characteristic
where f is a suitable test function, cannot be achieved by any function , but the Dirac delta function can be rigorously defined either as a distribution or as a measure.
In terms of dimensional analysis, this definition of implies that has dimensions reciprocal to those of dx.
As a distribution, the Dirac delta is a linear functional on the space of test functions and is defined by
for every test function . It is a distribution with compact support (the support being {0}). Because of this definition, and the absence of a true function with the delta function's properties, it is important to realize the above integral notation is simply a notational convenience, and not a garden-variety (Riemann or Lebesgue) integral.
for all real numbers x. It is important to realize this "density" interpretation is a notational convenience; if dt is Lebesgue measure, then no such density exists. However, by choosing to interpret as a singular measure giving point mass to 0, one can move beyond mere notational convenience and state something
both logically coherent and actually true, namely,
int^{x}_{-infin} d delta =
begin{cases}
0 & text{if } x < 0,
1 & text{if } x ge 0 end{cases}
Delta function of more complicated arguments
A helpful identity is the scaling property ( is non-zero),