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May 20, 1999 10:33 f51-ch15 Sheet number 1 Page number 643 magenta black PART 3 ADVANCED CIRCUIT ANALYSIS Chapter 15 The Laplace Transform Chapter 16 Fourier Series Chapter 17 Fourier Transform Chapter 18 Two-Port Networks 643 ▲ | ▲ | e-Text Main Menu | Textbook Table of Contents | Problem Solving Workbook Contents CHAPTER 15 THELAPLACETRANSFORM Amanislikeafunction whose numerator is what he is and whose denominatoriswhathethinksofhimself. Thelargerthedenominatorthe smaller the fraction. —I.N.Tolstroy Historical Profiles Pierre Simon Laplace (1749–1827), a French astronomer and mathematician, first presentedthetransformthatbearshisnameanditsapplicationstodifferentialequations in 1779. Born of humble origins in Beaumont-en-Auge, Normandy, France, Laplace becameaprofessorofmathematicsattheageof20. Hismathematicalabilitiesinspired the famous mathematician Simeon Poisson, who called Laplace the Isaac Newton of France. He made important contributions in potential theory, probability theory, astronomy, and celestial mechanics. He was widely known for his work, Traite de Mecanique Celeste (Celestial Mechanics), which supplemented the work of New- tononastronomy. TheLaplacetransform,thesubjectofthischapter,isnamedafterhim. SamuelF.B.Morse(1791–1872),anAmericanpainter,inventedthetelegraph,thefirst practical, commercialized application of electricity. MorsewasborninCharlestown,MassachusettsandstudiedatYaleandtheRoyal Academy of Arts in London to become an artist. In the 1830s, he became intrigued with developing a telegraph. He had a working model by 1836 and applied for a patent in 1838. The U.S. Senate appropriated funds for Morse to construct a telegraph line between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. On May 24, 1844, he sent the famous first message: “What hath God wrought!” Morse also developed a code of dots and dashes for letters and numbers, for sending messages on the telegraph. The development of the telegraph led to the invention of the telephone. 645 ▲ | ▲ | e-Text Main Menu | Textbook Table of Contents | Problem Solving Workbook Contents 646 PART3 Advanced Circuit Analysis 15.1 INTRODUCTION Our frequency-domain analysis has been limited to circuits with sinu- soidal inputs. In other words, we have assumed sinusoidal time-varying excitationsinallournon-dccircuits. ThischapterintroducestheLaplace transform, a very powerful tool for analyzing circuits with sinusoidal or nonsinusoidal inputs. Theideaoftransformationshouldbefamiliarbynow. Whenusing phasorsfortheanalysisofcircuits,wetransformthecircuitfromthetime domain to the frequency or phasor domain. Once we obtain the phasor result, we transform it back to the time domain. The Laplace transform method follows the same process: we use the Laplace transformation to transform the circuit from the time domain to the frequency domain, obtain the solution, and apply the inverse Laplace transform to the result to transform it back to the time domain. TheLaplacetransformissignificantforanumberofreasons. First, it canbeappliedtoawidervarietyofinputsthanphasoranalysis. Second, it provides an easy way to solve circuit problems involving initial con- ditions, because it allows us to work with algebraic equations instead of differential equations. Third, the Laplace transform is capable of provid- ingus,inonesingleoperation,thetotalresponseofthecircuitcomprising both the natural and forced responses. WebeginwiththedefinitionoftheLaplacetransformanduseitto derive the transforms of some basic, important functions. We consider some properties of the Laplace transform that are very helpful in circuit analysis. We then consider the inverse Laplace transform, transfer func- tions, and convolution. Finally, we examine how the Laplace transform is applied in circuit analysis, network stability, and network synthesis. 15.2DEFINITIONOFTHELAPLACETRANSFORM Givenafunctionf(t),itsLaplacetransform,denotedbyF(s)orL[f(t)], is given by ∞ st L[f(t)] = F(s)= 0 f(t)e dt (15.1) where s is a complex variable given by s = σ +jω (15.2) SincetheargumentstoftheexponenteinEq.(15.1)mustbedimension- less, it follows that s has the dimensions of frequency and units of inverse 1 seconds(s ). In Eq. (15.1), the lower limit is specified as 0 to indicate atimejustbeforet = 0. Weuse0 asthelowerlimittoincludetheorigin and capture any discontinuity of f(t)at t = 0; this will accommodate functions—such as singularity functions—that may be discontinuous at For an ordinary function f(t), the lower limit can t = 0. be replaced by 0. The Laplace transform is an integral transformation of a function f(t) from the time domain into the complex frequency domain, giving F(s). ▲ | ▲ | e-Text Main Menu | Textbook Table of Contents | Problem Solving Workbook Contents CHAPTER15 TheLaplace Transform 647 WeassumeinEq.(15.1) that f(t)is ignored for t<0. To ensure that this is the case, a function is often multiplied by the unit step. Thus, f(t)is written as f(t)u(t) or f(t), t ≥ 0. The Laplace transform in Eq. (15.1) is known as the one-sided (or unilateral) Laplace transform. The two-sided (or bilateral) Laplace transform is given by ∞ st F(s)= ∞f(t)e dt (15.3) The one-sided Laplace transform in Eq. (15.1), being adequate for our purposes, is the only type of Laplace transform that we will treat in this book. Afunction f(t)may not have a Laplace transform. In order for f(t)tohaveaLaplacetransform,theintegralinEq.(15.1)mustconverge jωt toafinitevalue. Since|e |=1foranyvalueoft,theintegralconverges jωt 2 2 when | e |= cos ωt+sin ωt=1 ∞eσt|f(t)|dt < ∞ (15.4) 0 for some real value σ = σc. Thus, the region of convergence for the Laplace transform is Re(s) = σ>σ, as shown in Fig. 15.1. In this c jv region, |F(s)| < ∞ and F(s) exists. F(s) is undefined outside the region of convergence. Fortunately, all functions of interest in circuit analysis satisfy the convergence criterion in Eq. (15.4) and have Laplace transforms. Therefore, it is not necessary to specify σ in what follows. c Acompanion to the direct Laplace transform in Eq. (15.1) is the inverse Laplace transform given by 0 s s s c 1 σ +j∞ 1 1 1 st L [F(s)] = f(t)= 2πj σ j∞ F(s)e ds (15.5) 1 wheretheintegrationisperformedalongastraightline(σ +jω,∞ < Figure 15.1 Region of convergence for 1 the Laplace transform. ω<∞)intheregion of convergence, σ >σ. See Fig. 15.1. The 1 c direct application of Eq. (15.5) involves some knowledge about complex analysis beyond the scope of this book. For this reason, we will not use Eq. (15.5) to find the inverse Laplace transform. We will rather use a look-up table, to be developed in Section 15.3. The functions f(t)and F(s)are regarded as a Laplace transform pair where f(t) ⇐⇒ F(s) (15.6) meaningthatthereisone-to-onecorrespondencebetweenf(t)andF(s). ThefollowingexamplesderivetheLaplacetransformsofsomeimportant functions. EXAMPLE15.1 Determine the Laplace transform of each of the following functions: (a) u(t), (b) eatu(t), a ≥ 0, and (c) δ(t). ▲ | ▲ | e-Text Main Menu | Textbook Table of Contents | Problem Solving Workbook Contents
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