Suppose you have a constant function f(x) = c. What is the Fourier transform of f?

We will show why the direct approach doesn’t work, give two hand-wavy approaches, and a rigorous definition.

Direct approach

Unfortunately there are multiple conventions for defining the Fourier transform.

For this post, we will define the Fourier transform of a function f to be

\hat{f}(\omega) = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2\pi}} \int_{-\infty}^\infty \exp(-i \omega x), f(x), dx

If f(x) = c then the integral diverges unless c = 0.

Heuristic approach

The more concentrated a function is in the time domain, the more it spreads out in the frequency domain. And the more spread out a f…

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