Dirac Delta Function As Limit of A Gaussian
Dirac Delta Function As Limit of A Gaussian
INTEGRAL
1 0 2 /∆2
g∆ x − x0 = e−(x−x )
1/2
(1)
2
(π∆ )
If ∆2 is real and positive, we have
ˆ ∞
1 0 2 /∆2
1/2
e−(x−x ) dx = 1 (2)
(π∆2 ) −∞
Thus the area under the curve is always 1, for any real value of ∆2 . Now
as ∆2 → 0 the exponential becomes zero except when x = x0 . The factor
1/2
1/ π∆2 tends to infinity as ∆2 → 0, but the exponential always tends
to zero faster than any power of ∆, so g∆ (x − x0 ) tends to zero everywhere
except at x = x0 . Thus it satisfies the requirements of a delta function: it is
zero everywhere except when x − x0 = 0 and has an integral of 1. Thus
lim g∆ x − x0 = δ x − x0
(3)
∆→0
However, if we plug the integral into Maple without any restrictions on
∆2 , it informs us that the integral is still 1 even if ∆2 is pure imaginary,
provided that the imaginary number is positive, that is, we can write ∆2 =
iβ 2 for real β. Thus it would appear that g∆ still gives a delta function in
the limit ∆2 → 0 even if ∆2 is a positive imaginary number.
Shankar provides a rationale for this in his footnote to equation 1.10.19.
In terms of β we can integrate some smooth function f (x0 ) multiplied by
g∆ over a region that includes x0 = x.
ˆ ∞
1 0 2 /β 2
ei(x−x ) f x0 dx
1/2
(4)
(πiβ 2 ) −∞
1
DIRAC DELTA FUNCTION AS LIMIT OF A GAUSSIAN INTEGRAL 2