196 C H A P T E R 3: The Laplace Transform
FIGURE 3.13
Full-wave rectified causal signal.
− 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
−0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
t
x(
t)
Solution
The first period of the full-wave rectified signal can be expressed as
x 1 (t)=sin( 2 πt)u(t)+sin( 2 π(t−0.5))u(t−0.5)
and its Laplace transform is
X 1 (s)=
2 π( 1 +e−0.5s)
s^2 +( 2 π)^2
And the train of these sinusoidal pulses
x(t)=
∑∞
k= 0
x 1 (t−0.5k)
will then have the following Laplace transform:
X(s)=X 1 (s)[1+e−s/^2 +e−s+···]=X 1 (s)
1
1 −e−s/^2
=
2 π( 1 +e−s/^2 )
( 1 −e−s/^2 )(s^2 + 4 π^2 ) n
3.3.5 Convolution Integral.................................................................
Because this is the most important property of the Laplace transform we provide a more extensive
coverage later, after considering the inverse Laplace transform.
The Laplace transform of the convolution integral of a causal signalx(t), with Laplace transformsX(s), and a
causal impulse responseh(t), with Laplace transformH(s), is given by
L[(x∗h)(t)]=X(s)H(s) (3.16)