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[parent] Laplace transform of power function (Derivation)

In the defining integral $$\mathcal{L}\left\{t^r\right\} = \int_0^\infty e^{-st}t^r\,dt$$ of the Laplace transform of the power function $t \mapsto t^r$ , we make the substitution $u := st$ : $$\mathcal{L}\left\{t^r\right\} = \int_0^\infty e^{-u}\left(\frac{u}{s}\right)^r\frac{du}{s} = \frac{1}{s^{n+1}}\int_0^\infty e^{-u}u^{r+1-1}\,du$$ Here we have assumed that $r > -1$ and $s > 0$ . According to the definition of the gamma function, the last integral is equal to $\Gamma(r\!+\!1)$ . Thus we obtain

$\displaystyle \mathcal{L}\left\{t^r\right\} = \frac{\Gamma(r+1)}{s^{r+1}}.$ (1)

The special case $r = -\frac{1}{2}$ gives the result

$\displaystyle \mathcal{L}\left\{\frac{1}{\sqrt{t}}\right\} = \sqrt{\frac{\pi}{s}}.$ (2)




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See Also: evaluating the gamma function at 1/2


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Cross-references: gamma function, power function, Laplace transform
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This is version 2 of Laplace transform of power function, born on 2008-08-02, modified 2008-08-03.
Object id is 10911, canonical name is LaplaceTransformOfPowerFunction.
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Classification:
AMS MSC44A10 (Integral transforms, operational calculus :: Laplace transform)

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