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Differentiation Theorem

Let $ x(t)$ denote a function differentiable for all $ t$ such that $ x(\pm\infty)=0$ and the Fourier transforms (FT) of both $ x(t)$ and $ x^\prime(t)$ exist, where $ x^\prime(t)$ denotes the time derivative of $ x(t)$. Then we have

$\displaystyle \zbox {x^\prime(t) \leftrightarrow j\omega X(\omega)}
$

where $ X(\omega)$ denotes the Fourier transform of $ x(t)$. In operator notation:

$\displaystyle \zbox {\mbox{\sc FT}_{\omega}(x^\prime) = j\omega X(\omega)}
$



Proof: This follows immediately from integration by parts:

\begin{eqnarray*}
\mbox{\sc FT}_{\omega}(x^\prime)
&\isdef & \int_{-\infty}^\in...
...\infty x(t) (-j\omega)e^{-j\omega t} dt\\
&=& j\omega X(\omega)
\end{eqnarray*}

since $ x(\pm\infty)=0$.

The differentiation theorem was implicitly used in §E.6 to show that audio signals are perceptually equivalent to bandlimited signals which are infinitely differentiable for all time.


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``Mathematics of the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT), with Music and Audio Applications'', by Julius O. Smith III, W3K Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9745607-0-7.

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