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Complex Analysis L13: Bromwich Integrals and the Inverse Laplace Transform 

Steve Brunton
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This video is a culmination of this series on complex analysis, where we show how to compute the Bromwich integral used in the inverse Laplace transform.
@eigensteve on Twitter
eigensteve.com
databookuw.com
This video was produced at the University of Washington

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20 апр 2023

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Комментарии : 43   
@gean7917
@gean7917 11 месяцев назад
It's unbelievable an amazing course like this available completely free on RU-vid. The guy is really good!
@tolkienfan1972
@tolkienfan1972 Год назад
I really appreciate you making these lectures public. It's dense material, but that's exactly what I'm looking for. Thank you
@guiliangzheng5704
@guiliangzheng5704 Год назад
What a ride in the complex analysis world! Thank you so much for putting it together! What a ride it is
@ElMalikHydaspes
@ElMalikHydaspes 6 месяцев назад
Bravo! What an excellent set of lectures on complex numbers! Really well taught by Dr Brunton.
@timepass4783
@timepass4783 2 месяца назад
thanks a lot, completed the whole complex analysis 10 hours before my finals, You're a brilliant teacher!!!
@tariqandrea398
@tariqandrea398 4 месяца назад
This isn't mere mathematics. It is a work of community service, a work of kindness, and a work of charity.
@andrej5861
@andrej5861 Год назад
I believe those "tricks" for showing that parts of integral in complex plane are 0 etc...are called Jordans lemmas (theorems)....unfortunately I do not have my textbook with me and it has been over 20 years...
@quantum4everyone
@quantum4everyone Год назад
Yes, that is correct. Jordan’s lemma holds for a broader set of integrands, and his formulation is slightly odd because everything is rotated by 90 degrees because his exponential in the integrand has no i in it. But the essence of the argument would be very similar.
@andresfeliperamirezgaviria8976
@andresfeliperamirezgaviria8976 5 месяцев назад
Excelent course, greetings and congratulations.
@basics5427
@basics5427 Год назад
How many hours do you have in one day? 70? More than 70? I just scrolled xN speed (with N huge) this series about complex analysis. Very well done. Lots of students in Engineering dealing with dynamical systems and control (so, almost every student in Engineering) curious about some detail about the math behind them and coming across these lectures should be so thankful to you. Obviously they're not enough without personal effort and study, but they're a good point to start for sure. Anyone who wants a concise and quite precise introduction to complex analysis and many other mathematical topics useful in engineering, could have on Schaum's Outlines, Advanced Mathematics for Engineers and Scientists: 10-15 pages of theory for every topic, and proofs left as an exercise to the reader.
@Eigensteve
@Eigensteve Год назад
Awesome, thanks for the kind words -- glad you like them!
@eig_himanshu
@eig_himanshu Год назад
superb sir!!!!!! you way of explanation is fantabulous
@papawhiskeybravo
@papawhiskeybravo 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for a great series. I was very well taught.
@danielhoven570
@danielhoven570 Год назад
Thank You! I just finished a dynamics homework with no reference to a Laplace transform table. Un-necessary for sure, but I feel like a boss lol. Anyway the only bit I had to dig for myself was finding residues of higher order poles, but without your introduction I'd have struggled to make sense of the literature.
@hoseinzahedifar1562
@hoseinzahedifar1562 Год назад
Great great great lecture...Thank you so much.
@xenofurmi
@xenofurmi 2 месяца назад
ATHF reference in last video of a Complex Analysis lecture... the future is now!
@leonardoalcayaga6640
@leonardoalcayaga6640 Год назад
Your lectures are really great, thanks a lot! Is it possible to follow a similar apporach to obtain Fourier transforms?
@eduardocarmona8157
@eduardocarmona8157 4 месяца назад
Great class!
@byronwatkins2565
@byronwatkins2565 Год назад
At 34:50, the way theta and the contour are defined requires integration from pi/2 to -pi/2; but the limit is still zero. Jordan's lemma proves this in general...
@chrislubs1341
@chrislubs1341 Год назад
Saw this, but noted he redefines theta to (PI - theta) to get the corect integral, which is important to keep inequalities from reversing due to a sign error. This video might serve to suggest useful FOURIER TAUBERIAN THEOREMS.
@ralvarezb78
@ralvarezb78 Месяц назад
minute 41:00 I think the trick is |R-a| = sqrt((R-a)^2) wich leads to sqrt(R^2 - 2aR + a^2) If theta = pi, the inequality becomes equal, so true, but if theta is different from pi, the term 2aR cos(theta) < 2aR which is also true. Then you're right
@ralvarezb78
@ralvarezb78 Месяц назад
at 44:00 I think this inequality can be deduced using Taylor series expansion up to 2 terms for cosine
@marekw4353
@marekw4353 Год назад
Thank you for the course, I appreciate the conceive form. You've been mentioning, that in good ol' days there would have been a whole semester course on complex analysis. Could you maybe recommend any sources to dive deeper into the topic?
@aram9167
@aram9167 2 месяца назад
42:30 Is all the following gymnastics necessary? Since -Rcos(theta)t is always negative between -pi and pi, as we tend R to infinity, the integrand goes to 0, so the integral goes to 0
@eng4529
@eng4529 10 месяцев назад
Question: why would ML bound work? At 31:48, he assumes that exp(gamm*t)*gamma does not go to infinity, but it may, if gamma >1 and t -> infinity?
@Alan-zf2tt
@Alan-zf2tt 6 месяцев назад
About 38:20 or thereabouts am I right in thinking: Given R² + 2Racosθ + a² then holding R and a fixed while theta varies satisfies (R- a)² ⩽ R² + 2Racosθ + a² ⩽ (R+a)² since -1 ⩽ cosθ ⩽ 1 hence |R-a| ⩽ √(R² + 2Racosθ + a²) ⩽ |R+a|
@kov1ub
@kov1ub 8 месяцев назад
Hey Steve, I really like your videos, and I'm curious - are you writing in reverse or did you flip the image? Either way, it's a cool effect!🤔
@sakethvirupakshi5961
@sakethvirupakshi5961 Год назад
Hello Steve, it will be nice if you make some videos related to statistics and probability theory
@tobiassugandi
@tobiassugandi Год назад
what a ride..
@GreenMeansGOF
@GreenMeansGOF 8 месяцев назад
Would a semicircular contour be harder? Like if it was just a vertical line and a semicircle without C+ and C-?
@user-eo7ll4yz6i
@user-eo7ll4yz6i 10 месяцев назад
Does someone now what marker pen this guys use ?
@PillarArt
@PillarArt 4 месяца назад
*stops to e^at @ t=021.140*
@Justin-dk9rl
@Justin-dk9rl Год назад
The (reverse) triangle inequality directly states |s-a| >= ||s|-|a|| = |R-a|.
@TheTimeRay
@TheTimeRay Год назад
so, this 50 mins to prove C+, C-, Cr are 0 - is this proof just for the simplest f(s)=1/(s-a) ? ... do we need to re-do this math proof for each other possible f(s) ?
@chrislubs1341
@chrislubs1341 Год назад
Be aware different inverse transforms f(t) corrispond to F[s] as distinquished by domain of F[s], so pick a desired f(t) by considering the Bromwich integral.
@hoseinzahedifar1562
@hoseinzahedifar1562 Год назад
In time 25:22: I think ds = -dx. isn't it correct?
@byronwatkins2565
@byronwatkins2565 Год назад
Yes. But, the limit is still zero.
@meguellatiyounes8659
@meguellatiyounes8659 Год назад
complex step finite difference
@belwizdadimed3967
@belwizdadimed3967 5 месяцев назад
Lack of consistency. Before talking about inverse Laplace transform, it is wise to first define the Laplace transform and how it is a generalization of the Fourier transform? Time to frequency domain? People with no background of signal theory will be confused.
@insainsin
@insainsin Год назад
Why is the default inverse definition the infinite integral and not the Cauchy integral formula?
@dantetheblizzard
@dantetheblizzard Год назад
You call this an integral, you don't have bacon on the curve?
@younique9710
@younique9710 3 месяца назад
At 27:04, I wonder how the norm of a complex variable is just the real part. Should we regard Cauchy inequality, || e^x+e^iR ||
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