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M257-316Notes Lecture16

The document discusses Parseval's identity, which relates the L2 norm of a function to the L2 norm of its Fourier series coefficients. It proves Parseval's identity for Fourier sine series and provides examples to illustrate the formula. Geometrically, Parseval's identity expresses that the squared L2 norm of a function is equal to the sum of the squared L2 norms of its constituent Fourier basis functions.

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Waseem Gondal
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
132 views

M257-316Notes Lecture16

The document discusses Parseval's identity, which relates the L2 norm of a function to the L2 norm of its Fourier series coefficients. It proves Parseval's identity for Fourier sine series and provides examples to illustrate the formula. Geometrically, Parseval's identity expresses that the squared L2 norm of a function is equal to the sum of the squared L2 norms of its constituent Fourier basis functions.

Uploaded by

Waseem Gondal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 12

Lecture 16 - Parseval’s
Identity

Lemma 12.1 (A version of Parseval’s Identity)



  nπx  L ∞

2  2
Let f (x) = bn sin 0 < x < L. Then f (x) dx = b2n .
L L
n=1 0 n=1

Proof:
L ∞ 
 ∞ L  mπx   nπx 
 2
f (x) dx = bm bn sin sin dx (12.1)
L L
0 m=1 n=1 0
 ∞
∞  ∞
L L 2
= bm bn · δmn · = bn . (12.2)
2 2
m=1 n=1 n=1

For a full Fourier Series on [−L, L] Parseval’s Theorem assumes the form:

a0 
∞  nπx   nπx 
f (x) = + an cos + bn sin (12.3)
2 L L
n=1
L ∞
1  2 a20  2
f (x) dx = + an + b2n . (12.4)
L 2
−L n=1


4  (−1)n+1  nπx 
Example 12.2 Recall for x ∈ [0, 2] f (x) = x = sin .
π n 2
n=1

81
Lecture 16 - Parseval’s Identity

Therefore

2
L
2 2
2
2 ∞
L f (x) dx = 2 x2 dx = π4 1
n2
0 0 n=1
2 4
2 ∞
x3 1
⇒ 3 = π n2
(12.5)
0 n=1
π2 ∞
1
6 = n2
n=1


 ∞ 
1 1  1 1 π2 π2
Note: = = = .
(2n)2 22 n2 4 6 24
n=1 n=1
Also note that

evens odds
π2

1

1

1
6 = n2
= (2m)2
+ (2m+1)2
n=1 m=1 m=0
π2 ∞
1
= 24 + (2m+1)2
m=0

Therefore


 1 π2 π2 π2
= − = . (12.6)
(2m + 1)2 6 24 8
m=0

12.1 Geometric Interpretation of Parseval’s For-


mula

f = b1 ê1 + b2 ê2 (12.7)

|f |2 = f · f = b21 ê1 · ê1 + b22 ê2 · ê2 (12.8)


= b21 + b22 Pythagoras’ Theorem (12.9)

82
12.1. GEOMETRIC INTERPRETATION OF PARSEVAL’S FORMULA

For Fourier Sine Components:


L ∞

2
2
f (x) dx = b2n . (12.10)
L
0 n=1

Example 12.3 Consider f (x) = x2 −π < x < π. The Fourier Series


Expansion is:
 (−1)n ∞
2 π2
x = +4 cos(nx). (12.11)
3 n2
n=1

nπn
1 2 3 4
cos 2 0 −1 0 1
Let
π π2 π2

(−1)n nπ

x= 2 ⇒ 4 = 3 +4 n2
cos 2
n=1

∞ (12.12)
2 (−1)k
− π12 = 4 (2k)2
k=1

Therefore

π 2  (−1)k+1
= . (12.13)
12 k2
k=1

By Parseval’s Formula:
π  2 2 ∞
2
π x4 dx = 2 π3 + 16 1
n4 9−5 4 8
0 n=1 45 = 45 = 90
π
∞ 1 (12.14)
2 x5 4
π 5 = 2π9 + 16 1
n4
90
0 n=1

Therefore


π4 1
= = δ?(4). (12.15)
90 n4
n=1

83

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