Jump to content

Heaviside function

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revision as of 06:25, 5 January 2018 by Auntof6 (talk | changes) (use standard simple headings and/or general cleanup using AWB)
The Heaviside step function, using the half-maximum convention

The Heaviside function, H is a non-continuous function whose value is zero for a negative input and one for a positive input.

The function is used in the mathematics of control theory to represent a signal that switches on at a specified time and stays switched on indefinitely. It was named after the Englishman Oliver Heaviside.

The Heaviside function is the integral of the Dirac delta function: H′ = δ. This is sometimes written as

Discrete form

We can also define an alternative form of the Heaviside step function as a function of a discrete variable n:

where n is an integer.

Or

The discrete-time unit impulse is the first difference of the discrete-time step

This function is the cumulative summation of the Kronecker delta:

where

is the discrete unit impulse function.

Representations

Often an integral representation of the Heaviside step function is useful:

H(0)

The value of the function at 0 can be defined as H(0) = 0, H(0) = ½ or H(0) = 1.