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. 2014 Nov 29;3:704. doi: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-704

Decomposition of multivariate function using the Heaviside step function

Eisuke Chikayama 1,2,3,
PMCID: PMC4447849  PMID: 26034693

Abstract

Whereas the Dirac delta function introduced by P. A. M. Dirac in 1930 to develop his theory of quantum mechanics has been well studied, a not famous formula related to the delta function using the Heaviside step function in a single-variable form, also given by Dirac, has been poorly studied. Following Dirac’s method, we demonstrate the decomposition of a multivariate function into a sum of integrals in which each integrand is composed of a derivative of the function and a direct product of Heaviside step functions. It is an extension of Dirac’s single-variable form to that for multiple variables.

Keywords: Heaviside step function, Dirac delta function, Transform

1. Introduction

P.A. M. Dirac introduced in 1930 a function, now called the Dirac delta function, to develop his theory of quantum mechanics (Dirac 1958). It takes value zero at x ≠ 0 and its integral is unity. A fundamental property derivable from the definition of the Dirac delta function is that any multivariate real function can be expressed with delta functions δ and integrals as follows,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ1_HTML.gif 1.1

The importance of this property is analogous to the Fourier transform (Bracewell 1965) for its ability to yield an alternative representation of any multivariate function in which the variables of the function are changed. The delta function can be seen in applications from physics to engineering: such as quantum mechanical states (Lee 1992); quantum similarity integrals (Safouhi and Berlu 2006); pseudopotential (Derevianko 2003); a spin system with a classical environment (Calvani et al. 2013); and generally, numbers of formulae in the Fourier and Laplace transforms, and differential equations (Schwartz 1966; Kreyszig 2011). A more rigorous mathematical theory for the delta function has also been developed and expanded under the branch in pure mathematics called the theory of distributions by L. Schwartz (Schwartz 1945). Further development is the generalized delta impulse (Corinthios 2003), which is an extension of the Dirac delta function to that on the complex plane and is applied to theories of generalized Laplace, z, Hilbert, and Fourier-related transforms (Corinthios 2005, 2007).

Transforming the integral expression in one variable using the Dirac delta function δ into one using the Heaviside step function σ,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ2_HTML.gif 1.2

is essentially described in Dirac’s quantum mechanics text (Dirac 1958). It is derived from the relation between the Dirac delta function and the derivative of the Heaviside step function. As these two expressions, the left- and right-hand sides of (1.2), are mathematically equivalent, the step-function expression would be expected to find potent applications in physics and engineering. One general example must be approximation theory (Milovanovic and Rassias 2014). The other example is replacement of the Dirac delta functions with the Heaviside step functions by which (divergent) delta functions can be hidden from integrand. It helps a rigorous formalism by using only bounded functions without advanced Schwartz distributions. Nevertheless, the step-function expression has not been extended so far compared with the application of the delta-function expression. Here we demonstrate a unified formula that extends this step-function expression for single-variable functions to multiple-variable functions. It can be interpreted as the decomposition of any multivariate function with respect to the Heaviside step function.

2. Decomposition of multivariate functions using the Heaviside step function

2.1. Definition

Let R(X1, X2, …, XN) be a continuous real function defined for 0 ≤ Xi < ∞ and satisfies:

  •  Whose derivatives Inline graphic exist and continuous where α = α1 + ⋯ + αN and αi ≥ 0 is a natural number.

  •   Inline graphic can be integrated with respect to a given Xi while the other variables are held fixed.

  • Sequences of functions Inline graphic uniformly converge to Inline graphic for Xj and j ≠ i.

2.2. Premise

We follow Dirac’s method:

  •  The Dirac delta function is regarded as a function (not a Schwartz distribution)

  •  The derivative of the Heaviside step function is regarded as the Dirac delta function

2.3. Theory

We demonstrate that the defined function R(X1, X2, ⋯, XN) can be decomposed into:

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ3_HTML.gif 2.1

where

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equa_HTML.gif

defines a set of Heaviside step functions for each μi ≥ 0; Inline graphic; α = α1 + ⋯ + αN; and αi = 0 or 1.

2.4. Proof

The formula (2.1) may be expressed as:

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ4_HTML.gif 2.2

We use mathematical induction.

Using the definition of the Dirac delta-function δ, then for any real function R(X1, X2, ⋯, XN)

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ5_HTML.gif 2.3

Therefore,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ6_HTML.gif 2.4

with Xi ≥0.

The expression (2.2) for single-variable functions (N =1),

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ7_HTML.gif 2.5

holds by Lemma 2.1 given below. Note that, for single-variable functions, Dirac described (Dirac 1958) the essentially equivalent expression (1.2).

To initiate the mathematical induction procedure, suppose that the expression (2.2),

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ8_HTML.gif 2.6

holds for some N. Using (2.6), the following,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ9_HTML.gif 2.7

holds because R(X1, ⋯, XN, μN + 1) can be regarded as one of the R(X1, ⋯, XN) appending a parameter μN + 1. Multiplying both sides of (2.7) by δ(μN + 1 - XN + 1) and then integrating each term with respect to μN + 1, one obtains on the left-hand side,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ10_HTML.gif 2.8

and on the right-hand side,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ11_HTML.gif 2.9

The order of the integrations can be changed because each integrand can be integrated with respect to its corresponding μi while holding other variables fixed. Therefore, (2.9) can be transformed into

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ12_HTML.gif 2.10

The terms enclosed in braces in (2.10) can be transformed using Lemma 2.1 as follows,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ13_HTML.gif 2.11

where Lemma 2.2 was also used.

Finally (2.11) becomes

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ14_HTML.gif 2.12

Thus, assuming expression (2.6) for N leads to the same expression for N +1. The formula for N =1 also holds as described above. Therefore, (2.1) holds for any natural number N.

The key is transforming integrands with Dirac delta functions to ones with Heaviside step functions. It is represented by Lemma 2.1, which is intuitively understandable with equality between sums of vertical stripes and sums of horizontal stripes under the target integrand F (Figure  1).

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Equality between (A) sums of vertical stripes and (B) sums of horizontal stripes (positive (red) and negative (green) contributions) under the target integrand.

2.5. Lemmas

Lemma 2.1

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ15_HTML.gif 2.13

where F is R or its derivatives.

Proof.

From (A1.2),

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equb_HTML.gif

If Xi >0,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equc_HTML.gif

With σ(Xi - ∞) = 0 and σ(Xi - 0) = 1, we obtain

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equd_HTML.gif

If Xi =0, the left-hand side of (2.13) is

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Eque_HTML.gif

whereas the right-hand side of (2.13) is

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equf_HTML.gif

(Q.E.D.)

Lemma 2.2

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equg_HTML.gif

where a = a1 + … + aN and ai ≥ 0 is a natural number.

Proof.

Since derivatives of R is continuous,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ16_HTML.gif 2.14

Where (rh → 0) is a sequence of functions. The sequence of function (rh → 0) converges uniformly to Inline graphic for μj and j ≠ i. Similarly Inline graphic converges pointwise for h to Inline graphic since it is continuous. Therefore, the order of the limits can be interchanged (Rudin 1976). Finally (2.14) be

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equh_HTML.gif

(Q.E.D.)

3. Conclusions

We have demonstrated the decomposition of a multivariate function as a sum of integrals of which each integrand is composed of a derivative and a direct product of Heaviside step functions. The expression offers a rigorous formalism by using only bounded functions without the Dirac delta and Schwartz distributions; applications in approximation theory of functions using the Heaviside step or sigmoid functions with suitable parameters and dimensionality; and potent applications to mathematical methods in physics and engineering.

Appendix

Some well-known formula related to the Heaviside step function appeared in the main text:

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ17_HTML.gif A1.1

Proof.

If X > 0,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equi_HTML.gif

If X < 0,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equj_HTML.gif

If X = 0,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equk_HTML.gif

(Q.E.D.)

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equ18_HTML.gif A1.2

Proof.

From (A1.1),

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equl_HTML.gif

Therefore, by differentiating both sides,

graphic file with name 40064_2014_1582_Equm_HTML.gif

(Q.E.D.)

Acknowledgements

I thank K. Soda for discussion.

Footnotes

Competing interests

The author declares that he has no competing interests.

Author’s contribution

EC derived the theory.

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