Lesson 209: The Fourier Transform: From Time to Frequency

Non-Periodic Functions

If a function doesn't repeat (like a single pulse), we use the Fourier Transform. Instead of a sum of discrete notes, we have an integral over a continuous spectrum of frequencies.

\[\mathcal{F}\{f(x)\} = F(k) = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(x) e^{-ikx} dx\]

This transforms "Space" (\(x\)) into "Wavenumber" (\(k\)).

Worked Examples

Example 1: The Delta Pulse

The Fourier transform of a single sharp spike (Dirac Delta) is a flat horizontal line. This means a perfectly localized spike contains every possible frequency in equal amounts.

The Bridge to Quantum Mechanics

The Fourier transform is the heart of Wave-Particle Duality. The wavefunction in position space \(\psi(x)\) and the wavefunction in momentum space \(\phi(p)\) are Fourier transforms of each other. Since \(p = \hbar k\), the transform literally converts "Where it is" into "How fast it's moving." This is why a particle with a precise position must have a completely spread-out (uncertain) momentum—the math of the Fourier transform doesn't allow both to be spikes at the same time.