"Joseph Meditz" wrote
"No, an impulse is not composed of waves, and has no Fourier
transform."
YIKES!
Have you got a point to make?
"You may contrive an approximation, perhaps using a delta
function,
but a simple impulse is a singularity, has no period, and
therefore
no transform."
YIKES!
Have you got a point to make?
http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Fourier...aFunction.html
You looked it up. Well done!
Have you got a point of your own to make, or are you just confirming
mine?
Once again, I say that you need to study the Fourier Transform.
I could give you a long list of things you might study, including
the difference between the transient and frequency domains, and
between transient and steady-state response, and between a simple
impulse and a delta function, and between a simple ramp and an
integral of the delta function, and between a step and a null. Since
you think you already know everything, I shan't bother.
cheers, Ian