Heaviside step function Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Heaviside step function, named in honor of Oliver Heaviside, is a discontinuous function whose value is zero for negative inputs and one elsewhere:
It is the cumulative distribution function of a random variable which is almost surely 0. (See constant random variable.)
The Heaviside function is the integral of the Dirac delta function. The value of H(0) is of very little importance, since the function is often used within an integral. Some writers give H(0) = 0, some H(0) = 1. H(0) = 0.5 is often used, since it maximizes the symmetry of the function. This makes the definition:
The question of the Fourier transform of H is an interesting example for the theory of distributions. It is often stated that it is 1/x, up to a normalizing constant. But near x=0 that cannot be justified: the definition must be given in terms of a principal value limit, and the transform isn't to be treated simply as a function. The corresponding convolution operator is the Hilbert transform.
Often an integral representation of the step function is useful,
