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  2. Step function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_function

    As such, the step functions form an algebra over the real numbers. A step function takes only a finite number of values. If the intervals , for =,, …, in the above definition of the step function are disjoint and their union is the real line, then () = for all . The definite integral of a step function is a piecewise linear function.

  3. Heaviside step function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heaviside_step_function

    Therefore the "step function" exhibits ramp-like behavior over the domain of [−1, 1], and cannot authentically be a step function, using the half-maximum convention. Unlike the continuous case, the definition of H[0] is significant. The discrete-time unit impulse is the first difference of the discrete-time step

  4. Regulated integral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulated_integral

    In mathematics, the regulated integral is a definition of integration for regulated functions, which are defined to be uniform limits of step functions. The use of the regulated integral instead of the Riemann integral has been advocated by Nicolas Bourbaki and Jean Dieudonné .

  5. Regulated function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regulated_function

    Let Reg([0, T]; X) denote the set of all regulated functions f : [0, T] → X. Sums and scalar multiples of regulated functions are again regulated functions. In other words, Reg([0, T]; X) is a vector space over the same field K as the space X; typically, K will be the real or complex numbers.

  6. Step potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_potential

    The step potential is simply the product of V 0, the height of the barrier, and the Heaviside step function: = {, <, The barrier is positioned at x = 0, though any position x 0 may be chosen without changing the results, simply by shifting position of the step by −x 0.

  7. Step response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Step_response

    The step response of a system in a given initial state consists of the time evolution of its outputs when its control inputs are Heaviside step functions. In electronic engineering and control theory , step response is the time behaviour of the outputs of a general system when its inputs change from zero to one in a very short time.

  8. Sigmoid function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigmoid_function

    A wide variety of sigmoid functions including the logistic and hyperbolic tangent functions have been used as the activation function of artificial neurons. Sigmoid curves are also common in statistics as cumulative distribution functions (which go from 0 to 1), such as the integrals of the logistic density , the normal density , and Student's ...

  9. Measurable function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measurable_function

    Continuous functions, monotone functions, step functions, semicontinuous functions, Riemann-integrable functions, and functions of bounded variation are all Lebesgue measurable. [2] A function f : X → C {\displaystyle f:X\to \mathbb {C} } is measurable if and only if the real and imaginary parts are measurable.