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In this post there is an intermediate step to compute $ \int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-c_1+it)x_1}\frac{\sin x_1}{x_1} dx $ where I can't find how to work it out.

To simplify the notation Let's just rename the parameters so the question is to show $$ I(a):= \int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-a+it)x}\frac{\sin x}{x} \text{d}x = \frac{1}{2i} \log \left(\frac{a+i(1-t)}{a-i(1+t)}\right) $$

I've tried so far:

\begin{align*} I'(a)&:=-\int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-a+it)x } \sin x \text{d}x \\ &= \frac{1}{a-it}e^{(-a+it)x } \sin x |_0^\infty - \frac{1}{a-it}\int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-a+it)x } \cos x \text{d}x \\ &= \frac{1}{(-a+it)^2} e^{(-a+it)x } \cos x |_0^\infty +\frac{1}{(-a+it)^2}\int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-a+it)x } \sin x \text{d}x \\ &= -\frac{1}{(-a+it)^2} -\frac{1}{(-a+it)^2} I'(a) \end{align*}

So, $$I'(a) = -\frac{1}{(a-it)^2+1} = \frac{1}{2i} \left(\frac{1}{a-it+i}-\frac{1}{a-it-i}\right)$$

Hence

\begin{align*} I(a)&=I(0)+\int_0^{a} I'(a) \text{d}a \\ &=I(0)+\frac{1}{2i} \int_0^{a} \left(\frac{1}{a-it+i}-\frac{1}{a-it-i}\right) \text{d}a \\ &=I(0)+\frac{1}{2i} \left.\log \left(\frac{a-it+i}{a-it-i}\right) \right|_0^{a} \\ &=I(0) + \frac{1}{2i} \log \left(\frac{a+i(1-t)}{a-i(1+t)}\right) -\frac{1}{2i} \log \left(-\frac{1-t}{1+t}\right) \end{align*}

Now I'm stuck at $I(0)$. Note that $I(0)$ shall be interpreted as $$\lim\limits_{a\to 0^+}I(a) = \lim\limits_{a\to 0^+} \int_{(0,\infty)}e^{(-a+it)x}\frac{\sin x}{x} \text{d}x $$, however I can't see how to compute this.

And, finally, @metamorphy mentioned that the Frullani integral produces the correct result almost immediately. However I also can't see how.

Pls kindly suggest.

athos
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3 Answers3

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Finding the limit as $a \to 0^+$ of $I(a)$ is, in my opinion, just as hard as finding the general value of $I(a)$. The approach with finding $I'(a)$ is needlessly complex. Instead using that $$\sin(x)=\frac{e^{ix}-e^{-ix}}{2i}$$ you have $$I(a)=\frac{1}{2i}\int_0^{\infty}\frac{e^{(-a+it+i)x}-e^{(-a+it-i)x}}{x}dx$$

With the Frullani integral, if you have $f(x)=e^{-x}$, then the integral is $$I(a)=\frac{1}{2i}\left( f(\infty)-f(0) \right)\ln\left( \frac{a-it-i}{a-it+i} \right)=\frac{1}{2i}\ln\left( \frac{a-it+i}{a-it-i} \right)$$

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Let $s=-a+it$.

We now have

$$F(s) = \int_0^\infty e^{-sx} \frac{\sin x}{x}\, dx .$$

Differentiating

$$F^\prime(s) = -\int_0^\infty e^{-sx} \sin x\, dx. $$

This is a familiar Laplace transform!

$$F^\prime(s) = - \frac{1}{1+s^2}.$$

$$F(s) = \text{const.} - \arctan(s).$$

Since it is well-known that $F(0) = \frac{\pi}{2}$, we have

$$F(s) = \frac{\pi}{2} - \arctan(s).$$

$$F(-a+it) = \frac{\pi}{2} - \arctan(-a+it).$$

You can write this in terms of logarithms, if you like:

$$-a+it = -\tan \left(w-\frac{\pi}{2}\right)= \cot w = - i \frac{e^{iw}+e^{-iw}}{e^{iw}-e^{-iw}}.$$

Simplifying and solving the resulting quadratic equation in $e^{iw}$ yields the expression in terms of the logarithm function.

$$F(-a+it) = \frac{1}{2i} \log \left[ \frac{a-(t-1)i}{a-(t+1)i} \right].$$

mjw
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  • sorry for my stupid question, i'm not familar with Laplace transform: $-a+it = -\tan \left(w-\frac{\pi}{2}\right)$ -- what is the $w$ here? – athos Apr 21 '21 at 16:49
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    $w=F(-a+it)$: $F(-a+it)= \frac{\pi}{2} - \arctan(-a+it) \iff -a+it = - \tan(F(-a+it)-\frac{\pi}{2})$ – mjw Apr 21 '21 at 16:52
  • Used $w$ instead of $F(-a+it)$ just to simplify a bit, but you are right, it probably was confusing to just switch notation here. – mjw Apr 21 '21 at 16:53
  • Also, although it is a known Laplace transform, we could just as easily integrate by parts twice to see that the integral is $-\frac{1}{1+s^2}$ – mjw Apr 21 '21 at 16:55
  • yeah i know the integrate by part trick, but have forgot about Laplace, alas! – athos Apr 21 '21 at 16:56
  • If you look at a table of Laplace transforms, and work out some of them so you'll (more or less) remember them, you'll see that they come up all the time! – mjw Apr 21 '21 at 17:00
  • thanks for the suggestion, i'll polish it.. – athos Apr 21 '21 at 18:53
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After obtaining $I'(a) = -\frac{1}{(a-it)^2+1}$, proceed as follows

\begin{align*} I(a)&=I(\infty)+\int_\infty^{a} I'(s) ds =0- \int_\infty^{a} \frac{ds}{(s-it)^2+1}= \frac{1}{2i} \log \frac{a+i(1-t)}{a-i(1+t)} \end{align*}

Quanto
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