What is the result of applying a fourier transform n times to a distribution?
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For a function applying the fourier transform twice is equivalent to the parity transformation, applying it three times is the same as applying the inverse of the fourier transform, and applying four times, is the identity transformation. Wikipedia has a good description of this.
What do we get when we apply the transform multiple times to a distribution? For example applying it twice would look like this:
FFT(f)=T(FFf)=T(f−)=?
Where f−=f(−x).
Here F is the fourier transform T is a distribution, and f is a function.
mathematical-physics
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