In mathematics, the Kronecker delta (named after Leopold Kronecker) is a function of two variables, usually just non-negative integers. The function is 1 if the variables are equal, and 0 otherwise:
The Kronecker delta appears naturally in many areas of mathematics, physics, engineering and computer science, as a means of compactly expressing its definition above.
In linear algebra, the identity matrix has entries equal to the Kronecker delta:
It is common for i and j to be restricted to a set of the form {1, 2, ..., n} or {0, 1, ..., n − 1}, but the Kronecker delta can be defined on an arbitrary set.
Properties
The following equations are satisfied:
Another useful representation is the following form:
Alternative notation
Using the Iverson bracket:
Often, a single-argument notation is used, which is equivalent to setting :
In linear algebra, it can be thought of as a tensor, and is written . Sometimes the Kronecker delta is called the substitution tensor.
Digital signal processing
In the study of digital signal processing (DSP), the unit sample function represents a special case of a 2-dimensional Kronecker delta function where the Kronecker indices include the number zero, and where one of the indices is zero. In this case:
Or more generally where:
However, this is only a special case. In tensor calculus, it is more common to number basis vectors in a particular dimension starting with index 1, rather than index 0. In this case, the relation does not exist, and in fact, the Kronecker delta function and the unit sample function are different functions that overlap in the specific case where the indices include the number 0, the number of indices is 2, and one of the indices has the value of zero.
While the discrete unit sample function and the Kronecker delta function use the same letter, they differ in the following ways. For the discrete unit sample function, it is more conventional to place a single integer index in square braces; in contrast the Kronecker delta can have any number of indexes. Further, the purpose of the discrete unit sample function is different from the Kronecker delta function. In DSP, the discrete unit sample function is typically used as an input function to a discrete system for discovering the system function of the system which will be produced as an output of the system. In contrast, the typical purpose of the Kronecker delta function is for filtering terms from an Einstein summation convention.
The discrete unit sample function is more simply defined as:
In addition, the Dirac delta function is often confused for both the Kronecker delta function and the unit sample function. The Dirac delta is defined as:
Unlike the Kronecker delta function and the unit sample function , the Dirac delta function does not have an integer index, it has a single continuous non-integer value t.
To confuse matters more, the unit impulse function is sometimes used to refer to either the Dirac delta function , or the unit sample function .
Notable properties
The Kronecker delta has the so-called sifting property that for :
The Kronecker delta forms the multiplicative identity element of an incidence algebra.
Relationship to the Dirac delta function
In probability theory and statistics, the Kronecker delta and Dirac delta function can both be used to represent a discrete distribution. If the support of a distribution consists of points , with corresponding probabilities , then the probability mass function of the distribution over can be written, using the Kronecker delta, as
Equivalently, the probability density function of the distribution can be written using the Dirac delta function as
Under certain conditions, the Kronecker delta can arise from sampling a Dirac delta function. For example, if a Dirac delta impulse occurs exactly at a sampling point and is ideally lowpass-filtered (with cutoff at the critical frequency) per the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem, the resulting discrete-time signal will be a Kronecker delta function.
Generalizations
If it is considered as a type tensor, the Kronecker tensor can be written with a covariant index and contravariant index :
This tensor represents:
- The identity mapping (or identity matrix), considered as a linear mapping or
- The trace or tensor contraction, considered as a mapping
- The map , representing scalar multiplication as a sum of outer products.
The generalized Kronecker delta or multi-index Kronecker delta of order is a type tensor that is completely antisymmetric in its upper indices, and also in its lower indices.
Two definitions that differ by a factor of are in use. Below, the version is presented has nonzero components scaled to be . The second version has nonzero components that are , with consequent changes scaling factors in formulae, such as the scaling factors of in § Properties of the generalized Kronecker delta below disappearing.
Definitions of the generalized Kronecker delta
In terms of the indices, the generalized Kronecker delta is defined as:
Let be the symmetric group of degree , then:
Using anti-symmetrization:
In terms of a determinant:
Using the Laplace expansion (Laplace's formula) of determinant, it may be defined recursively:
When (the dimension of the vector space), in terms of the Levi-Civita symbol:
Contractions of the generalized Kronecker delta
Kronecker Delta contractions depend on the dimension of the space. For example,
Properties of the generalized Kronecker delta
The generalized Kronecker delta may be used for anti-symmetrization:
From the above equations and the properties of anti-symmetric tensors, we can derive the properties of the generalized Kronecker delta:
Reducing the order via summation of the indices may be expressed by the identity
Using both the summation rule for the case and the relation with the Levi-Civita symbol, the summation rule of the Levi-Civita symbol is derived:
Integral representations
For any integer , using a standard residue calculation we can write an integral representation for the Kronecker delta as the integral below, where the contour of the integral goes counterclockwise around zero. This representation is also equivalent to a definite integral by a rotation in the complex plane.
The Kronecker comb
The Kronecker comb function with period is defined (using DSP notation) as:
Kronecker integral
The Kronecker delta is also called degree of mapping of one surface into another. Suppose a mapping takes place from surface Suvw to Sxyz that are boundaries of regions, Ruvw and Rxyz which is simply connected with one-to-one correspondence. In this framework, if s and t are parameters for Suvw, and Suvw to Suvw are each oriented by the outer normal n:
Let x = x(u, v, w), y = y(u, v, w), z = z(u, v, w) be defined and smooth in a domain containing Suvw, and let these equations define the mapping of Suvw onto Sxyz. Then the degree δ of mapping is 1/4π times the solid angle of the image S of Suvw with respect to the interior point of Sxyz, O. If O is the origin of the region, Rxyz, then the degree, δ is given by the integral: