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authorsiveshs <siveshs@gmail.com>2010-07-02 19:47:21 +0000
committerbnewbold <bnewbold@adelie.robocracy.org>2010-07-02 19:47:21 +0000
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It is easy to show that any product of cosines and sines can be expressed as the product of exponentials which will reduce to a sum of sines and cosines.
-As a final test to see if the Fourier series really could exist for any periodic function, we consider a periodic function with a sharp peak as shown below
---- Image goes here ---
-
+As a final test to see if the Fourier series really could exist for any periodic function, we consider a periodic function with a sharp peak as shown below
+
+![Peak Function Image](/peak_func.gif)
+
If it is possible to approximate the above function using a sum of sines and cosines, then it can be argued that *any* continuous periodic function can be expressed in a similar way. This is because any function could be expressed as a number of peaks at every position.