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Ralph Furman
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How about $$\frac{e^{-e^x}}{1+\epsilon x^2}$$ If you compute the Fourier transform you can shift the contour to height $\pm\pi/2$ to get an $e^{-|t|}$ times something decaying to 1, by Riemann-Lebesgue lemma

Edit.

Or you can look at a shift of your original example: $f(x+\log A)$ to get something on the lines of $$e^{-A e^x} e^{-B x^2} e^{C x}$$

How about $$\frac{e^{-e^x}}{1+\epsilon x^2}$$ If you compute the Fourier transform you can shift the contour to height $\pm\pi/2$ to get an $e^{-|t|}$ times something decaying to 1, by Riemann-Lebesgue lemma

How about $$\frac{e^{-e^x}}{1+\epsilon x^2}$$ If you compute the Fourier transform you can shift the contour to height $\pm\pi/2$ to get an $e^{-|t|}$ times something decaying to 1, by Riemann-Lebesgue lemma

Edit.

Or you can look at a shift of your original example: $f(x+\log A)$ to get something on the lines of $$e^{-A e^x} e^{-B x^2} e^{C x}$$

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Ralph Furman
  • 1.2k
  • 7
  • 18

How about $$\frac{e^{-e^x}}{1+\epsilon x^2}$$ If you compute the Fourier transform you can shift the contour to height $\pm\pi/2$ to get an $e^{-|t|}$ times something decaying to 1, by Riemann-Lebesgue lemma