Always had a thought about why Laplace transform reveals the transient properties of the system? My doubt is based on the following fact, Fourier transform is given as
\begin{equation} \mathscr{F}\left\lbrace f(t)\right\rbrace = \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(t) e^{ -j \omega t} dt \end{equation}
Where Mathematically and intuitively we believe that the angular frequency $\omega$ takes only real value.
What if, instead of taking real angular frequencies, if the variable $\omega$ assumes a complex angular frequency in the form $\beta - j \alpha$ , then,
$$ j \omega t = j (\beta - j \alpha) t = (\alpha + j \beta ) t = s t $$
While taking Fourier transform w.r.t $\omega$, the quantity $\beta$ will be real angular frequency in radians per second and $\alpha$ will be the $\textbf{imaginary angular }$ frequency in radians per second.
\begin{equation} \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(t) e^{ -j \omega t} dt = \int_{-\infty}^\infty f(t) e^{ - s t} dt = \mathscr{L}\left\lbrace f(t)\right\rbrace \end{equation}
Hence is it mathematically correct to consider bilateral Laplace transform as a special case of Fourier transform (not the other way around) when $\omega$ takes a complex angular form $\beta - j \alpha$ ? I believe the fact that $\omega$ can take complex values is the reason why we get transient properties of the system when using Laplace transform.