I am trying to prove the below identity where $f_c(x)=f(cx)$ such that c is a positive number.
$F_c(\alpha)=\frac 1 c F(\frac\alpha c)$
F above represents the Fourier transformed $f(x)$. I attempted this by representing $f(x)$ as a Fourier series such that we can represent its values in the frequency domain:
$f(x) = a_0 + \sum_{k=1}^n a_n \cos(n\pi x ) + \sum_{k=1}^n b_n \cos(n\pi x ) $
Because the coefficients are defined over your signal period, the coefficients do not change when writing f(cx). You can then prove that:
$f(cx) = a_0 + \sum_{k=1}^n a_n \cos(n\pi xc ) + \sum_{k=1}^n b_n \cos(n\pi xc ) $
This gives us an integral we can solve when plugging back into the Fourier transform:
$F_c(\alpha)=\int_{-\infty}^\infty \left(a_0 + \sum_{k=1}^n a_n \cos(n\pi xc ) + \sum_{k=1}^n b_n \cos(n\pi xc )e^{-i\alpha xc}\right)$
Euler's number can of course be represented as $\cos(\alpha xc)+i\sin(\alpha cx)$
For the sake of brevity, I'll apply this integral to only the $a_0$ term to represent my dilemma.
$F_c(\alpha)=a_0\int_{-\infty}^\infty (\cos(\alpha xc)+i\sin(\alpha cx))dx+...$
$F_c(\alpha)=\frac{a_0}{\alpha c}(\sin(\alpha xc)]^\infty _{-\infty}-\cos(\alpha xc)]^\infty _{-\infty} ) $
And here lies my dilemma. The above equation for f(x) is:
$F(\alpha)=\frac{a_0}{\alpha}(\sin(\alpha x)|^\infty _{-\infty}-\cos(\alpha x)|^\infty _{-\infty} ) $
Since $\sin(\alpha xc)|^\infty _{-\infty}\ne \sin(\frac{\alpha x}{c})|^\infty _{-\infty}$ I don't know how to prove the identity.