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Green's Functions and Propagators

    Any complete set of functions, not just eigenfunctions, can be used to construct a solution to a linear PDE if we know how these functions evolve in time. Dirac delta functions are a perfectly acceptable alternative to the trigonometric eigenfunctions that were studied previously. The time evolution of these delta functions is called a Green (or Green's) function.

  
Figure: Decomposition of sawtooth into Green's functions.

We can approximate a Dirac delta function using a narrow Gaussian if we are careful not to make the width, a, smaller than the grid spacing in the simulation.

Figure gif shows how an initial saw-tooth disturbance is decomposed into delta functions.

Clearly Green's functions exist for all of the linear PDEs in Table gif; you just displayed them as contour plots in the previous exercise! In practice, it is often difficult to find an analytic expression for these functions even if they are known to exist. Green's functions depend on the position of the delta function, , at initial time, , and must predict the disturbance at any other point in the medium, x, at any subsequent time, t. The disturbance will, of course, only depend on the elapsed time, .

The Green's function can now be used to calculate the wavefunction at any subsequent time if the initial disturbance, , is known.

 

Since the Green's function for time-dependent PDEs allows one to calculate the wavefunction at any time, , using the initial conditions, , these functions are sometimes referred to as propagators.

A formal representation of Green's functions is not hard to derive . Substituting the definition of the Fourier coefficients, , into an eigenfunction expansion of a solution, we obtain

 

If we interchange the order of the summation and integration and compare the result to eq:GreenSol, we obtain the Green's function as a sum over eigenfunctions.

 



next up previous contents index
Next: Superposition and Interference Up: Exercises Previous: Fourier Analysis



Wolfgang Christian
Fri Apr 14 08:22:30 EDT 1995