Quarks and
Leptons:
An
Indrodoctory Course In Modern Particle Physics
Francis
Halzen and Alan D. Martin
Green's Functions
Propagator theory is based on the Green's
function method of solving inhomoge neous differential equations. We explain the method in terms of a simple example.
Suppose we wish to solve Poisson's equation
146
Electrodynamics of Spin-}
Particles
Fig. 6.14 G is the potential at x due to a unit
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superposition to obtain the cumulative potential at x, (6.121), arising from all possible elemental
charges pd 3x'.
for a known charge
distribution p(x), subject to some boundary
condition. It is
easier to first solve the "unit source" problem
(6.120)
where G(x, x') is the potential at x due to a unit source
at x'. [For the boundary condition that G --. 0 at large distances,
it is easy to show
that G = 1/ (4'1TIX- x'l)]. We then move this source
over the charge
distribution and accu mulate the total potential at x from all possible
volume elements d 3x':
q,(x) = j G(x,x') p(x') d 3x',
(6.121)
see Fig. 6.14. We can check directly
that q, is the desired solution of
(6.119) by operating with
V 2 on (6.121).
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