Lecture 4
Lecture 4
Indeed,
To write down the equation for , we need to know the Fourier transform of
Cauchy Principal value
The delta-function driving term contains all frequences with the same
amplitude including . Forcing an oscillator at resonance leads to an
indefinite growth of amplitude when there is no friction. So we include a
small friction term to the differential equation for x(t) and G.
Cauchy Principal value
The equation for a Fourier transform of the Green function takes the form
The solution is
Simple poles are no longer on the real axis and the integral converges
Cauchy Principal value
Consider the function f(z) with a simple pole at z=x0 integrated over the real axis.
Example
If this limit does not exist but the limit exists, it is defined
to be the principal value of the integral.
Cauchy Principal value
When only the symmetric limit exists, we define the integral as its
principal value
For infinite integrals with several singularities (simple poles only !) on the
real axis we obtain
Cauchy Principal value
This type of formulas are very typical in optics or QFT (propagators of particles)
Example
Investigate Cauchy principal value of the integral
So for even p the limit does not exist but for odd p>1 it exists. So, Cauchy
principle value is defined for poles of order . For p=1