Given a wave packet which in the remote past represented a particle approaching a potential, what does that wave look like in the remote future?
We will first consider the nonrelativistic propagator. Huygens' principle can be written as
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(6.5) |
where the integral extends over all space.
is the total wave arriving at
the point
at time
and
is
the original wave amplitude.
is the Green's function or
propagator.
In general one does not consider stationary eigenstates of energy
(i.e. stationary waves).
Knowledge of
enables us to construct the physical state which
develops in time from any given initial state.
This is equivalent to a complete solution to Schrödinger equation.
Consider a free-particle solution and its Green function
.
We introduce a potential
which is ``turned on'' for a
brief interval of time
about
(
outside of time
).
acts as a source of new waves and we can write
where right-hand side is zero outside the interval .
The new wave function can be written as
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(6.7) |
Substituting this solution into equation 6.6 and using the free particle Schrödinger equation gives
The second terms on both sides of the equation are smaller than the first terms on both sides of the equation. This is clear for the righthand side of the equation. To see it for the lefthand side, we drop the second term on the righthand side and write
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(6.9) |
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(6.10) |
After dropping the second two terms on both sides of equation 6.8, we have
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(6.11) |
To first order
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(6.12) |
The integration shows that the potential produces an additional change
in during
in addition to that taking place in the
absence of
.
Since the potential
vanishes after the time interval
, the scattered wave propagates according to the free
propagator
too.
This added wave at a future time
leads to a new contribution
to
,
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|
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(6.13) |
Here we have replaced
by
which is justified in
the limit.
Thus the wave developing from an arbitary wave packet
in the
remote past is
Therefore the Green's function here is
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(6.16) |
The first term represents the propagation for to
as a free
particle.
The second term represents propagation from
to
, a scattering at
, and free
propagation from
to
.
If we turn on another potential
for an interval
at time
, the additional contribution to
for
is
where we have used the obvious notation:
and
.
The first term represents a single scattering at time
.
The second term is a double scattering.
The total wave is obtained by inserting (6.14) for into
(6.17) and adding it to (6.14)
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(6.19) |
The four terms of the above equation are depicted in figure 6.1.
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If there are such time intervals when the potential
is turned
on
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(6.20) |
The corresponding Green's function is
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(6.21) |
is the probability amplitude for a particle wave
originating at
to propagate to
, as depicted in
figure 6.2.
This amplitude is a sum of amplitudes, the
th such term begin a
product of factors corresponding to the figure below.
Each line in the figure represents the amplitude
that a particle wave originating at
propagates freely to
.
At the point
it is scattered with probability amplitude per unit
space-time volume
to a new wave propagating forward in time
with amplitude
to the next interaction.
This amplitude is then summed over all space-time points in which the
interactions can occur.
We may lift the time-ordering restriction , etc, if we define
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(6.22) |
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(6.23) |
is a retarded propagator since it only propagates waves forward in
time.
Physically this just means that no Huygens wavelets
from
the
'th iteration (at time
) appear until after
.
In the limit of a continuous interaction
and
, so that we can write
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(6.24) |
and obtain
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(6.25) |
This multiple scattering series is assumed to converge and may be summed formally to yield
This is the Lippmann-Schwinger equation.
We have ignore the possibility of bound states in the potential .
Similarly the series for the wave function
can be
summed, resulting in
This is the integral equation for
, where the second
term is the scattered wave.