Questions tagged [greens-function]

This tag is for questions about a Green's function which is the impulse response of an inhomogeneous differential equation defined on a domain, with specified initial conditions or boundary conditions.

Green's function is a function of many variables associated with integral representation of solution of a boundary problem for a differential equation.

Generally speaking, a Green's function is an integral kernel that can be used to solve differential equations from a large number of families including simpler examples such as ordinary differential equations with initial or boundary value conditions, as well as more difficult examples such as inhomogeneous partial differential equations (PDE) with boundary conditions.

In the general case of a linear boundary problem with homogeneous boundary conditions$$L\phi(x)=f(x),~~~~x\in D\tag1$$$$\Gamma_i\phi(x)=0,~~~~i=1,2,\cdots,I,~~x\in S\tag2$$where $~Γ_i φ(x)~$ are linear homogeneous functions of $~φ(x)~$ and its derivatives on the boundary $~S~$ of domain $~D~$. An inverse transformation (if it exists) of the form $$\phi(x)=\int_D G(x,\xi)dv\tag3$$uses Green's function $~G(x, ξ)~$ as a kernel for the given problem, Eq. (1) & (2).

Equation (3) describes the solution as a superposition of elementary solutions which can be interpreted as point sources or power pulses $~f(ξ) δ(x, ξ)~$ at the point $~x = ξ~$ (where $~δ(x, ξ)~$ is the Dirac delta function).

The function $~G(x, ξ)~$ of the argument $~x~$ must satisfy the homogeneous boundary condition $(2)$, and also the equation$$LG(x,\xi)=0,~~~\text{for}~~~x\ne \xi\tag4$$ and the condition$$\int_DLG(x,\xi)dv=1\tag5$$or, as generalized function, the equation$$LG(x,\xi)=\delta(x,\xi)\tag6$$If the operator $~L~$ is self-conjugate, Green's function $~G(x, ξ)~$ is symmetric, i.e., $~G(x, ξ) = G(ξ, x)~$. For a boundary problem for a linear ordinary differential equation$$L\phi\equiv a_n(x)\frac{d^n\phi}{dx^n}+\cdots+a_1\frac{d\phi}{dx}+a_0=f(x)\tag7$$the general solution on the section $~[a, b]~$ can be presented in the form$$\phi=\int_a^bG(x,\xi)f(\xi)d\xi+\sum_{k=1}^n C_k\phi_k(x).\tag8$$where {\phi_k} is the functional system of solutions of a homogeneous equation $~L(φ) = 0, ~~C_k~$ are arbitrary constants obtained from boundary conditions.

It often appears possible to determine Green's function so that a particular solution$$\int_a^bG(x,\xi)f(\xi)dv$$satisfies the given boundary conditions. Such Green's function must have a jump of $~(n – 1)^{th}~$ derivative for $~x = ξ~$

$$\left|\frac{\partial^{n-1}G}{\partial x^{n-1}}\right|_{x\to \xi^{+}}-\left|\frac{\partial^{n-1}G}{\partial x^{n-1}}\right|_{x\to \xi^{-}}=\frac{1}{a_n(\xi)}$$

Applications:

In the modern study of linear partial differential equations, Green's functions are studied largely from the point of view of fundamental solutions instead. Under many-body theory, the term is also used in physics, specifically in quantum field theory, aerodynamics, aeroacoustics, electrodynamics, seismology and statistical field theory, to refer to various types of correlation functions, even those that do not fit the mathematical definition. In quantum field theory, Green's functions take the roles of propagators.

References:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green%27s_function

https://brilliant.org/wiki/greens-functions-in-physics/

728 questions
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What is the idea behind Green's function? What does it do?

I have an exam on ordinary and partial differential equations in a couple of days and there is one concept that I am really struggling with: Green's function. I have basically read every PDF-file on the first ten Pages of google but it just doesn't…
16
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2 answers

Fundamental solution for Helmholtz equation in higher dimensions

The fundamental solution for Helmholtz equation $(\Delta + k^2) u = -\delta$ is $e^{i k r}/r$ in 3d and $H_0^1(kr)$ in 2d (up to normalization constants). Is there an explicit expression (eventually in terms of special functions) for the fundamental…
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4 answers

Green's Function for 2D Poisson Equation

In two dimensions, Poisson's equation has the fundamental solution, $$G(\mathbf{r},\mathbf{r'}) = \frac{\log|\mathbf{r}-\mathbf{r'}|}{2\pi}. $$ I was trying to derive this using the Fourier transformed equation, and the process encountered an…
13
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Finding the Green Function of the upper half ball

Find the Green function of $\Omega:=\left\{x\in\mathbb{R}^n:\lVert x\rVert0\right\}$ and show that the function you've found is indeed a Green function! You are allowed to use the Green function of the whole ball…
12
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2 answers

Fundamental solution to the Poisson equation by Fourier transform

The fundamental solution (or Green function) for the Laplace operator in $d$ space dimensions $$\Delta u(x)=\delta(x),$$ where $\Delta \equiv \sum_{i=1}^d \partial^2_i$, is given by $$ u(x)=\begin{cases} \dfrac{1}{(2-d)\Omega_d}|x|^{2-d}\text{ for }…
9
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3 answers

How to solve a second order partial differential equation involving a delta Dirac function?

In a mathematical physical problem, I came across the following partial differential equation involving a delta Dirac function: $$ a \, \frac{\partial^2 w}{\partial x^2} + b \, \frac{\partial^2 w}{\partial y^2} + \delta^2(x,y) = 0 \, , $$ subject…
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An MCQ on Greens function

$$G(x,t) =\begin{cases} a+ b\log t & \text{if $0
8
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1 answer

Green's Function for Laplacian on $S^1 \times S^2$

As indicated by the title, I am looking to find the Green's function for the Laplacian on $S^1 \times S^2$. Is such a function known? If not, does anyone have an approach to constructing such a function? My first idea isto combine the Green's…
7
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Green’s Function for the Heat Equation

I’m trying find the Green’s function for the Heat Equation which satisfies the condition $$\Delta G( \bar{x}, t; \bar{x},^*t^* ) - \partial_t G = \delta(\bar{x} - \bar{x}^*) \delta(t-t^*),$$ where $\bar{x}$ represents n-tuples of spacial coordinates…
7
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2 answers

Integrating a sum of delta functions?

I know that the "hand-wavy" definition of the $\delta (x)$ function is $$ \delta(x) = \begin{cases} \infty &\quad\ x=0 \\ 0 &\quad\text{otherwise} \end{cases} $$ and the more rigorous definition is that it's the limit of a…
7
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Green Solution to Laplace Equation with Robin Boundary Conditions

Let's say that I know a solution for the Laplace equation in the whole plane: $$\nabla^2u(\mathbf{x})=0\quad \mathbf{x}\in\mathbb{R}^2$$ And I need a solution for the laplace equation in the semiplane $x>0$. I know that if there are Dirichlet…
6
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2 answers

Equivalent IVPs for the Wave Equation (moving the delta function) Kevorkian.

I've been reviewing the Wave equation, and there are a few things that I don't understand in Kevorkian's book. It says the fundamental solution to the wave equation is defined by the solution to: $$\begin{align} u_{tt} - u_{xx} &=…
6
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1 answer

Closed-form of an infinite Legendre polynomial sum

While working on my research, I ended up finding an infinite sum of the kind: \begin{equation} S = \sum_{l=2}^{\infty} \frac{2l+1}{l^2 (l+1)^2} P_l (\cos(\theta)) \end{equation} with $P_l$ the Legendre polynomial of order l and $\theta$ the polar…
6
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1 answer

Why does Green's function depend on contour?

I am trying to find a Green's function for the wave equation: \begin{equation} \bigg(\nabla^2 - \frac{1}{c}^2\frac{\partial^2}{\partial t^2}\bigg)G(\textbf{r},t) = \delta^3(\textbf{r})\delta(t) \end{equation} After a fairly trivial calculation,…
6
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3 answers

How to make sense of the Green's function of the 4+1D wave equation?

In the paper "Wakes and waves in N dimensions" by Harry Soodak and Martin S. Tiersten, equation $(36)$ gives the Green's function for the 4+1D wave equation in the following…
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