Lecture 4 Exercise
(1) Please derive the Dyson series (4) for the transition amplitude in the presence of a source
We can solve this problem in the interaction picture, where the effect of the light bulb can be seen as a perturbation
Using the schrödinger equation for the time elvoving operators under the interaction picture
We can change this equation into a integral equation
Iterate this integral equation, we can get the Dyson series for the time evolving operator
So using the Dyson series, we can get the time evolving operator from
So the component of the S-matrix can be represented as
(2) Please fill in the missing steps in the proof of the on‑shell factorization theorem.
§2 On‑Shell Factorization Theorem Now we are ready to state an important theorem concerning the simple poles of a Green function. For simplicity, we will work with a model with scalar particles only and we work with vacuum Green function, namely, taking
in (5) and drop the subscripts, . The generalization to arbitrary in/out states is straightforward. Generalization to spinning particles will be commented afterwards. We work in momentum space
Importantly, these
’s are completely arbitrary 4‑momenta without any mass‑shell constraints. Assuming scalars only, is a function of Lorentz invariant combinations like , , where . We want to know ’s behavior on the complex plane of with the condition . Theorem (on‑shell factorization):
develops a simple pole at when approaching it from , if there is a one‑particle state of species , 3‑momentum , and mass having nonvanishing matrix element: Then
If
, then the above limit still holds, yet with Remarks Clearly,
means an “internal” particle going on shell. The residue factorizes into . The physical intuition is: An on‑shell particle can propagate arbitrarily long distance. The divergence is from the accumulation over long distances, where & are very far apart in spacetime. So they must factorize, which is loosely a consequence of cluster decomposition. In reality, an amplitude as such is never divergent. Consider a
process: — If stable, on‑shell pole is in unphysical domain ( ) so you can never reach it physically. — If unstable ( ), then in position space you have a finite life‑time cutoff . Its momentum equivalent is the famous Breit‑Wigner approximation which tells you that the pole is shifted to and once again you will never reach it physically. After all, On‑shellness is also a theoretical abstraction, or, a relative concept. — Every photon/particle you see/detect is off‑shell! The “on‑shellness” is roughly a measure of non‑locality. So, CMB photons are the most on‑shell photons! Proof Here is a sketch of the proof of the theorem and the missing steps are left as exercises:
- The pole is from on‑shell propagation of a one‑particle state.
Contributed by the part of the spacetime integral where all “early operators” are earlier than all “late” one . . Using the integral representation
we can write
where terms in
do not contribute poles at . Also, thanks to the function, we can write:
- Insert a complete basis
Claim: Only the one‑particle state part contributes poles.
- Rewrite
with
, ( ), and similarly for the other factor.
Finishing , and integrals produces a ‑product that gives a denominator Note that the pole is produced by the negative energy
.
- Combining all other terms, we get the desired result (10).
Remarks
- Technically, the pole comes from the
factor when . The one‑particle state carries the minimal number of phase‑space integrals that preserve the singularity. Starting from two‑particle states (in the sense of in states, for example), there are more integrals which soften the singularities to branch cuts. Let us confirm this by a direct counting exercise: two integrals of
leads to 8 ‑function factors; Then, removes 4 ’s. So we have 4 net ’s of total energy‑momentum conservation.
- Also, from the proof, it is clear how to generalize this result when the intermediate on‑shell particle
has nonzero spin: We simply sum over all helicity states: where the sum goes from
for massive and for massless , and
- We would like to formulate the on‑shell factorization theorem for
-matrix elements, but there are subtleties. So, our strategy is to state and prove the theorem for Green functions first, and then convert a Green function to -matrix element, which is the well‑known Lehmann–Symanzik–Zimmermann (LSZ) reduction.
After using the integral representation of the
The pole at
and the
because corrections from the relative times inside each cluster do not affect the singular part.Introduce the coordinate differences
Using the momentum eigenstate property
Insert (C) and (D) into (A). The Fourier exponentials combine as
where
The integrals over
The two delta‑functions in (E) enforce
Adding the two equations gives overall momentum conservation
which is already contained in the definition of the Green function. The on‑shell condition
Defining
The sign is fixed by the requirement that the pole appears when approaching from
because in that case
The three‑dimensional delta‑function sets
Carrying out the
Recall that
The factor
Multiplying by the overall
The remaining integrals over the internal coordinates are exactly the amputated Green functions defined in the theorem:
Assembling all pieces we arrive at the advertised result
The case
