To appreciate the non-analyticity of the Green's function, consider
how the the isolated poles of a finite string Green's function merge
so that they form the branch cut when the string becomes infinitely
long. To illustrate the point, start with a string of length
which satisfies the Dirichlet boundary conditions at both ends.
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Observe that in the complex
-plane its poles are isolated and
located at
along the real
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Remark. How would a change in boundary conditions, from Dirichlet
to, say, mixed Dirichlet-Neumann conditions, have altered the
coalescence of the poles of the Green's function? It is evident that
the positions of these poles depend continuously on the parameters
that specify the Dirichlet-Neumann boundary conditions.
A change in these boundary conditions
would merely have shifted these poles along the real
axis in
a continuous way. However, as
, they still would have
coalesced and formed the branch cut across which the limiting Green's
function is discontinuous in the
plane