25.7 WKB METHODS
The precise combination of these two solutions that is required for any particular problem
has to be determined from the problem.
When Stokes’ equation is applied more generally to functions of a complex
variable, i.e. the real variablexis replaced by the complex variablez,ithas
solutions whose type of behaviour depends upon wherezlies in the complex
plane. For the particular caseλ=−1, when Stokes’ equation takes the form
d^2 y
dz^2
=zy
and the two WKB solutions (with the inverse fourth root written explicitly) are
y 1 , 2 (z)=
A 1 , 2
z^1 /^4
exp
[
∓
2
3
z^3 /^2
]
, (25.51)
one of the solutions, Ai(z) (see section 25.6), has the property that it is real
wheneverzis real, whether positive or negative. For negative realzit has
sinusoidal behaviour, but it becomes an evanescent wave for real positivez.
Since the functionz^3 /^2 has a branch point atz= 0 and therefore has an abrupt
(complex) change in its argument there, it is clear that neither of the two functions
in (25.51), nor any fixed combination of them, can be equal to Ai(z) for all values
ofz. More explicitly, forzreal and positive, Ai(z) is proportional toy 1 (z), which
is real and has the form of a decaying exponential function, whilst forzreal and
negative, whenz^3 /^2 is purely imaginary andy 1 (z)andy 2 (z) are both oscillatory,
it is clear that Ai(z) must contain bothy 1 andy 2 with equal amplitudes.
The actual combinations ofy 1 (z)andy 2 (z) needed to coincide with these two
asymptotic forms of Ai(z) are as follows.
Forzreal and>0, c 1 y 1 (z)=
1
2
√
πz^1 /^4
exp
[
−
2
3
z^3 /^2
]
. (25.52)
Forzreal and<0, c 2 [y 1 (z)eiπ/^4 −y 2 (z)e−iπ/^4 ]
=
1
√
π(−z)^1 /^4
sin
[
2
3
(−z)^3 /^2 +
π
4
]
. (25.53)
Therefore it must be the case that the constants used to form Ai(z)from
the solutions (25.51) change aszmoves from one part of the complex plane to
another. In fact, the changes occur for particular values of the argument ofz;
these boundaries are therefore radial lines in the complex plane and are known
asStokes lines. For Stokes’ equation they occur when argzis equal to 0, 2π/3or
4 π/3.
The general occurrence of a change in the arbitrary constants used to make
up a solution, as its argument crosses certain boundaries in the complex plane, is
known as the Stokes phenomenon and is discussed further in subsection 25.7.4.