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Homework Statement
The Feynman Propagator is given by
<0| T \phi(y)\phi(x) |0> ,
where T is the time-ordering operator. I understand that this turns out to be the solution to the inhomogeneous klein-gordon equation, etc., but is there any intuitive description of the propagator? Can this be interpreted, for example, as the propability amplitude for a particle to travel from point x to point y? If so, why? The only thing I have to work with is that \phi(x) is to be interpreted as an operator which creates a particle at point x. But I don't see any notion of time evolution in this definition of the propagator, or anything which is to be interpreted as a 'propagating' particle.
Thanks.