Ok.
Take a bosonic propagator. Or a Green function call it as you wish.
Know what I mean, huh? The solution of ([] - m^2) D(x-y) = - delta(x-y).
It's something like D(x-y) = integral over d^4p of exp(ip(x-y)) times 1 / (p^2 - m^2 +- i epsilon)
Now. First of all, I don't want to bother about prefactors, "i" factors, signs, prescription (feynman, casual...)
The point is. I have seen this expression so many times. (and actually NEVER used it, I'm not a scientist).
Then suddendly I realized that... that...
...isn't it INFINITE?!
Ok forget what happens on the poles.
But we are talking about an integral over "p" in 4 dimensions.
And, the integrated function goes like 1 / p^2 for p ---> infinity.
Shouldn't it vanish faster than 1/p^5 for the integral to be convergent at infinity?!
Oh, ok, there is an oscillating phase multiplying all that. Good. I hope it does the job, with positive and negative pieces cancelling each other.
But I'm not really sure.
Someone can help me understanding the whole story?!
thnx in advance.