I am currently working on some transport problems using the non-equilibrium Green's function techniques.
I am trying to understand the contour ordered intgeral that the Keldysh Formalism uses to define Green's functions.
I am quite sure I understand how the contour ordering works for a single operator: $$\tilde{T}[e^{i\int_{t_0}^{t}dt'H_{h}'(t')}]O_{h}(t)T[e^{-i\int_{t_0}^{t}dt'H_{h}'(t')}]=T_{C_{t}}[e^{-i\int_{t_0}^{t}dt'H_{h}'(t')}O_{h}(t)]$$ where $\tilde{T}$ is the anti-time ordering operator, $T$ is the time ordering operator and $T_{C_{t}}$ is the contour ordering operator which is defined as placing operators at times that come later in the conour $C_{t}$ left to that of operators at times that come before.
Now, the way I understand it is that the contour $C_{t}$ provides only a way to order the operators so that the terms on the L.H.S and R.H.S are equal. It's not that we are integrating in the complex plane over the contour itself.
Usually, $t_0\rightarrow -\infty$.
Moving on to two operators at different times, we arrive at the definition of the Green's function given here:
$$G_{ij}(t,t')=\frac{\langle \Psi_{H}|T_{C_{t,t'}}[c_i(t)c^{\dagger}_{j}(t')]|\Psi_{H}\rangle}{\langle \Psi_{H}|\Psi_{H}\rangle}$$
What I don't understand is how would this give rise to the four different Green's functions,$G^{++}, G^{-+}, G^{+-}, G^{--}$ given in the reference. To my understanding,the thing that we actually measure in other places, the expectation value - $\langle \Psi_{H}|T[c_{iH}(t)c^{\dagger}_{jH}(t')]|\Psi_{H}\rangle$, will upon reducing the two operators to the interaction picture, give two separate contours for the two operators.
I am obviously not getting the motivation behind making four things out of one entity.So, finally, my question is what is going on when I am defining the Green's function? How am I getting four distinct possibilities or rather why am I using four different entities?