I'm trying to understand the usual "Fourier transform" of the free scalar propagator $ G(x,y) = \int \frac{d^{4}k}{(2\pi)^{4}} \frac{1}{\omega_{\mathbf{k}}^{2} + k^{2}} e^{i k \cdot (x - y)}$. I'd like to understand this as an expansion in terms of Minkowski modes.
The propagator is defined as the solution to the equation $[\square + m^{2}] G(x,y) = \delta^{(4)}(x-y)$. The Minkowski modes $\{ u_{\mathbf{k}}, u_{\mathbf{k}}^{\ast} \}_{\mathbf{k} \in \mathbb{R}^{3}}$ are solutions to the equation $[ \square + m^{2} ]u_{\mathbf{k}} = 0$, which are given by: $$ u_{\mathbf{k}}( x ) = u_{\mathbf{k}}( x^{0}, \mathbf{x} ) = \frac{ 1 }{ \sqrt{ 2 \omega_{\mathbf{k}} (2\pi)^{3} } } \exp\left( i \mathbf{k} \cdot \mathbf{x} - i \omega_{\mathbf{k}} x^{0} \right) $$
These solutions constitute a complete linearly independent set. They are also orthonormal with respect to the Klein-Gordon inner product, which is given by: $$ \langle \phi_{1}, \phi_{2} \rangle = i \int d^{3}\mathbf{x}\ \left[ \phi_{1}^{\ast}(x) \frac{\partial \phi_{2}}{\partial x^{0}} - \frac{\partial \phi^{\ast}_{1}}{\partial x^{0}} \phi_{2}(x) \right] $$
We integrate the above over a hypersurface $\Sigma$ of constant $x^{0}$. They are orthonormal such that: \begin{eqnarray*} \langle u_{\mathbf{k}}, u_{\mathbf{p}} \rangle = \delta^{(3)}(\mathbf{k} - \mathbf{p}) \\ \langle u_{\mathbf{k}}, u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{p}} \rangle = 0 \\ \langle u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{k}}, u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{p}} \rangle = - \delta^{(3)}(\mathbf{k} - \mathbf{p}) \end{eqnarray*}
Supposedly, the Minkowski modes are a complete set in the sense that: $$ \sum_{\mathbf{k}} u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{k}}(x) u_{\mathbf{k}}(y) = \delta^{(4)}(x-y) $$
I've been told that if I think of the solutions $u$ in terms of an eigenvalue problem $\square u_{\mathbf{k}} = \lambda_{\mathbf{k}} u_{\mathbf{k}}$, then I can use the above to write the propagator as: $$ G(x,y) \ = \ \sum_{\mathbf{k}} \frac{ u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{k}}(x) u_{\mathbf{k}}(y) }{\lambda_{\mathbf{k}}} \ = \ \int \frac{d^{3}\mathbf{k}}{(2\pi)^{3}} \frac{e^{i \mathbf{k} \cdot (\mathbf{x} - \mathbf{y})}}{\omega_{\mathbf{k}}^{2} - \mathbf{k}^{2}} $$
My Questions:
$\mathbf{1.}$ The Klein-Gordon inner product is over the space of $L^{2}(\mathbb{R}^{4})$? (The space of square-integrable functions, with variables in $\mathbb{R}^{4}$?)
$\mathbf{2.}$ How do can I understand the completeness relation $\sum_{\mathbf{k}} u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{k}}(x) u_{\mathbf{k}}(y) = \delta^{(4)}(x-y)$ with reference to the Klein-Gordon inner product? I'm a little confused how I can say this.
$\mathbf{3.}$ Why does $G(x,y) \ = \ \sum_{\mathbf{k}} \frac{ u^{\ast}_{\mathbf{k}}(x) u_{\mathbf{k}}(y) }{\lambda_{\mathbf{k}}} $? I simply don't understand this bit, and is the main reason I am posting.
Thank you in advance!