Usually in quantum mechanics the wave function can be propagated via the so-called Kernel or Amplitude: $\Psi(x,t) = \int K(x,t;x',t')\Psi(x',t')dx'$. I have read in some paper that this comes from Huygen's principle, and it makes somehow sense, since we are calculating the wave function at some point and time from the wave function at all the other points and times. However, I have two questions:
First of all, Huygens' principle is referred to waves, i.e., to solutions of the wave equation
$$\frac{\partial^2u}{\partial t^2} = v^2\frac{\partial^2u}{\partial x^2}.$$
However, the Schrödinger equation is not a wave equation since the time and position derivatives are not of the same order.
Second, if $\Psi(x,t) = \int K(x,t;x',t')\Psi(x',t')dx'$ is true because of Huygens' principle, could we just say that for every wave function $u(x,t)$ that satisfies the above wave equation (which is not the Schrödinger equation) something like
$$ u(x,t) = \int G(x,t;x',t')u(x',t')dx'$$
always holds? Could we say that this is the mathematical formulation of Huygens' principle?