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Bra–ket notation

In quantum mechanics, bra–ket notation, or Dirac notation, is used ubiquitously to denote quantum states. The notation uses angle brackets, and , and a vertical bar , to construct "bras" and "kets".

A ket is of the form . Mathematically it denotes a vector, , in an abstract (complex) vector space , and physically it represents a state of some quantum system.

A bra is of the form . Mathematically it denotes a linear form , i.e. a linear map that maps each vector in to a number in the complex plane . Letting the linear functional act on a vector is written as .

Assume that on there exists an inner product with antilinear first argument, which makes an inner product space. Then with this inner product each vector can be identified with a corresponding linear form, by placing the vector in the anti-linear first slot of the inner product: . The correspondence between these notations is then . The linear form is a covector to , and the set of all covectors form a subspace of the dual vector space , to the initial vector space . The purpose of this linear form can now be understood in terms of making projections on the state , to find how linearly dependent two states are, etc.

For the vector space , kets can be identified with column vectors, and bras with row vectors. Combinations of bras, kets, and linear operators are interpreted using matrix multiplication. If has the standard Hermitian inner product , under this identification, the identification of kets and bras and vice versa provided by the inner product is taking the Hermitian conjugate (denoted ).

It is common to suppress the vector or linear form from the bra–ket notation and only use a label inside the typography for the bra or ket. For example, the spin operator on a two dimensional space of spinors, has eigenvalues with eigenspinors . In bra–ket notation, this is typically denoted as , and . As above, kets and bras with the same label are interpreted as kets and bras corresponding to each other using the inner product. In particular, when also identified with row and column vectors, kets and bras with the same label are identified with Hermitian conjugate column and row vectors.

Bra–ket notation was effectively established in 1939 by Paul Dirac;[1][2] it is thus also known as Dirac notation, despite the notation having a precursor in Hermann Grassmann's use of for inner products nearly 100 years earlier.[3][4]

Introduction

Bra–ket notation is a notation for linear algebra and linear operators on complex vector spaces together with their dual space both in the finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional case. It is specifically designed to ease the types of calculations that frequently come up in quantum mechanics. Its use in quantum mechanics is quite widespread. Many phenomena that are explained using quantum mechanics are explained using bra–ket notation.

Vector spaces

Vectors vs kets

In mathematics, the term "vector" is used for an element of any vector space. In physics, however, the term "vector" is much more specific: "vector" refers almost exclusively to quantities like displacement or velocity, which have components that relate directly to the three dimensions of space, or relativistically, to the four of spacetime. Such vectors are typically denoted with over arrows ( ), boldface ( ) or indices ( ).

In quantum mechanics, a quantum state is typically represented as an element of a complex Hilbert space, for example, the infinite-dimensional vector space of all possible wavefunctions (square integrable functions mapping each point of 3D space to a complex number) or some more abstract Hilbert space constructed more algebraically. Since the term "vector" is already used for something else (see previous paragraph), and physicists tend to prefer conventional notation to stating what space something is an element of, it is common and useful to denote an element   of an abstract complex vector space as a ket   using vertical bars and angular brackets and refer to them as "kets" rather than as vectors and pronounced "ket- " or "ket-A" for |A.

Symbols, letters, numbers, or even words—whatever serves as a convenient label—can be used as the label inside a ket, with the   making clear that the label indicates a vector in vector space. In other words, the symbol "|A" has a specific and universal mathematical meaning, while just the "A" by itself does not. For example, |1⟩ + |2⟩ is not necessarily equal to |3⟩. Nevertheless, for convenience, there is usually some logical scheme behind the labels inside kets, such as the common practice of labeling energy eigenkets in quantum mechanics through a listing of their quantum numbers. At its simplest, the label inside the ket is the eigenvalue of a physical operator, such as  ,  ,  , etc.

Notation

Since kets are just vectors in a Hermitian vector space, they can be manipulated using the usual rules of linear algebra. For example:

 

Note how the last line above involves infinitely many different kets, one for each real number x.

Since the ket is an element of a vector space, a bra   is an element of its dual space, i.e. a bra is a linear functional which is a linear map from the vector space to the complex numbers. Thus, it is useful to think of kets and bras as being elements of different vector spaces (see below however) with both being different useful concepts.

A bra   and a ket   (i.e. a functional and a vector), can be combined to an operator   of rank one with outer product

 

Inner product and bra–ket identification on Hilbert space

The bra–ket notation is particularly useful in Hilbert spaces which have an inner product[5] that allows Hermitian conjugation and identifying a vector with a continuous linear functional, i.e. a ket with a bra, and vice versa (see Riesz representation theorem). The inner product on Hilbert space   (with the first argument anti linear as preferred by physicists) is fully equivalent to an (anti-linear) identification between the space of kets and that of bras in the bra ket notation: for a vector ket   define a functional (i.e. bra)   by

 

Bras and kets as row and column vectors

In the simple case where we consider the vector space  , a ket can be identified with a column vector, and a bra as a row vector. If moreover we use the standard Hermitian inner product on  , the bra corresponding to a ket, in particular a bra m| and a ket |m with the same label are conjugate transpose. Moreover, conventions are set up in such a way that writing bras, kets, and linear operators next to each other simply imply matrix multiplication.[6] In particular the outer product   of a column and a row vector ket and bra can be identified with matrix multiplication (column vector times row vector equals matrix).

For a finite-dimensional vector space, using a fixed orthonormal basis, the inner product can be written as a matrix multiplication of a row vector with a column vector:

 
Based on this, the bras and kets can be defined as:
 
and then it is understood that a bra next to a ket implies matrix multiplication.

The conjugate transpose (also called Hermitian conjugate) of a bra is the corresponding ket and vice versa:

 
because if one starts with the bra
 
then performs a complex conjugation, and then a matrix transpose, one ends up with the ket
 

Writing elements of a finite dimensional (or mutatis mutandis, countably infinite) vector space as a column vector of numbers requires picking a basis. Picking a basis is not always helpful because quantum mechanics calculations involve frequently switching between different bases (e.g. position basis, momentum basis, energy eigenbasis), and one can write something like "|m" without committing to any particular basis. In situations involving two different important basis vectors, the basis vectors can be taken in the notation explicitly and here will be referred simply as "|" and "|+".

Non-normalizable states and non-Hilbert spaces

Bra–ket notation can be used even if the vector space is not a Hilbert space.

In quantum mechanics, it is common practice to write down kets which have infinite norm, i.e. non-normalizable wavefunctions. Examples include states whose wavefunctions are Dirac delta functions or infinite plane waves. These do not, technically, belong to the Hilbert space itself. However, the definition of "Hilbert space" can be broadened to accommodate these states (see the Gelfand–Naimark–Segal construction or rigged Hilbert spaces). The bra–ket notation continues to work in an analogous way in this broader context.

Banach spaces are a different generalization of Hilbert spaces. In a Banach space B, the vectors may be notated by kets and the continuous linear functionals by bras. Over any vector space without topology, we may also notate the vectors by kets and the linear functionals by bras. In these more general contexts, the bracket does not have the meaning of an inner product, because the Riesz representation theorem does not apply.

Usage in quantum mechanics

The mathematical structure of quantum mechanics is based in large part on linear algebra:

  • Wave functions and other quantum states can be represented as vectors in a complex Hilbert space. (The exact structure of this Hilbert space depends on the situation.) In bra–ket notation, for example, an electron might be in the "state" |ψ. (Technically, the quantum states are rays of vectors in the Hilbert space, as c|ψ corresponds to the same state for any nonzero complex number c.)
  • Quantum superpositions can be described as vector sums of the constituent states. For example, an electron in the state 1/√2|1⟩ + i/√2|2⟩ is in a quantum superposition of the states |1⟩ and |2⟩.
  • Measurements are associated with linear operators (called observables) on the Hilbert space of quantum states.
  • Dynamics are also described by linear operators on the Hilbert space. For example, in the Schrödinger picture, there is a linear time evolution operator U with the property that if an electron is in state |ψ right now, at a later time it will be in the state U|ψ, the same U for every possible |ψ.
  • Wave function normalization is scaling a wave function so that its norm is 1.

Since virtually every calculation in quantum mechanics involves vectors and linear operators, it can involve, and often does involve, bra–ket notation. A few examples follow:

Spinless position–space wave function

 
Discrete components Ak of a complex vector |A = Σk Ak |ek, which belongs to a countably infinite-dimensional Hilbert space; there are countably infinitely many k values and basis vectors |ek.
 
Continuous components ψ(x) of a complex vector |ψ = ∫ dx ψ(x)|x, which belongs to an uncountably infinite-dimensional Hilbert space; there are infinitely many x values and basis vectors |x.
Components of complex vectors plotted against index number; discrete k and continuous x. Two particular components out of infinitely many are highlighted.

The Hilbert space of a spin-0 point particle is spanned by a "position basis" { |r }, where the label r extends over the set of all points in position space. This label is the eigenvalue of the position operator acting on such a basis state,  . Since there are an uncountably infinite number of vector components in the basis, this is an uncountably infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. The dimensions of the Hilbert space (usually infinite) and position space (usually 1, 2 or 3) are not to be conflated.

Starting from any ket |Ψ⟩ in this Hilbert space, one may define a complex scalar function of r, known as a wavefunction,

 

On the left-hand side, Ψ(r) is a function mapping any point in space to a complex number; on the right-hand side, |Ψ⟩ = ∫ d3r Ψ(r) |r is a ket consisting of a superposition of kets with relative coefficients specified by that function.

It is then customary to define linear operators acting on wavefunctions in terms of linear operators acting on kets, by

 

For instance, the momentum operator   has the following coordinate representation,

 

One occasionally even encounters a expressions such as  , though this is something of an abuse of notation. The differential operator must be understood to be an abstract operator, acting on kets, that has the effect of differentiating wavefunctions once the expression is projected onto the position basis,   even though, in the momentum basis, this operator amounts to a mere multiplication operator (by p). That is, to say,

 
or
 

Overlap of states

In quantum mechanics the expression φ|ψ is typically interpreted as the probability amplitude for the state ψ to collapse into the state φ. Mathematically, this means the coefficient for the projection of ψ onto φ. It is also described as the projection of state ψ onto state φ.

Changing basis for a spin-1/2 particle

A stationary spin-12 particle has a two-dimensional Hilbert space. One orthonormal basis is:

 
where |↑z is the state with a definite value of the spin operator Sz equal to +12 and |↓z is the state with a definite value of the spin operator Sz equal to −12.

Since these are a basis, any quantum state of the particle can be expressed as a linear combination (i.e., quantum superposition) of these two states:

 
where aψ and bψ are complex numbers.

A different basis for the same Hilbert space is:

 
defined in terms of Sx rather than Sz.

Again, any state of the particle can be expressed as a linear combination of these two:

 

In vector form, you might write

 
depending on which basis you are using. In other words, the "coordinates" of a vector depend on the basis used.

There is a mathematical relationship between  ,  ,   and  ; see change of basis.

Pitfalls and ambiguous uses

There are some conventions and uses of notation that may be confusing or ambiguous for the non-initiated or early student.

Separation of inner product and vectors

A cause for confusion is that the notation does not separate the inner-product operation from the notation for a (bra) vector. If a (dual space) bra-vector is constructed as a linear combination of other bra-vectors (for instance when expressing it in some basis) the notation creates some ambiguity and hides mathematical details. We can compare bra–ket notation to using bold for vectors, such as  , and   for the inner product. Consider the following dual space bra-vector in the basis  :

 

It has to be determined by convention if the complex numbers   are inside or outside of the inner product, and each convention gives different results.

 
 

Reuse of symbols

It is common to use the same symbol for labels and constants. For example,  , where the symbol   is used simultaneously as the name of the operator  , its eigenvector   and the associated eigenvalue  . Sometimes the hat is also dropped for operators, and one can see notation such as  [7]

Hermitian conjugate of kets

It is common to see the usage  , where the dagger ( ) corresponds to the Hermitian conjugate. This is however not correct in a technical sense, since the ket,  , represents a vector in a complex Hilbert-space  , and the bra,  , is a linear functional on vectors in  . In other words,   is just a vector, while   is the combination of a vector and an inner product.

Operations inside bras and kets

This is done for a fast notation of scaling vectors. For instance, if the vector   is scaled by  , it may be denoted  . This can be ambiguous since   is simply a label for a state, and not a mathematical object on which operations can be performed. This usage is more common when denoting vectors as tensor products, where part of the labels are moved outside the designed slot, e.g.  .

Linear operators

Linear operators acting on kets

A linear operator is a map that inputs a ket and outputs a ket. (In order to be called "linear", it is required to have certain properties.) In other words, if   is a linear operator and   is a ket-vector, then   is another ket-vector.

In an  -dimensional Hilbert space, we can impose a basis on the space and represent   in terms of its coordinates as a   column vector. Using the same basis for  , it is represented by an   complex matrix. The ket-vector   can now be computed by matrix multiplication.

Linear operators are ubiquitous in the theory of quantum mechanics. For example, observable physical quantities are represented by self-adjoint operators, such as energy or momentum, whereas transformative processes are represented by unitary linear operators such as rotation or the progression of time.

Linear operators acting on bras

Operators can also be viewed as acting on bras from the right hand side. Specifically, if A is a linear operator and φ| is a bra, then φ|A is another bra defined by the rule

 

(in other words, a function composition). This expression is commonly written as (cf. energy inner product)

 

In an N-dimensional Hilbert space, φ| can be written as a 1 × N row vector, and A (as in the previous section) is an N × N matrix. Then the bra φ|A can be computed by normal matrix multiplication.

If the same state vector appears on both bra and ket side,

 
then this expression gives the expectation value, or mean or average value, of the observable represented by operator A for the physical system in the state |ψ.

Outer products

A convenient way to define linear operators on a Hilbert space H is given by the outer product: if ϕ| is a bra and |ψ is a ket, the outer product

 
denotes the rank-one operator with the rule
 

For a finite-dimensional vector space, the outer product can be understood as simple matrix multiplication:

 

The outer product is an N × N matrix, as expected for a linear operator.

One of the uses of the outer product is to construct projection operators. Given a ket |ψ of norm 1, the orthogonal projection onto the subspace spanned by |ψ is

 
This is an idempotent in the algebra of observables that acts on the Hilbert space.

Hermitian conjugate operator

Just as kets and bras can be transformed into each other (making |ψ into ψ|), the element from the dual space corresponding to A|ψ is ψ|A, where A denotes the Hermitian conjugate (or adjoint) of the operator A. In other words,

 

If A is expressed as an N × N matrix, then A is its conjugate transpose.

Self-adjoint operators, where A = A, play an important role in quantum mechanics; for example, an observable is always described by a self-adjoint operator. If A is a self-adjoint operator, then ψ|A|ψ is always a real number (not complex). This implies that expectation values of observables are real.

Properties

Bra–ket notation was designed to facilitate the formal manipulation of linear-algebraic expressions. Some of the properties that allow this manipulation are listed herein. In what follows, c1 and c2 denote arbitrary complex numbers, c* denotes the complex conjugate of c, A and B denote arbitrary linear operators, and these properties are to hold for any choice of bras and kets.

Linearity

  • Since bras are linear functionals,
     
  • By the definition of addition and scalar multiplication of linear functionals in the dual space,[8]
     

Associativity

Given any expression involving complex numbers, bras, kets, inner products, outer products, and/or linear operators (but not addition), written in bra–ket notation, the parenthetical groupings do not matter (i.e., the associative property holds). For example:

 

and so forth. The expressions on the right (with no parentheses whatsoever) are allowed to be written unambiguously because of the equalities on the left. Note that the associative property does not hold for expressions that include nonlinear operators, such as the antilinear time reversal operator in physics.

Hermitian conjugation

Bra–ket notation makes it particularly easy to compute the Hermitian conjugate (also called dagger, and denoted ) of expressions. The formal rules are:

  • The Hermitian conjugate of a bra is the corresponding ket, and vice versa.
  • The Hermitian conjugate of a complex number is its complex conjugate.
  • The Hermitian conjugate of the Hermitian conjugate of anything (linear operators, bras, kets, numbers) is itself—i.e.,
     
  • Given any combination of complex numbers, bras, kets, inner products, outer products, and/or linear operators, written in bra–ket notation, its Hermitian conjugate can be computed by reversing the order of the components, and taking the Hermitian conjugate of each.

These rules are sufficient to formally write the Hermitian conjugate of any such expression; some examples are as follows:

  • Kets:
     
  • Inner products:
     
    Note that φ|ψ is a scalar, so the Hermitian conjugate is just the complex conjugate, i.e.,
     
  • Matrix elements:
     
  • Outer products:
     

Composite bras and kets

Two Hilbert spaces V and W may form a third space VW by a tensor product. In quantum mechanics, this is used for describing composite systems. If a system is composed of two subsystems described in V and W respectively, then the Hilbert space of the entire system is the tensor product of the two spaces. (The exception to this is if the subsystems are actually identical particles. In that case, the situation is a little more complicated.)

If |ψ is a ket in V and |φ is a ket in W, the tensor product of the two kets is a ket in VW. This is written in various notations:

 

See quantum entanglement and the EPR paradox for applications of this product.

The unit operator

Consider a complete orthonormal system (basis),

 
for a Hilbert space H, with respect to the norm from an inner product ⟨·,·⟩.

From basic functional analysis, it is known that any ket   can also be written as

 
with ⟨·|·⟩ the inner product on the Hilbert space.

From the commutativity of kets with (complex) scalars, it follows that

 
must be the identity operator, which sends each vector to itself.

This, then, can be inserted in any expression without affecting its value; for example

 
where, in the last line, the Einstein summation convention has been used to avoid clutter.

In quantum mechanics, it often occurs that little or no information about the inner product ψ|φ of two arbitrary (state) kets is present, while it is still possible to say something about the expansion coefficients ψ|ei = ei|ψ* and ei|φ of those vectors with respect to a specific (orthonormalized) basis. In this case, it is particularly useful to insert the unit operator into the bracket one time or more.

For more information, see Resolution of the identity, [9]

 
where
 

Since x|x = δ(xx), plane waves follow,

 

In his book (1958), Ch. III.20, Dirac defines the standard ket which, up to a normalization, is the translationally invariant momentum eigenstate   in the momentum representation, i.e.,  . Consequently, the corresponding wavefunction is a constant,  , and

 
as well as
 

Typically, when all matrix elements of an operator such as

 
are available, this resolution serves to reconstitute the full operator,
 

Notation used by mathematicians

The object physicists are considering when using bra–ket notation is a Hilbert space (a complete inner product space).

Let   be a Hilbert space and hH a vector in H. What physicists would denote by |h is the vector itself. That is,

 

Let H* be the dual space of H. This is the space of linear functionals on H. The embedding   is defined by  , where for every hH the linear functional   satisfies for every gH the functional equation  . Notational confusion arises when identifying φh and g with h| and |g respectively. This is because of literal symbolic substitutions. Let   and let g = G = |g. This gives

 

One ignores the parentheses and removes the double bars.

Moreover, mathematicians usually write the dual entity not at the first place, as the physicists do, but at the second one, and they usually use not an asterisk but an overline (which the physicists reserve for averages and the Dirac spinor adjoint) to denote complex conjugate numbers; i.e., for scalar products mathematicians usually write

 
whereas physicists would write for the same quantity
 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dirac 1939
  2. ^ Shankar 1994, Chapter 1
  3. ^ Grassmann 1862
  4. ^ Lecture 2 | Quantum Entanglements, Part 1 (Stanford), Leonard Susskind on complex numbers, complex conjugate, bra, ket. 2006-10-02.
  5. ^ Lecture 2 | Quantum Entanglements, Part 1 (Stanford), Leonard Susskind on inner product, 2006-10-02.
  6. ^ "Gidney, Craig (2017). Bra–Ket Notation Trivializes Matrix Multiplication".
  7. ^ Sakurai & Napolitano 2017
  8. ^ Lecture notes by Robert Littlejohn 2012-06-17 at the Wayback Machine, eqns 12 and 13
  9. ^ Sakurai & Napolitano 2017

References

  • Dirac, P. A. M. (1939). "A new notation for quantum mechanics". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 35 (3): 416–418. Bibcode:1939PCPS...35..416D. doi:10.1017/S0305004100021162. S2CID 121466183.. Also see his standard text, The Principles of Quantum Mechanics, IV edition, Clarendon Press (1958), ISBN 978-0198520115
  • Grassmann, H. (1862). Extension Theory. History of Mathematics Sources. 2000 translation by Lloyd C. Kannenberg. American Mathematical Society, London Mathematical Society.
  • Cajori, Florian (1929). A History Of Mathematical Notations Volume II. Open Court Publishing. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-486-67766-8.
  • Shankar, R. (1994). Principles of Quantum Mechanics (2nd ed.). ISBN 0-306-44790-8.
  • Feynman, Richard P.; Leighton, Robert B.; Sands, Matthew (1965). The Feynman Lectures on Physics. Vol. III. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-02118-8.
  • Sakurai, J J; Napolitano, J (2017). Modern Quantum Mechanics (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-42241-3.

External links

  • Richard Fitzpatrick, "Quantum Mechanics: A graduate level course", The University of Texas at Austin. Includes:
    • 1. Ket space
    • 2. Bra space
    • 3. Operators
    • 4. The outer product
    • 5. Eigenvalues and eigenvectors
  • Robert Littlejohn, Lecture notes on "The Mathematical Formalism of Quantum mechanics", including bra–ket notation. University of California, Berkeley.
  • Gieres, F. (2000). "Mathematical surprises and Dirac's formalism in quantum mechanics". Rep. Prog. Phys. 63 (12): 1893–1931. arXiv:quant-ph/9907069. Bibcode:2000RPPh...63.1893G. doi:10.1088/0034-4885/63/12/201. S2CID 10854218.

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This article s lead section may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In quantum mechanics bra ket notation or Dirac notation is used ubiquitously to denote quantum states The notation uses angle brackets displaystyle langle and displaystyle rangle and a vertical bar displaystyle to construct bras and kets A ket is of the form v displaystyle v rangle Mathematically it denotes a vector v displaystyle boldsymbol v in an abstract complex vector space V displaystyle V and physically it represents a state of some quantum system A bra is of the form f displaystyle langle f Mathematically it denotes a linear form f V C displaystyle f V to mathbb C i e a linear map that maps each vector in V displaystyle V to a number in the complex plane C displaystyle mathbb C Letting the linear functional f displaystyle langle f act on a vector v displaystyle v rangle is written as f v C displaystyle langle f v rangle in mathbb C Assume that on V displaystyle V there exists an inner product displaystyle cdot cdot with antilinear first argument which makes V displaystyle V an inner product space Then with this inner product each vector ϕ ϕ displaystyle boldsymbol phi equiv phi rangle can be identified with a corresponding linear form by placing the vector in the anti linear first slot of the inner product ϕ ϕ displaystyle boldsymbol phi cdot equiv langle phi The correspondence between these notations is then ϕ ps ϕ ps displaystyle boldsymbol phi boldsymbol psi equiv langle phi psi rangle The linear form ϕ displaystyle langle phi is a covector to ϕ displaystyle phi rangle and the set of all covectors form a subspace of the dual vector space V displaystyle V vee to the initial vector space V displaystyle V The purpose of this linear form ϕ displaystyle langle phi can now be understood in terms of making projections on the state ϕ displaystyle boldsymbol phi to find how linearly dependent two states are etc For the vector space C n displaystyle mathbb C n kets can be identified with column vectors and bras with row vectors Combinations of bras kets and linear operators are interpreted using matrix multiplication If C n displaystyle mathbb C n has the standard Hermitian inner product v w v w displaystyle boldsymbol v boldsymbol w v dagger w under this identification the identification of kets and bras and vice versa provided by the inner product is taking the Hermitian conjugate denoted displaystyle dagger It is common to suppress the vector or linear form from the bra ket notation and only use a label inside the typography for the bra or ket For example the spin operator s z displaystyle hat sigma z on a two dimensional space D displaystyle Delta of spinors has eigenvalues 1 2 textstyle pm frac 1 2 with eigenspinors ps ps D displaystyle boldsymbol psi boldsymbol psi in Delta In bra ket notation this is typically denoted as ps displaystyle boldsymbol psi rangle and ps displaystyle boldsymbol psi rangle As above kets and bras with the same label are interpreted as kets and bras corresponding to each other using the inner product In particular when also identified with row and column vectors kets and bras with the same label are identified with Hermitian conjugate column and row vectors Bra ket notation was effectively established in 1939 by Paul Dirac 1 2 it is thus also known as Dirac notation despite the notation having a precursor in Hermann Grassmann s use of ϕ ps displaystyle phi mid psi for inner products nearly 100 years earlier 3 4 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Vector spaces 2 1 Vectors vs kets 2 2 Notation 2 3 Inner product and bra ket identification on Hilbert space 2 3 1 Bras and kets as row and column vectors 2 4 Non normalizable states and non Hilbert spaces 3 Usage in quantum mechanics 3 1 Spinless position space wave function 3 2 Overlap of states 3 3 Changing basis for a spin 1 2 particle 4 Pitfalls and ambiguous uses 4 1 Separation of inner product and vectors 4 2 Reuse of symbols 4 3 Hermitian conjugate of kets 4 4 Operations inside bras and kets 5 Linear operators 5 1 Linear operators acting on kets 5 2 Linear operators acting on bras 5 3 Outer products 5 4 Hermitian conjugate operator 6 Properties 6 1 Linearity 6 2 Associativity 6 3 Hermitian conjugation 7 Composite bras and kets 8 The unit operator 9 Notation used by mathematicians 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksIntroduction EditBra ket notation is a notation for linear algebra and linear operators on complex vector spaces together with their dual space both in the finite dimensional and infinite dimensional case It is specifically designed to ease the types of calculations that frequently come up in quantum mechanics Its use in quantum mechanics is quite widespread Many phenomena that are explained using quantum mechanics are explained using bra ket notation Vector spaces EditVectors vs kets Edit In mathematics the term vector is used for an element of any vector space In physics however the term vector is much more specific vector refers almost exclusively to quantities like displacement or velocity which have components that relate directly to the three dimensions of space or relativistically to the four of spacetime Such vectors are typically denoted with over arrows r displaystyle vec r boldface p displaystyle mathbf p or indices v m displaystyle v mu In quantum mechanics a quantum state is typically represented as an element of a complex Hilbert space for example the infinite dimensional vector space of all possible wavefunctions square integrable functions mapping each point of 3D space to a complex number or some more abstract Hilbert space constructed more algebraically Since the term vector is already used for something else see previous paragraph and physicists tend to prefer conventional notation to stating what space something is an element of it is common and useful to denote an element ϕ displaystyle phi of an abstract complex vector space as a ket ϕ displaystyle phi rangle using vertical bars and angular brackets and refer to them as kets rather than as vectors and pronounced ket ϕ displaystyle phi or ket A for A Symbols letters numbers or even words whatever serves as a convenient label can be used as the label inside a ket with the displaystyle rangle making clear that the label indicates a vector in vector space In other words the symbol A has a specific and universal mathematical meaning while just the A by itself does not For example 1 2 is not necessarily equal to 3 Nevertheless for convenience there is usually some logical scheme behind the labels inside kets such as the common practice of labeling energy eigenkets in quantum mechanics through a listing of their quantum numbers At its simplest the label inside the ket is the eigenvalue of a physical operator such as x displaystyle hat x p displaystyle hat p L z displaystyle hat L z etc Notation Edit Since kets are just vectors in a Hermitian vector space they can be manipulated using the usual rules of linear algebra For example A B C C 1 2 i D D e x 2 x d x displaystyle begin aligned A rangle amp B rangle C rangle C rangle amp 1 2i D rangle D rangle amp int infty infty e x 2 x rangle mathrm d x end aligned Note how the last line above involves infinitely many different kets one for each real number x Since the ket is an element of a vector space a bra A displaystyle langle A is an element of its dual space i e a bra is a linear functional which is a linear map from the vector space to the complex numbers Thus it is useful to think of kets and bras as being elements of different vector spaces see below however with both being different useful concepts A bra ϕ displaystyle langle phi and a ket ps displaystyle psi rangle i e a functional and a vector can be combined to an operator ps ϕ displaystyle psi rangle langle phi of rank one with outer product ps ϕ 3 ps ϕ 3 displaystyle psi rangle langle phi colon xi rangle mapsto psi rangle langle phi xi rangle Inner product and bra ket identification on Hilbert space Edit Main article Inner product The bra ket notation is particularly useful in Hilbert spaces which have an inner product 5 that allows Hermitian conjugation and identifying a vector with a continuous linear functional i e a ket with a bra and vice versa see Riesz representation theorem The inner product on Hilbert space displaystyle with the first argument anti linear as preferred by physicists is fully equivalent to an anti linear identification between the space of kets and that of bras in the bra ket notation for a vector ket ϕ ϕ displaystyle phi phi rangle define a functional i e bra f ϕ ϕ displaystyle f phi langle phi by ϕ ps ϕ ps f ϕ ps ϕ ps ϕ ps displaystyle phi psi phi rangle psi rangle f phi psi langle phi bigl psi rangle bigr langle phi mid psi rangle Bras and kets as row and column vectors Edit In the simple case where we consider the vector space C n displaystyle mathbb C n a ket can be identified with a column vector and a bra as a row vector If moreover we use the standard Hermitian inner product on C n displaystyle mathbb C n the bra corresponding to a ket in particular a bra m and a ket m with the same label are conjugate transpose Moreover conventions are set up in such a way that writing bras kets and linear operators next to each other simply imply matrix multiplication 6 In particular the outer product ps ϕ displaystyle psi rangle langle phi of a column and a row vector ket and bra can be identified with matrix multiplication column vector times row vector equals matrix For a finite dimensional vector space using a fixed orthonormal basis the inner product can be written as a matrix multiplication of a row vector with a column vector A B A 1 B 1 A 2 B 2 A N B N A 1 A 2 A N B 1 B 2 B N displaystyle langle A B rangle doteq A 1 B 1 A 2 B 2 cdots A N B N begin pmatrix A 1 amp A 2 amp cdots amp A N end pmatrix begin pmatrix B 1 B 2 vdots B N end pmatrix Based on this the bras and kets can be defined as A A 1 A 2 A N B B 1 B 2 B N displaystyle begin aligned langle A amp doteq begin pmatrix A 1 amp A 2 amp cdots amp A N end pmatrix B rangle amp doteq begin pmatrix B 1 B 2 vdots B N end pmatrix end aligned and then it is understood that a bra next to a ket implies matrix multiplication The conjugate transpose also called Hermitian conjugate of a bra is the corresponding ket and vice versa A A A A displaystyle langle A dagger A rangle quad A rangle dagger langle A because if one starts with the bra A 1 A 2 A N displaystyle begin pmatrix A 1 amp A 2 amp cdots amp A N end pmatrix then performs a complex conjugation and then a matrix transpose one ends up with the ket A 1 A 2 A N displaystyle begin pmatrix A 1 A 2 vdots A N end pmatrix Writing elements of a finite dimensional or mutatis mutandis countably infinite vector space as a column vector of numbers requires picking a basis Picking a basis is not always helpful because quantum mechanics calculations involve frequently switching between different bases e g position basis momentum basis energy eigenbasis and one can write something like m without committing to any particular basis In situations involving two different important basis vectors the basis vectors can be taken in the notation explicitly and here will be referred simply as and Non normalizable states and non Hilbert spaces Edit Bra ket notation can be used even if the vector space is not a Hilbert space In quantum mechanics it is common practice to write down kets which have infinite norm i e non normalizable wavefunctions Examples include states whose wavefunctions are Dirac delta functions or infinite plane waves These do not technically belong to the Hilbert space itself However the definition of Hilbert space can be broadened to accommodate these states see the Gelfand Naimark Segal construction or rigged Hilbert spaces The bra ket notation continues to work in an analogous way in this broader context Banach spaces are a different generalization of Hilbert spaces In a Banach space B the vectors may be notated by kets and the continuous linear functionals by bras Over any vector space without topology we may also notate the vectors by kets and the linear functionals by bras In these more general contexts the bracket does not have the meaning of an inner product because the Riesz representation theorem does not apply Usage in quantum mechanics EditThe mathematical structure of quantum mechanics is based in large part on linear algebra Wave functions and other quantum states can be represented as vectors in a complex Hilbert space The exact structure of this Hilbert space depends on the situation In bra ket notation for example an electron might be in the state ps Technically the quantum states are rays of vectors in the Hilbert space as c ps corresponds to the same state for any nonzero complex number c Quantum superpositions can be described as vector sums of the constituent states For example an electron in the state 1 2 1 i 2 2 is in a quantum superposition of the states 1 and 2 Measurements are associated with linear operators called observables on the Hilbert space of quantum states Dynamics are also described by linear operators on the Hilbert space For example in the Schrodinger picture there is a linear time evolution operator U with the property that if an electron is in state ps right now at a later time it will be in the state U ps the same U for every possible ps Wave function normalization is scaling a wave function so that its norm is 1 Since virtually every calculation in quantum mechanics involves vectors and linear operators it can involve and often does involve bra ket notation A few examples follow Spinless position space wave function Edit Discrete components Ak of a complex vector A Sk Ak ek which belongs to a countably infinite dimensional Hilbert space there are countably infinitely many k values and basis vectors ek Continuous components ps x of a complex vector ps dx ps x x which belongs to an uncountably infinite dimensional Hilbert space there are infinitely many x values and basis vectors x Components of complex vectors plotted against index number discrete k and continuous x Two particular components out of infinitely many are highlighted The Hilbert space of a spin 0 point particle is spanned by a position basis r where the label r extends over the set of all points in position space This label is the eigenvalue of the position operator acting on such a basis state r r r r displaystyle hat mathbf r mathbf r rangle mathbf r mathbf r rangle Since there are an uncountably infinite number of vector components in the basis this is an uncountably infinite dimensional Hilbert space The dimensions of the Hilbert space usually infinite and position space usually 1 2 or 3 are not to be conflated Starting from any ket PS in this Hilbert space one may define a complex scalar function of r known as a wavefunction PS r def r PS displaystyle Psi mathbf r stackrel text def langle mathbf r Psi rangle On the left hand side PS r is a function mapping any point in space to a complex number on the right hand side PS d3r PS r r is a ket consisting of a superposition of kets with relative coefficients specified by that function It is then customary to define linear operators acting on wavefunctions in terms of linear operators acting on kets byA r PS r def r A PS displaystyle hat A mathbf r Psi mathbf r stackrel text def langle mathbf r hat A Psi rangle For instance the momentum operator p displaystyle hat mathbf p has the following coordinate representation p r PS r def r p PS i ℏ PS r displaystyle hat mathbf p mathbf r Psi mathbf r stackrel text def langle mathbf r hat mathbf p Psi rangle i hbar nabla Psi mathbf r One occasionally even encounters a expressions such as PS displaystyle nabla Psi rangle though this is something of an abuse of notation The differential operator must be understood to be an abstract operator acting on kets that has the effect of differentiating wavefunctions once the expression is projected onto the position basis r PS displaystyle nabla langle mathbf r Psi rangle even though in the momentum basis this operator amounts to a mere multiplication operator by iħp That is to say r p i ℏ r displaystyle langle mathbf r hat mathbf p i hbar nabla langle mathbf r or p d 3 r r i ℏ r displaystyle hat mathbf p int d 3 mathbf r mathbf r rangle i hbar nabla langle mathbf r Overlap of states Edit In quantum mechanics the expression f ps is typically interpreted as the probability amplitude for the state ps to collapse into the state f Mathematically this means the coefficient for the projection of ps onto f It is also described as the projection of state ps onto state f Changing basis for a spin 1 2 particle Edit A stationary spin 1 2 particle has a two dimensional Hilbert space One orthonormal basis is z z displaystyle uparrow z rangle downarrow z rangle where z is the state with a definite value of the spin operator Sz equal to 1 2 and z is the state with a definite value of the spin operator Sz equal to 1 2 Since these are a basis any quantum state of the particle can be expressed as a linear combination i e quantum superposition of these two states ps a ps z b ps z displaystyle psi rangle a psi uparrow z rangle b psi downarrow z rangle where aps and bps are complex numbers A different basis for the same Hilbert space is x x displaystyle uparrow x rangle downarrow x rangle defined in terms of Sx rather than Sz Again any state of the particle can be expressed as a linear combination of these two ps c ps x d ps x displaystyle psi rangle c psi uparrow x rangle d psi downarrow x rangle In vector form you might write ps a ps b ps or ps c ps d ps displaystyle psi rangle doteq begin pmatrix a psi b psi end pmatrix quad text or quad psi rangle doteq begin pmatrix c psi d psi end pmatrix depending on which basis you are using In other words the coordinates of a vector depend on the basis used There is a mathematical relationship between a ps displaystyle a psi b ps displaystyle b psi c ps displaystyle c psi and d ps displaystyle d psi see change of basis Pitfalls and ambiguous uses EditThere are some conventions and uses of notation that may be confusing or ambiguous for the non initiated or early student Separation of inner product and vectors Edit A cause for confusion is that the notation does not separate the inner product operation from the notation for a bra vector If a dual space bra vector is constructed as a linear combination of other bra vectors for instance when expressing it in some basis the notation creates some ambiguity and hides mathematical details We can compare bra ket notation to using bold for vectors such as ps displaystyle boldsymbol psi and displaystyle cdot cdot for the inner product Consider the following dual space bra vector in the basis e n displaystyle e n rangle ps n e n ps n displaystyle langle psi sum n langle e n psi n It has to be determined by convention if the complex numbers ps n displaystyle psi n are inside or outside of the inner product and each convention gives different results ps ps n e n ps n displaystyle langle psi equiv boldsymbol psi cdot sum n boldsymbol e n cdot psi n ps ps n e n ps n n e n ps n displaystyle langle psi equiv boldsymbol psi cdot sum n boldsymbol e n psi n cdot sum n boldsymbol e n cdot psi n Reuse of symbols Edit It is common to use the same symbol for labels and constants For example a a a a displaystyle hat alpha alpha rangle alpha alpha rangle where the symbol a displaystyle alpha is used simultaneously as the name of the operator a displaystyle hat alpha its eigenvector a displaystyle alpha rangle and the associated eigenvalue a displaystyle alpha Sometimes the hat is also dropped for operators and one can see notation such as A a a a displaystyle A a rangle a a rangle 7 Hermitian conjugate of kets Edit It is common to see the usage ps ps displaystyle psi rangle dagger langle psi where the dagger displaystyle dagger corresponds to the Hermitian conjugate This is however not correct in a technical sense since the ket ps displaystyle psi rangle represents a vector in a complex Hilbert space H displaystyle mathcal H and the bra ps displaystyle langle psi is a linear functional on vectors in H displaystyle mathcal H In other words ps displaystyle psi rangle is just a vector while ps displaystyle langle psi is the combination of a vector and an inner product Operations inside bras and kets Edit This is done for a fast notation of scaling vectors For instance if the vector a displaystyle alpha rangle is scaled by 1 2 displaystyle 1 sqrt 2 it may be denoted a 2 displaystyle alpha sqrt 2 rangle This can be ambiguous since a displaystyle alpha is simply a label for a state and not a mathematical object on which operations can be performed This usage is more common when denoting vectors as tensor products where part of the labels are moved outside the designed slot e g a a 2 1 a 2 2 displaystyle alpha rangle alpha sqrt 2 1 rangle otimes alpha sqrt 2 2 rangle Linear operators EditSee also Linear operator Linear operators acting on kets Edit A linear operator is a map that inputs a ket and outputs a ket In order to be called linear it is required to have certain properties In other words if A displaystyle hat A is a linear operator and ps displaystyle psi rangle is a ket vector then A ps displaystyle hat A psi rangle is another ket vector In an N displaystyle N dimensional Hilbert space we can impose a basis on the space and represent ps displaystyle psi rangle in terms of its coordinates as a N 1 displaystyle N times 1 column vector Using the same basis for A displaystyle hat A it is represented by an N N displaystyle N times N complex matrix The ket vector A ps displaystyle hat A psi rangle can now be computed by matrix multiplication Linear operators are ubiquitous in the theory of quantum mechanics For example observable physical quantities are represented by self adjoint operators such as energy or momentum whereas transformative processes are represented by unitary linear operators such as rotation or the progression of time Linear operators acting on bras Edit Operators can also be viewed as acting on bras from the right hand side Specifically if A is a linear operator and f is a bra then f A is another bra defined by the rule ϕ A ps ϕ A ps displaystyle bigl langle phi boldsymbol A bigr psi rangle langle phi bigl boldsymbol A psi rangle bigr in other words a function composition This expression is commonly written as cf energy inner product ϕ A ps displaystyle langle phi boldsymbol A psi rangle In an N dimensional Hilbert space f can be written as a 1 N row vector and A as in the previous section is an N N matrix Then the bra f A can be computed by normal matrix multiplication If the same state vector appears on both bra and ket side ps A ps displaystyle langle psi boldsymbol A psi rangle then this expression gives the expectation value or mean or average value of the observable represented by operator A for the physical system in the state ps Outer products Edit A convenient way to define linear operators on a Hilbert space H is given by the outer product if ϕ is a bra and ps is a ket the outer product ϕ ps displaystyle phi rangle langle psi denotes the rank one operator with the rule ϕ ps x ps x ϕ displaystyle bigl phi rangle langle psi bigr x langle psi x rangle phi rangle For a finite dimensional vector space the outer product can be understood as simple matrix multiplication ϕ ps ϕ 1 ϕ 2 ϕ N ps 1 ps 2 ps N ϕ 1 ps 1 ϕ 1 ps 2 ϕ 1 ps N ϕ 2 ps 1 ϕ 2 ps 2 ϕ 2 ps N ϕ N ps 1 ϕ N ps 2 ϕ N ps N displaystyle phi rangle langle psi doteq begin pmatrix phi 1 phi 2 vdots phi N end pmatrix begin pmatrix psi 1 amp psi 2 amp cdots amp psi N end pmatrix begin pmatrix phi 1 psi 1 amp phi 1 psi 2 amp cdots amp phi 1 psi N phi 2 psi 1 amp phi 2 psi 2 amp cdots amp phi 2 psi N vdots amp vdots amp ddots amp vdots phi N psi 1 amp phi N psi 2 amp cdots amp phi N psi N end pmatrix The outer product is an N N matrix as expected for a linear operator One of the uses of the outer product is to construct projection operators Given a ket ps of norm 1 the orthogonal projection onto the subspace spanned by ps is ps ps displaystyle psi rangle langle psi This is an idempotent in the algebra of observables that acts on the Hilbert space Hermitian conjugate operator Edit Main article Hermitian conjugate Just as kets and bras can be transformed into each other making ps into ps the element from the dual space corresponding to A ps is ps A where A denotes the Hermitian conjugate or adjoint of the operator A In other words ϕ A ps if and only if ϕ ps A displaystyle phi rangle A psi rangle quad text if and only if quad langle phi langle psi A dagger If A is expressed as an N N matrix then A is its conjugate transpose Self adjoint operators where A A play an important role in quantum mechanics for example an observable is always described by a self adjoint operator If A is a self adjoint operator then ps A ps is always a real number not complex This implies that expectation values of observables are real Properties EditBra ket notation was designed to facilitate the formal manipulation of linear algebraic expressions Some of the properties that allow this manipulation are listed herein In what follows c1 and c2 denote arbitrary complex numbers c denotes the complex conjugate of c A and B denote arbitrary linear operators and these properties are to hold for any choice of bras and kets Linearity Edit Since bras are linear functionals ϕ c 1 ps 1 c 2 ps 2 c 1 ϕ ps 1 c 2 ϕ ps 2 displaystyle langle phi bigl c 1 psi 1 rangle c 2 psi 2 rangle bigr c 1 langle phi psi 1 rangle c 2 langle phi psi 2 rangle By the definition of addition and scalar multiplication of linear functionals in the dual space 8 c 1 ϕ 1 c 2 ϕ 2 ps c 1 ϕ 1 ps c 2 ϕ 2 ps displaystyle bigl c 1 langle phi 1 c 2 langle phi 2 bigr psi rangle c 1 langle phi 1 psi rangle c 2 langle phi 2 psi rangle Associativity Edit Given any expression involving complex numbers bras kets inner products outer products and or linear operators but not addition written in bra ket notation the parenthetical groupings do not matter i e the associative property holds For example ps A ϕ ps A ϕ def ps A ϕ A ps ϕ A ps ϕ def A ps ϕ displaystyle begin aligned langle psi bigl A phi rangle bigr bigl langle psi A bigr phi rangle amp stackrel text def langle psi A phi rangle bigl A psi rangle bigr langle phi A bigl psi rangle langle phi bigr amp stackrel text def A psi rangle langle phi end aligned and so forth The expressions on the right with no parentheses whatsoever are allowed to be written unambiguously because of the equalities on the left Note that the associative property does not hold for expressions that include nonlinear operators such as the antilinear time reversal operator in physics Hermitian conjugation Edit Bra ket notation makes it particularly easy to compute the Hermitian conjugate also called dagger and denoted of expressions The formal rules are The Hermitian conjugate of a bra is the corresponding ket and vice versa The Hermitian conjugate of a complex number is its complex conjugate The Hermitian conjugate of the Hermitian conjugate of anything linear operators bras kets numbers is itself i e x x displaystyle left x dagger right dagger x Given any combination of complex numbers bras kets inner products outer products and or linear operators written in bra ket notation its Hermitian conjugate can be computed by reversing the order of the components and taking the Hermitian conjugate of each These rules are sufficient to formally write the Hermitian conjugate of any such expression some examples are as follows Kets c 1 ps 1 c 2 ps 2 c 1 ps 1 c 2 ps 2 displaystyle bigl c 1 psi 1 rangle c 2 psi 2 rangle bigr dagger c 1 langle psi 1 c 2 langle psi 2 Inner products ϕ ps ps ϕ displaystyle langle phi psi rangle langle psi phi rangle Note that f ps is a scalar so the Hermitian conjugate is just the complex conjugate i e ϕ ps ϕ ps displaystyle bigl langle phi psi rangle bigr dagger langle phi psi rangle Matrix elements ϕ A ps ps A ϕ ϕ A B ps ps B A ϕ displaystyle begin aligned langle phi A psi rangle amp left langle psi left A dagger right phi right rangle left langle phi left A dagger B dagger right psi right rangle amp langle psi BA phi rangle end aligned Outer products c 1 ϕ 1 ps 1 c 2 ϕ 2 ps 2 c 1 ps 1 ϕ 1 c 2 ps 2 ϕ 2 displaystyle Big bigl c 1 phi 1 rangle langle psi 1 bigr bigl c 2 phi 2 rangle langle psi 2 bigr Big dagger bigl c 1 psi 1 rangle langle phi 1 bigr bigl c 2 psi 2 rangle langle phi 2 bigr Composite bras and kets EditTwo Hilbert spaces V and W may form a third space V W by a tensor product In quantum mechanics this is used for describing composite systems If a system is composed of two subsystems described in V and W respectively then the Hilbert space of the entire system is the tensor product of the two spaces The exception to this is if the subsystems are actually identical particles In that case the situation is a little more complicated If ps is a ket in V and f is a ket in W the tensor product of the two kets is a ket in V W This is written in various notations ps ϕ ps ϕ ps ϕ ps ϕ displaystyle psi rangle phi rangle quad psi rangle otimes phi rangle quad psi phi rangle quad psi phi rangle See quantum entanglement and the EPR paradox for applications of this product The unit operator EditConsider a complete orthonormal system basis e i i N displaystyle e i i in mathbb N for a Hilbert space H with respect to the norm from an inner product From basic functional analysis it is known that any ket ps displaystyle psi rangle can also be written as ps i N e i ps e i displaystyle psi rangle sum i in mathbb N langle e i psi rangle e i rangle with the inner product on the Hilbert space From the commutativity of kets with complex scalars it follows that i N e i e i I displaystyle sum i in mathbb N e i rangle langle e i mathbb I must be the identity operator which sends each vector to itself This then can be inserted in any expression without affecting its value for example v w v i N e i e i w v i N e i e i j N e j e j w v e i e i e j e j w displaystyle begin aligned langle v w rangle amp langle v left sum i in mathbb N e i rangle langle e i right w rangle amp langle v left sum i in mathbb N e i rangle langle e i right left sum j in mathbb N e j rangle langle e j right w rangle amp langle v e i rangle langle e i e j rangle langle e j w rangle end aligned where in the last line the Einstein summation convention has been used to avoid clutter In quantum mechanics it often occurs that little or no information about the inner product ps f of two arbitrary state kets is present while it is still possible to say something about the expansion coefficients ps ei ei ps and ei f of those vectors with respect to a specific orthonormalized basis In this case it is particularly useful to insert the unit operator into the bracket one time or more For more information see Resolution of the identity 9 I d x x x d p p p displaystyle mathbb I int dx x rangle langle x int dp p rangle langle p where p d x e i x p ℏ x 2 p ℏ displaystyle p rangle int dx frac e ixp hbar x rangle sqrt 2 pi hbar Since x x d x x plane waves follow x p e i x p ℏ 2 p ℏ displaystyle langle x p rangle frac e ixp hbar sqrt 2 pi hbar In his book 1958 Ch III 20 Dirac defines the standard ket which up to a normalization is the translationally invariant momentum eigenstate ϖ lim p 0 p textstyle varpi rangle lim p to 0 p rangle in the momentum representation i e p ϖ 0 displaystyle hat p varpi rangle 0 Consequently the corresponding wavefunction is a constant x ϖ 2 p ℏ 1 displaystyle langle x varpi rangle sqrt 2 pi hbar 1 and x d x x ϖ 2 p ℏ displaystyle x rangle delta hat x x varpi rangle sqrt 2 pi hbar as well as p exp i p x ℏ ϖ displaystyle p rangle exp ip hat x hbar varpi rangle Typically when all matrix elements of an operator such as x A y displaystyle langle x A y rangle are available this resolution serves to reconstitute the full operator d x d y x x A y y A displaystyle int dx dy x rangle langle x A y rangle langle y A Notation used by mathematicians EditThe object physicists are considering when using bra ket notation is a Hilbert space a complete inner product space Let H displaystyle mathcal H langle cdot cdot rangle be a Hilbert space and h H a vector in H What physicists would denote by h is the vector itself That is h H displaystyle h rangle in mathcal H Let H be the dual space of H This is the space of linear functionals on H The embedding F H H displaystyle Phi mathcal H hookrightarrow mathcal H is defined by F h f h displaystyle Phi h varphi h where for every h H the linear functional f h H C displaystyle varphi h mathcal H to mathbb C satisfies for every g H the functional equation f h g h g h g displaystyle varphi h g langle h g rangle langle h mid g rangle Notational confusion arises when identifying fh and g with h and g respectively This is because of literal symbolic substitutions Let f h H h displaystyle varphi h H langle h mid and let g G g This givesf h g H g H G h G h g displaystyle varphi h g H g H G langle h G langle h bigl g rangle bigr One ignores the parentheses and removes the double bars Moreover mathematicians usually write the dual entity not at the first place as the physicists do but at the second one and they usually use not an asterisk but an overline which the physicists reserve for averages and the Dirac spinor adjoint to denote complex conjugate numbers i e for scalar products mathematicians usually write ϕ ps ϕ x ps x d x displaystyle langle phi psi rangle int phi x cdot overline psi x mathrm d x whereas physicists would write for the same quantity ps ϕ d x ps x ϕ x displaystyle langle psi phi rangle int dx psi x phi x See also Edit Mathematics portal Physics portalAngular momentum diagrams quantum mechanics n slit interferometric equation Quantum state Inner product spaceNotes Edit Dirac 1939 Shankar 1994 Chapter 1 Grassmann 1862 Lecture 2 Quantum Entanglements Part 1 Stanford Leonard Susskind on complex numbers complex conjugate bra ket 2006 10 02 Lecture 2 Quantum Entanglements Part 1 Stanford Leonard Susskind on inner product 2006 10 02 Gidney Craig 2017 Bra Ket Notation Trivializes Matrix Multiplication Sakurai amp Napolitano 2017 Lecture notes by Robert Littlejohn Archived 2012 06 17 at the Wayback Machine eqns 12 and 13 Sakurai amp Napolitano 2017References EditDirac P A M 1939 A new notation for quantum mechanics Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 35 3 416 418 Bibcode 1939PCPS 35 416D doi 10 1017 S0305004100021162 S2CID 121466183 Also see his standard text The Principles of Quantum Mechanics IV edition Clarendon Press 1958 ISBN 978 0198520115 Grassmann H 1862 Extension Theory History of Mathematics Sources 2000 translation by Lloyd C Kannenberg American Mathematical Society London Mathematical Society Cajori Florian 1929 A History Of Mathematical Notations Volume II Open Court Publishing p 134 ISBN 978 0 486 67766 8 Shankar R 1994 Principles of Quantum Mechanics 2nd ed ISBN 0 306 44790 8 Feynman Richard P Leighton Robert B Sands Matthew 1965 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol III Reading MA Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 02118 8 Sakurai J J Napolitano J 2017 Modern Quantum Mechanics 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 42241 3 External links EditRichard Fitzpatrick Quantum Mechanics A graduate level course The University of Texas at Austin Includes 1 Ket space 2 Bra space 3 Operators 4 The outer product 5 Eigenvalues and eigenvectors Robert Littlejohn Lecture notes on The Mathematical Formalism of Quantum mechanics including bra ket notation University of California Berkeley Gieres F 2000 Mathematical surprises and Dirac s formalism in quantum mechanics Rep Prog Phys 63 12 1893 1931 arXiv quant ph 9907069 Bibcode 2000RPPh 63 1893G doi 10 1088 0034 4885 63 12 201 S2CID 10854218 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bra ket notation amp oldid 1132469976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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