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Self-adjoint operator

In mathematics, a self-adjoint operator on an infinite-dimensional complex vector space V with inner product is a linear map A (from V to itself) that is its own adjoint. If V is finite-dimensional with a given orthonormal basis, this is equivalent to the condition that the matrix of A is a Hermitian matrix, i.e., equal to its conjugate transpose A. By the finite-dimensional spectral theorem, V has an orthonormal basis such that the matrix of A relative to this basis is a diagonal matrix with entries in the real numbers. This article deals with applying generalizations of this concept to operators on Hilbert spaces of arbitrary dimension.

Self-adjoint operators are used in functional analysis and quantum mechanics. In quantum mechanics their importance lies in the Dirac–von Neumann formulation of quantum mechanics, in which physical observables such as position, momentum, angular momentum and spin are represented by self-adjoint operators on a Hilbert space. Of particular significance is the Hamiltonian operator defined by

which as an observable corresponds to the total energy of a particle of mass m in a real potential field V. Differential operators are an important class of unbounded operators.

The structure of self-adjoint operators on infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces essentially resembles the finite-dimensional case. That is to say, operators are self-adjoint if and only if they are unitarily equivalent to real-valued multiplication operators. With suitable modifications, this result can be extended to possibly unbounded operators on infinite-dimensional spaces. Since an everywhere-defined self-adjoint operator is necessarily bounded, one needs be more attentive to the domain issue in the unbounded case. This is explained below in more detail.

Definitions edit

Let   be a Hilbert space and   an unbounded (i.e. not necessarily bounded) operator with a dense domain   This condition holds automatically when   is finite-dimensional since   for every linear operator on a finite-dimensional space.

The graph of an (arbitrary) operator   is the set   An operator   is said to extend   if   This is written as  

Let the inner product   be conjugate linear on the second argument. The adjoint operator   acts on the subspace   consisting of the elements   such that

 

The densely defined operator   is called symmetric (or Hermitian) if  , i.e., if   and   for all  . Equivalently,   is symmetric if and only if

 

Since   is dense in  , symmetric operators are always closable (i.e. the closure of   is the graph of an operator). If   is a closed extension of  , the smallest closed extension   of   must be contained in  . Hence,

 

for symmetric operators and

 

for closed symmetric operators.[1]

The densely defined operator   is called self-adjoint if  , that is, if and only if   is symmetric and  . Equivalently, a closed symmetric operator   is self-adjoint if and only if   is symmetric. If   is self-adjoint, then   is real for all  , i.e.,[2]

 

A symmetric operator   is said to be essentially self-adjoint if the closure of   is self-adjoint. Equivalently,   is essentially self-adjoint if it has a unique self-adjoint extension. In practical terms, having an essentially self-adjoint operator is almost as good as having a self-adjoint operator, since we merely need to take the closure to obtain self-adjoint operator.

In physics, the term Hermitian refers to symmetric as well as self-adjoint operators alike. The subtle difference between the two is generally overlooked.

Bounded self-adjoint operators edit

Let   be a Hilbert space and   a symmetric operator. According to Hellinger–Toeplitz theorem, if   then   is necessarily bounded.[3] A bounded operator   is self-adjoint if

 

Every bounded operator   can be written in the complex form   where   and   are bounded self-adjoint operators.[4]

Alternatively, every positive bounded linear operator   is self-adjoint if the Hilbert space   is complex.[5]

Properties edit

A bounded self-adjoint operator   defined on   has the following properties:[6][7]

  •   is invertible if the image of   is dense in  
  •  
  • The eigenvalues of   are real and the corresponding eigenvectors are orthogonal.
  • If   is an eigenvalue of   then  , where   if   and   is a compact self-adjoint operator.

Spectrum of self-adjoint operators edit

Let   be an unbounded operator.[8] The resolvent set (or regular set) of   is defined as

 

If   is bounded, the definition reduces to   being bijective on  . The spectrum of   is defined as the complement

 

In finite dimensions,   consists exclusively of (complex) eigenvalues.[9] The spectrum of a self-adjoint operator is always real (i.e.  ), though non-self-adjoint operators with real spectrum exist as well.[10][11] For bounded (normal) operators, however, the spectrum is real if and only if the operator is self-adjoint.[12] This implies, for example, that a non-self-adjoint operator with real spectrum is necessarily unbounded.

As a preliminary, define     and   with  . Then, for every   and every  

 

where  

Indeed, let   By the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality,

 

If   then   and   is called bounded below.

Theorem — Self-adjoint operator has real spectrum

Proof

Let   be self-adjoint and denote   with   It suffices to prove that  

  1. Let   The goal is to prove the existence and boundedness of   and show that   We begin by showing that   and  
    1. As shown above,   is bounded below, i.e.   with   The triviality of   follows.
    2. It remains to show that   Indeed,
      1.   is closed. To prove this, pick a sequence   converging to some   Since
         
          is fundamental. Hence, it converges to some   Furthermore,   and   The arguments made thus far hold for any symmetric operator. It now follows from self-adjointness that   is closed, so     and consequently  
      2.   is dense in   The self-adjointness of   (i.e.  ) implies   and thus  . The subsequent inclusion   implies   and, consequently,  
  2. The operator   has now been proven to be bijective, so   exists and is everywhere defined. The graph of   is the set   Since   is closed (because   is), so is   By closed graph theorem,   is bounded, so  

Theorem — Symmetric operator with real spectrum is self-adjoint

Proof
  1.   is symmetric; therefore   and   for every  . Let   If   then   and the operators   are both bijective.
  2.   Indeed,  . That is, if   then   would not be injective (i.e.  ). But   and, hence,   This contradicts the bijectiveness.
  3. The equality   shows that   i.e.   is self-adjoint. Indeed, it suffices to prove that   For every   and  
     

Spectral theorem edit

In the physics literature, the spectral theorem is often stated by saying that a self-adjoint operator has an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors. Physicists are well aware, however, of the phenomenon of "continuous spectrum"; thus, when they speak of an "orthonormal basis" they mean either an orthonormal basis in the classic sense or some continuous analog thereof. In the case of the momentum operator  , for example, physicists would say that the eigenvectors are the functions  , which are clearly not in the Hilbert space  . (Physicists would say that the eigenvectors are "non-normalizable.") Physicists would then go on to say that these "generalized eigenvectors" form an "orthonormal basis in the continuous sense" for  , after replacing the usual Kronecker delta   by a Dirac delta function  .[13]

Although these statements may seem disconcerting to mathematicians, they can be made rigorous by use of the Fourier transform, which allows a general   function to be expressed as a "superposition" (i.e., integral) of the functions  , even though these functions are not in  . The Fourier transform "diagonalizes" the momentum operator; that is, it converts it into the operator of multiplication by  , where   is the variable of the Fourier transform.

The spectral theorem in general can be expressed similarly as the possibility of "diagonalizing" an operator by showing it is unitarily equivalent to a multiplication operator. Other versions of the spectral theorem are similarly intended to capture the idea that a self-adjoint operator can have "eigenvectors" that are not actually in the Hilbert space in question.

Multiplication operator form of the spectral theorem edit

Firstly, let   be a σ-finite measure space and   a measurable function on  . Then the operator  , defined by

 

where

 

is called a multiplication operator.[14] Any multiplication operator is a self-adjoint operator.[15]

Secondly, two operators   and   with dense domains   and   in Hilbert spaces   and  , respectively, are unitarily equivalent if and only if there is a unitary transformation   such that:[16]

  •  
  •  

If unitarily equivalent   and   are bounded, then  ; if   is self-adjoint, then so is  .

Theorem — Any self-adjoint operator   on a separable Hilbert space is unitarily equivalent to a multiplication operator, i.e.,[17]

 

The spectral theorem holds for both bounded and unbounded self-adjoint operators. Proof of the latter follows by reduction to the spectral theorem for unitary operators.[18] We might note that if   is multiplication by  , then the spectrum of   is just the essential range of  .

More complete versions of the spectral theorem exist as well that involve direct integrals and carry with it the notion of "generalized eigenvectors".[19]

Functional calculus edit

One application of the spectral theorem is to define a functional calculus. That is, if   is a function on the real line and   is a self-adjoint operator, we wish to define the operator  . The spectral theorem shows that if   is represented as the operator of multiplication by  , then   is the operator of multiplication by the composition  .

One example from quantum mechanics is the case where   is the Hamiltonian operator  . If   has a true orthonormal basis of eigenvectors   with eigenvalues  , then   can be defined as the unique bounded operator with eigenvalues   such that:

 

The goal of functional calculus is to extend this idea to the case where   has continuous spectrum (i.e. where   has no normalizable eigenvectors).

It has been customary to introduce the following notation

 

where   is the indicator function of the interval  . The family of projection operators E(λ) is called resolution of the identity for T. Moreover, the following Stieltjes integral representation for T can be proved:

 

Formulation in the physics literature edit

In quantum mechanics, Dirac notation is used as combined expression for both the spectral theorem and the Borel functional calculus. That is, if H is self-adjoint and f is a Borel function,

 

with

 

where the integral runs over the whole spectrum of H. The notation suggests that H is diagonalized by the eigenvectors ΨE. Such a notation is purely formal. The resolution of the identity (sometimes called projection-valued measures) formally resembles the rank-1 projections  . In the Dirac notation, (projective) measurements are described via eigenvalues and eigenstates, both purely formal objects. As one would expect, this does not survive passage to the resolution of the identity. In the latter formulation, measurements are described using the spectral measure of  , if the system is prepared in   prior to the measurement. Alternatively, if one would like to preserve the notion of eigenstates and make it rigorous, rather than merely formal, one can replace the state space by a suitable rigged Hilbert space.

If f = 1, the theorem is referred to as resolution of unity:

 

In the case   is the sum of an Hermitian H and a skew-Hermitian (see skew-Hermitian matrix) operator  , one defines the biorthogonal basis set

 

and write the spectral theorem as:

 

(See Feshbach–Fano partitioning method for the context where such operators appear in scattering theory).

Formulation for symmetric operators edit

The spectral theorem applies only to self-adjoint operators, and not in general to symmetric operators. Nevertheless, we can at this point give a simple example of a symmetric (specifically, an essentially self-adjoint) operator that has an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors. Consider the complex Hilbert space L2[0,1] and the differential operator

 

with   consisting of all complex-valued infinitely differentiable functions f on [0, 1] satisfying the boundary conditions

 

Then integration by parts of the inner product shows that A is symmetric.[nb 1] The eigenfunctions of A are the sinusoids

 

with the real eigenvalues n2π2; the well-known orthogonality of the sine functions follows as a consequence of A being symmetric.

The operator A can be seen to have a compact inverse, meaning that the corresponding differential equation Af = g is solved by some integral (and therefore compact) operator G. The compact symmetric operator G then has a countable family of eigenvectors which are complete in L2. The same can then be said for A.

Pure point spectrum edit

A self-adjoint operator A on H has pure point spectrum if and only if H has an orthonormal basis {ei}i ∈ I consisting of eigenvectors for A.

Example. The Hamiltonian for the harmonic oscillator has a quadratic potential V, that is

 

This Hamiltonian has pure point spectrum; this is typical for bound state Hamiltonians in quantum mechanics.[clarification needed][20] As was pointed out in a previous example, a sufficient condition that an unbounded symmetric operator has eigenvectors which form a Hilbert space basis is that it has a compact inverse.

Symmetric vs self-adjoint operators edit

Although the distinction between a symmetric operator and a (essentially) self-adjoint operator is subtle, it is important since self-adjointness is the hypothesis in the spectral theorem. Here we discuss some concrete examples of the distinction.

Boundary conditions edit

In the case where the Hilbert space is a space of functions on a bounded domain, these distinctions have to do with a familiar issue in quantum physics: One cannot define an operator—such as the momentum or Hamiltonian operator—on a bounded domain without specifying boundary conditions. In mathematical terms, choosing the boundary conditions amounts to choosing an appropriate domain for the operator. Consider, for example, the Hilbert space   (the space of square-integrable functions on the interval [0,1]). Let us define a momentum operator A on this space by the usual formula, setting Planck's constant equal to 1:

 

We must now specify a domain for A, which amounts to choosing boundary conditions. If we choose

 

then A is not symmetric (because the boundary terms in the integration by parts do not vanish).

If we choose

 

then using integration by parts, one can easily verify that A is symmetric. This operator is not essentially self-adjoint,[21] however, basically because we have specified too many boundary conditions on the domain of A, which makes the domain of the adjoint too big (see also the example below).

Specifically, with the above choice of domain for A, the domain of the closure   of A is

 

whereas the domain of the adjoint   of A is

 

That is to say, the domain of the closure has the same boundary conditions as the domain of A itself, just a less stringent smoothness assumption. Meanwhile, since there are "too many" boundary conditions on A, there are "too few" (actually, none at all in this case) for  . If we compute   for   using integration by parts, then since   vanishes at both ends of the interval, no boundary conditions on   are needed to cancel out the boundary terms in the integration by parts. Thus, any sufficiently smooth function   is in the domain of  , with  .[22]

Since the domain of the closure and the domain of the adjoint do not agree, A is not essentially self-adjoint. After all, a general result says that the domain of the adjoint of   is the same as the domain of the adjoint of A. Thus, in this case, the domain of the adjoint of   is bigger than the domain of   itself, showing that   is not self-adjoint, which by definition means that A is not essentially self-adjoint.

The problem with the preceding example is that we imposed too many boundary conditions on the domain of A. A better choice of domain would be to use periodic boundary conditions:

 

With this domain, A is essentially self-adjoint.[23]

In this case, we can understand the implications of the domain issues for the spectral theorem. If we use the first choice of domain (with no boundary conditions), all functions   for   are eigenvectors, with eigenvalues  , and so the spectrum is the whole complex plane. If we use the second choice of domain (with Dirichlet boundary conditions), A has no eigenvectors at all. If we use the third choice of domain (with periodic boundary conditions), we can find an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors for A, the functions  . Thus, in this case finding a domain such that A is self-adjoint is a compromise: the domain has to be small enough so that A is symmetric, but large enough so that  .

Schrödinger operators with singular potentials edit

A more subtle example of the distinction between symmetric and (essentially) self-adjoint operators comes from Schrödinger operators in quantum mechanics. If the potential energy is singular—particularly if the potential is unbounded below—the associated Schrödinger operator may fail to be essentially self-adjoint. In one dimension, for example, the operator

 

is not essentially self-adjoint on the space of smooth, rapidly decaying functions.[24] In this case, the failure of essential self-adjointness reflects a pathology in the underlying classical system: A classical particle with a   potential escapes to infinity in finite time. This operator does not have a unique self-adjoint, but it does admit self-adjoint extensions obtained by specifying "boundary conditions at infinity". (Since   is a real operator, it commutes with complex conjugation. Thus, the deficiency indices are automatically equal, which is the condition for having a self-adjoint extension.)

In this case, if we initially define   on the space of smooth, rapidly decaying functions, the adjoint will be "the same" operator (i.e., given by the same formula) but on the largest possible domain, namely

 

It is then possible to show that   is not a symmetric operator, which certainly implies that   is not essentially self-adjoint. Indeed,   has eigenvectors with pure imaginary eigenvalues,[25][26] which is impossible for a symmetric operator. This strange occurrence is possible because of a cancellation between the two terms in  : There are functions   in the domain of   for which neither   nor   is separately in  , but the combination of them occurring in   is in  . This allows for   to be nonsymmetric, even though both   and   are symmetric operators. This sort of cancellation does not occur if we replace the repelling potential   with the confining potential  .

Non-self-adjoint operators in quantum mechanics edit

In quantum mechanics, observables correspond to self-adjoint operators. By Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups, self-adjoint operators are precisely the infinitesimal generators of unitary groups of time evolution operators. However, many physical problems are formulated as a time-evolution equation involving differential operators for which the Hamiltonian is only symmetric. In such cases, either the Hamiltonian is essentially self-adjoint, in which case the physical problem has unique solutions or one attempts to find self-adjoint extensions of the Hamiltonian corresponding to different types of boundary conditions or conditions at infinity.

Example. The one-dimensional Schrödinger operator with the potential  , defined initially on smooth compactly supported functions, is essentially self-adjoint for 0 < α ≤ 2 but not for α > 2.[27][28]

The failure of essential self-adjointness for   has a counterpart in the classical dynamics of a particle with potential  : The classical particle escapes to infinity in finite time.[29]

Example. There is no self-adjoint momentum operator   for a particle moving on a half-line. Nevertheless, the Hamiltonian   of a "free" particle on a half-line has several self-adjoint extensions corresponding to different types of boundary conditions. Physically, these boundary conditions are related to reflections of the particle at the origin.[30]

Examples edit

A symmetric operator that is not essentially self-adjoint edit

We first consider the Hilbert space   and the differential operator

 

defined on the space of continuously differentiable complex-valued functions on [0,1], satisfying the boundary conditions

 

Then D is a symmetric operator as can be shown by integration by parts. The spaces N+, N (defined below) are given respectively by the distributional solutions to the equation

 

which are in L2[0, 1]. One can show that each one of these solution spaces is 1-dimensional, generated by the functions xe−x and xex respectively. This shows that D is not essentially self-adjoint,[31] but does have self-adjoint extensions. These self-adjoint extensions are parametrized by the space of unitary mappings N+N, which in this case happens to be the unit circle T.

In this case, the failure of essential self-adjointenss is due to an "incorrect" choice of boundary conditions in the definition of the domain of  . Since   is a first-order operator, only one boundary condition is needed to ensure that   is symmetric. If we replaced the boundary conditions given above by the single boundary condition

 ,

then D would still be symmetric and would now, in fact, be essentially self-adjoint. This change of boundary conditions gives one particular essentially self-adjoint extension of D. Other essentially self-adjoint extensions come from imposing boundary conditions of the form  .

This simple example illustrates a general fact about self-adjoint extensions of symmetric differential operators P on an open set M. They are determined by the unitary maps between the eigenvalue spaces

 

where Pdist is the distributional extension of P.

Constant-coefficient operators edit

We next give the example of differential operators with constant coefficients. Let

 

be a polynomial on Rn with real coefficients, where α ranges over a (finite) set of multi-indices. Thus

 

and

 

We also use the notation

 

Then the operator P(D) defined on the space of infinitely differentiable functions of compact support on Rn by

 

is essentially self-adjoint on L2(Rn).

Theorem — Let P a polynomial function on Rn with real coefficients, F the Fourier transform considered as a unitary map L2(Rn) → L2(Rn). Then F*P(D)F is essentially self-adjoint and its unique self-adjoint extension is the operator of multiplication by the function P.

More generally, consider linear differential operators acting on infinitely differentiable complex-valued functions of compact support. If M is an open subset of Rn

 

where aα are (not necessarily constant) infinitely differentiable functions. P is a linear operator

 

Corresponding to P there is another differential operator, the formal adjoint of P

 

Theorem — The adjoint P* of P is a restriction of the distributional extension of the formal adjoint to an appropriate subspace of  . Specifically:

 

Spectral multiplicity theory edit

The multiplication representation of a self-adjoint operator, though extremely useful, is not a canonical representation. This suggests that it is not easy to extract from this representation a criterion to determine when self-adjoint operators A and B are unitarily equivalent. The finest grained representation which we now discuss involves spectral multiplicity. This circle of results is called the HahnHellinger theory of spectral multiplicity.

Uniform multiplicity edit

We first define uniform multiplicity:

Definition. A self-adjoint operator A has uniform multiplicity n where n is such that 1 ≤ n ≤ ω if and only if A is unitarily equivalent to the operator Mf of multiplication by the function f(λ) = λ on

 

where Hn is a Hilbert space of dimension n. The domain of Mf consists of vector-valued functions ψ on R such that

 

Non-negative countably additive measures μ, ν are mutually singular if and only if they are supported on disjoint Borel sets.

Theorem — Let A be a self-adjoint operator on a separable Hilbert space H. Then there is an ω sequence of countably additive finite measures on R (some of which may be identically 0)

 
such that the measures are pairwise singular and A is unitarily equivalent to the operator of multiplication by the function f(λ) = λ on
 

This representation is unique in the following sense: For any two such representations of the same A, the corresponding measures are equivalent in the sense that they have the same sets of measure 0.

Direct integrals edit

The spectral multiplicity theorem can be reformulated using the language of direct integrals of Hilbert spaces:

Theorem — [32] Any self-adjoint operator on a separable Hilbert space is unitarily equivalent to multiplication by the function λ ↦ λ on

 

Unlike the multiplication-operator version of the spectral theorem, the direct-integral version is unique in the sense that the measure equivalence class of μ (or equivalently its sets of measure 0) is uniquely determined and the measurable function   is determined almost everywhere with respect to μ.[33] The function   is the spectral multiplicity function of the operator.

We may now state the classification result for self-adjoint operators: Two self-adjoint operators are unitarily equivalent if and only if (1) their spectra agree as sets, (2) the measures appearing in their direct-integral representations have the same sets of measure zero, and (3) their spectral multiplicity functions agree almost everywhere with respect to the measure in the direct integral.[34]

Example: structure of the Laplacian edit

The Laplacian on Rn is the operator

 

As remarked above, the Laplacian is diagonalized by the Fourier transform. Actually it is more natural to consider the negative of the Laplacian −Δ since as an operator it is non-negative; (see elliptic operator).

Theorem — If n = 1, then −Δ has uniform multiplicity  , otherwise −Δ has uniform multiplicity  . Moreover, the measure μmult may be taken to be Lebesgue measure on [0, ∞).

See also edit

Remarks edit

  1. ^ The reader is invited to perform integration by parts twice and verify that the given boundary conditions for   ensure that the boundary terms in the integration by parts vanish.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Reed & Simon 1980, p. 255-256.
  2. ^ Griffel 2002, pp. 224.
  3. ^ Hall 2013 Corollary 9.9
  4. ^ Griffel 2002, p. 238.
  5. ^ Reed & Simon 1980, p. 195.
  6. ^ Rudin 1991, pp. 326–327.
  7. ^ Griffel 2002, pp. 224–230, 241.
  8. ^ Hall 2013, pp. 133, 177.
  9. ^ de la Madrid Modino 2001, pp. 95–97.
  10. ^ Hall 2013 Section 9.4
  11. ^ Bebiano & da Providência 2019.
  12. ^ Rudin 1991, pp. 327.
  13. ^ Hall 2013, pp. 123–130.
  14. ^ Hall 2013, p. 207.
  15. ^ Akhiezer 1981, p. 152.
  16. ^ Akhiezer 1981, pp. 115–116.
  17. ^ Hall 2013, p. 127,207.
  18. ^ Hall 2013 Section 10.4
  19. ^ Hall 2013, pp. 144–147, 206–207.
  20. ^ Ruelle 1969.
  21. ^ Hall 2013 Proposition 9.27
  22. ^ Hall 2013 Proposition 9.28
  23. ^ Hall 2013 Example 9.25
  24. ^ Hall 2013 Theorem 9.41
  25. ^ Berezin & Shubin 1991 p. 85
  26. ^ Hall 2013 Section 9.10
  27. ^ Berezin & Shubin 1991, pp. 55, 86.
  28. ^ Hall 2013, pp. 193–196.
  29. ^ Hall 2013 Chapter 2, Exercise 4
  30. ^ Bonneau, Faraut & Valent 2001.
  31. ^ Hall 2013 Section 9.6
  32. ^ Hall 2013 Theorems 7.19 and 10.9
  33. ^ Hall 2013 Proposition 7.22
  34. ^ Hall 2013 Proposition 7.24

References edit

  • Akhiezer, Naum Ilʹich (1981). Theory of Linear Operators in Hilbert Space. Boston: Pitman. ISBN 0-273-08496-8.
  • Berezin, F. A.; Shubin, M. A. (1991), The Schrödinger Equation, Kluwer
  • Bonneau, Guy; Faraut, Jacques; Valent, Galliano (2001). "Self-adjoint extensions of operators and the teaching of quantum mechanics". American Journal of Physics. 69 (3): 322–331. arXiv:quant-ph/0103153. Bibcode:2001AmJPh..69..322B. doi:10.1119/1.1328351. ISSN 0002-9505.
  • Bebiano, N.; da Providência, J. (2019-01-01). "Non-self-adjoint operators with real spectra and extensions of quantum mechanics". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 60 (1): 012104. arXiv:1808.08863. Bibcode:2019JMP....60a2104B. doi:10.1063/1.5048577. ISSN 0022-2488.
  • Carey, R. W.; Pincus, J. D. (May 1974). "An Invariant for Certain Operator Algebras". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 71 (5): 1952–1956. Bibcode:1974PNAS...71.1952C. doi:10.1073/pnas.71.5.1952. PMC 388361. PMID 16592156.
  • Carey, R. W.; Pincus, J. D. (1973). "The structure of intertwining isometries". Indiana University Mathematics Journal. 7 (22): 679–703. doi:10.1512/iumj.1973.22.22056.
  • Griffel, D. H. (2002). Applied functional analysis. Mineola, N.Y: Dover. ISBN 0-486-42258-5. OCLC 49250076.
  • Hall, B. C. (2013), Quantum Theory for Mathematicians, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 267, Springer, Bibcode:2013qtm..book.....H, ISBN 978-1461471158
  • Kato, T. (1966), Perturbation Theory for Linear Operators, New York: Springer
  • de la Madrid Modino, R. (2001). Quantum mechanics in rigged Hilbert space language (PhD thesis). Universidad de Valladolid.
  • Moretti, V. (2017), Spectral Theory and Quantum Mechanics:Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theories, Symmetries and Introduction to the Algebraic Formulation, Springer-Verlag, Bibcode:2017stqm.book.....M, ISBN 978-3-319-70706-8
  • Narici, Lawrence; Beckenstein, Edward (2011). Topological Vector Spaces. Pure and applied mathematics (Second ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1584888666. OCLC 144216834.
  • Reed, M.; Simon, B. (1980). Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics: Vol 1: Functional analysis. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-585050-6.
  • Reed, M.; Simon, B. (1972), Methods of Mathematical Physics: Vol 2: Fourier Analysis, Self-Adjointness, Academic Press
  • Rudin, Walter (1991). Functional Analysis. Boston, Mass.: McGraw-Hill Science, Engineering & Mathematics. ISBN 978-0-07-054236-5.
  • Schaefer, Helmut H.; Wolff, Manfred P. (1999). Topological Vector Spaces. GTM. Vol. 8 (Second ed.). New York, NY: Springer New York Imprint Springer. ISBN 978-1-4612-7155-0. OCLC 840278135.
  • Ruelle, D. (1969). "A remark on bound states in potential-scattering theory" (PDF). Il Nuovo Cimento A. 61 (4). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 655–662. Bibcode:1969NCimA..61..655R. doi:10.1007/bf02819607. ISSN 0369-3546. S2CID 56050354.
  • Teschl, G. (2009), Mathematical Methods in Quantum Mechanics; With Applications to Schrödinger Operators, Providence: American Mathematical Society
  • Trèves, François (2006) [1967]. Topological Vector Spaces, Distributions and Kernels. Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-45352-1. OCLC 853623322.
  • Yosida, K. (1965), Functional Analysis, Academic Press

self, adjoint, operator, mathematics, self, adjoint, operator, infinite, dimensional, complex, vector, space, with, inner, product, displaystyle, langle, cdot, cdot, rangle, linear, from, itself, that, adjoint, finite, dimensional, with, given, orthonormal, ba. In mathematics a self adjoint operator on an infinite dimensional complex vector space V with inner product displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle is a linear map A from V to itself that is its own adjoint If V is finite dimensional with a given orthonormal basis this is equivalent to the condition that the matrix of A is a Hermitian matrix i e equal to its conjugate transpose A By the finite dimensional spectral theorem V has an orthonormal basis such that the matrix of A relative to this basis is a diagonal matrix with entries in the real numbers This article deals with applying generalizations of this concept to operators on Hilbert spaces of arbitrary dimension Self adjoint operators are used in functional analysis and quantum mechanics In quantum mechanics their importance lies in the Dirac von Neumann formulation of quantum mechanics in which physical observables such as position momentum angular momentum and spin are represented by self adjoint operators on a Hilbert space Of particular significance is the Hamiltonian operator H displaystyle hat H defined by H ps ℏ22m 2ps Vps displaystyle hat H psi frac hbar 2 2m nabla 2 psi V psi which as an observable corresponds to the total energy of a particle of mass m in a real potential field V Differential operators are an important class of unbounded operators The structure of self adjoint operators on infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces essentially resembles the finite dimensional case That is to say operators are self adjoint if and only if they are unitarily equivalent to real valued multiplication operators With suitable modifications this result can be extended to possibly unbounded operators on infinite dimensional spaces Since an everywhere defined self adjoint operator is necessarily bounded one needs be more attentive to the domain issue in the unbounded case This is explained below in more detail Contents 1 Definitions 2 Bounded self adjoint operators 2 1 Properties 3 Spectrum of self adjoint operators 4 Spectral theorem 4 1 Multiplication operator form of the spectral theorem 4 2 Functional calculus 4 3 Formulation in the physics literature 4 4 Formulation for symmetric operators 4 5 Pure point spectrum 5 Symmetric vs self adjoint operators 5 1 Boundary conditions 5 2 Schrodinger operators with singular potentials 5 3 Non self adjoint operators in quantum mechanics 6 Examples 6 1 A symmetric operator that is not essentially self adjoint 6 2 Constant coefficient operators 7 Spectral multiplicity theory 7 1 Uniform multiplicity 7 2 Direct integrals 7 3 Example structure of the Laplacian 8 See also 9 Remarks 10 Notes 11 ReferencesDefinitions editLet H displaystyle H nbsp be a Hilbert space and A displaystyle A nbsp an unbounded i e not necessarily bounded operator with a dense domain Dom A H displaystyle operatorname Dom A subseteq H nbsp This condition holds automatically when H displaystyle H nbsp is finite dimensional since Dom A H displaystyle operatorname Dom A H nbsp for every linear operator on a finite dimensional space The graph of an arbitrary operator A displaystyle A nbsp is the set G A x Ax x Dom A displaystyle G A x Ax mid x in operatorname Dom A nbsp An operator B displaystyle B nbsp is said to extend A displaystyle A nbsp if G A G B displaystyle G A subseteq G B nbsp This is written as A B displaystyle A subseteq B nbsp Let the inner product displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle nbsp be conjugate linear on the second argument The adjoint operator A displaystyle A nbsp acts on the subspace Dom A H displaystyle operatorname Dom A subseteq H nbsp consisting of the elements y displaystyle y nbsp such that Ax y x A y x Dom A displaystyle langle Ax y rangle langle x A y rangle quad forall x in operatorname Dom A nbsp The densely defined operator A displaystyle A nbsp is called symmetric or Hermitian if A A displaystyle A subset A nbsp i e if Dom A Dom A displaystyle operatorname Dom A subset operatorname Dom A nbsp and Ax A x displaystyle Ax A x nbsp for all x Dom A displaystyle x in operatorname Dom A nbsp Equivalently A displaystyle A nbsp is symmetric if and only if Ax y x Ay x y Dom A displaystyle langle Ax y rangle langle x Ay rangle quad forall x y in operatorname Dom A nbsp Since Dom A Dom A displaystyle operatorname Dom A supset operatorname Dom A nbsp is dense in H displaystyle H nbsp symmetric operators are always closable i e the closure of G A displaystyle G A nbsp is the graph of an operator If A displaystyle A nbsp is a closed extension of A displaystyle A nbsp the smallest closed extension A displaystyle A nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp must be contained in A displaystyle A nbsp Hence A A A displaystyle A subset A subset A nbsp for symmetric operators and A A A displaystyle A A subset A nbsp for closed symmetric operators 1 The densely defined operator A displaystyle A nbsp is called self adjoint if A A displaystyle A A nbsp that is if and only if A displaystyle A nbsp is symmetric and Dom A Dom A displaystyle operatorname Dom A operatorname Dom A nbsp Equivalently a closed symmetric operator A displaystyle A nbsp is self adjoint if and only if A displaystyle A nbsp is symmetric If A displaystyle A nbsp is self adjoint then x Ax displaystyle left langle x Ax right rangle nbsp is real for all x H displaystyle x in H nbsp i e 2 x Ax Ax x x Ax R x H displaystyle langle x Ax rangle overline langle Ax x rangle overline langle x Ax rangle in mathbb R quad forall x in H nbsp A symmetric operator A displaystyle A nbsp is said to be essentially self adjoint if the closure of A displaystyle A nbsp is self adjoint Equivalently A displaystyle A nbsp is essentially self adjoint if it has a unique self adjoint extension In practical terms having an essentially self adjoint operator is almost as good as having a self adjoint operator since we merely need to take the closure to obtain self adjoint operator In physics the term Hermitian refers to symmetric as well as self adjoint operators alike The subtle difference between the two is generally overlooked Bounded self adjoint operators editLet H displaystyle H nbsp be a Hilbert space and A Dom A H displaystyle A operatorname Dom A to H nbsp a symmetric operator According to Hellinger Toeplitz theorem if Dom A H displaystyle operatorname Dom A H nbsp then A displaystyle A nbsp is necessarily bounded 3 A bounded operator A H H displaystyle A H to H nbsp is self adjoint if Ax y x Ay x y H displaystyle langle Ax y rangle langle x Ay rangle quad forall x y in H nbsp Every bounded operator T H H displaystyle T H to H nbsp can be written in the complex form T A iB displaystyle T A iB nbsp where A H H displaystyle A H to H nbsp and B H H displaystyle B H to H nbsp are bounded self adjoint operators 4 Alternatively every positive bounded linear operator A H H displaystyle A H to H nbsp is self adjoint if the Hilbert space H displaystyle H nbsp is complex 5 Properties edit A bounded self adjoint operator A H H displaystyle A H to H nbsp defined on Dom A H displaystyle operatorname Dom left A right H nbsp has the following properties 6 7 A H Im A H displaystyle A H to operatorname Im A subseteq H nbsp is invertible if the image of A displaystyle A nbsp is dense in H displaystyle H nbsp A sup x Ax x H x 1 displaystyle left A right sup left langle x Ax rangle x in H x leq 1 right nbsp The eigenvalues of A displaystyle A nbsp are real and the corresponding eigenvectors are orthogonal If l displaystyle lambda nbsp is an eigenvalue of A displaystyle A nbsp then l A displaystyle lambda leq A nbsp where l A displaystyle lambda A nbsp if x 1 displaystyle x 1 nbsp and A displaystyle A nbsp is a compact self adjoint operator Spectrum of self adjoint operators editSee also Spectrum functional analysis Let A Dom A H displaystyle A operatorname Dom A to H nbsp be an unbounded operator 8 The resolvent set or regular set of A displaystyle A nbsp is defined as r A l C A lI 1bounded and densely defined displaystyle rho A left lambda in mathbb C exists A lambda I 1 text bounded and densely defined right nbsp If A displaystyle A nbsp is bounded the definition reduces to A lI displaystyle A lambda I nbsp being bijective on H displaystyle H nbsp The spectrum of A displaystyle A nbsp is defined as the complement s A C r A displaystyle sigma A mathbb C setminus rho A nbsp In finite dimensions s A C displaystyle sigma A subseteq mathbb C nbsp consists exclusively of complex eigenvalues 9 The spectrum of a self adjoint operator is always real i e s A R displaystyle sigma A subseteq mathbb R nbsp though non self adjoint operators with real spectrum exist as well 10 11 For bounded normal operators however the spectrum is real if and only if the operator is self adjoint 12 This implies for example that a non self adjoint operator with real spectrum is necessarily unbounded As a preliminary define S x Dom A x 1 displaystyle S x in operatorname Dom A mid Vert x Vert 1 nbsp m infx S Ax x displaystyle textstyle m inf x in S langle Ax x rangle nbsp and M supx S Ax x displaystyle textstyle M sup x in S langle Ax x rangle nbsp with m M R displaystyle m M in mathbb R cup pm infty nbsp Then for every l C displaystyle lambda in mathbb C nbsp and every x Dom A displaystyle x in operatorname Dom A nbsp A l x d l x displaystyle Vert A lambda x Vert geq d lambda cdot Vert x Vert nbsp where d l infr m M r l displaystyle textstyle d lambda inf r in m M r lambda nbsp Indeed let x Dom A 0 displaystyle x in operatorname Dom A setminus 0 nbsp By the Cauchy Schwarz inequality A l x A l x x x Ax x x x l x d l x displaystyle Vert A lambda x Vert geq frac langle A lambda x x rangle Vert x Vert left left langle A frac x Vert x Vert frac x Vert x Vert right rangle lambda right cdot Vert x Vert geq d lambda cdot Vert x Vert nbsp If l m M displaystyle lambda notin m M nbsp then d l gt 0 displaystyle d lambda gt 0 nbsp and A lI displaystyle A lambda I nbsp is called bounded below Theorem Self adjoint operator has real spectrum Proof Let A displaystyle A nbsp be self adjoint and denote Rl A lI displaystyle R lambda A lambda I nbsp with l C displaystyle lambda in mathbb C nbsp It suffices to prove that s A m M displaystyle sigma A subseteq m M nbsp Let l C m M displaystyle lambda in mathbb C setminus m M nbsp The goal is to prove the existence and boundedness of Rl 1 displaystyle R lambda 1 nbsp and show that Dom Rl 1 H displaystyle operatorname Dom R lambda 1 H nbsp We begin by showing that ker Rl 0 displaystyle ker R lambda 0 nbsp and Im Rl H displaystyle operatorname Im R lambda H nbsp As shown above Rl displaystyle R lambda nbsp is bounded below i e Rlx d l x displaystyle Vert R lambda x Vert geq d lambda cdot Vert x Vert nbsp with d l gt 0 displaystyle d lambda gt 0 nbsp The triviality of ker Rl displaystyle ker R lambda nbsp follows It remains to show that Im Rl H displaystyle operatorname Im R lambda H nbsp Indeed Im Rl displaystyle operatorname Im R lambda nbsp is closed To prove this pick a sequence yn Rlxn Im Rl displaystyle y n R lambda x n in operatorname Im R lambda nbsp converging to some y H displaystyle y in H nbsp Since xn xm 1d l yn ym displaystyle x n x m leq frac 1 d lambda y n y m nbsp xn displaystyle x n nbsp is fundamental Hence it converges to some x H displaystyle x in H nbsp Furthermore yn lxn Axn displaystyle y n lambda x n Ax n nbsp and yn lxn y lx displaystyle y n lambda x n to y lambda x nbsp The arguments made thus far hold for any symmetric operator It now follows from self adjointness that A displaystyle A nbsp is closed so x Dom A Dom Rl displaystyle x in operatorname Dom A operatorname Dom R lambda nbsp Ax y lx Im A displaystyle Ax y lambda x in operatorname Im A nbsp and consequently y Rlx Im Rl displaystyle y R lambda x in operatorname Im R lambda nbsp Im Rl displaystyle operatorname Im R lambda nbsp is dense in H displaystyle H nbsp The self adjointness of A displaystyle A nbsp i e A A displaystyle A A nbsp implies Rl Rl displaystyle R lambda R bar lambda nbsp and thus Im Rl ker Rl displaystyle left operatorname Im R lambda right perp ker R bar lambda nbsp The subsequent inclusion l C m M displaystyle bar lambda in mathbb C setminus m M nbsp implies d l gt 0 displaystyle d bar lambda gt 0 nbsp and consequently ker Rl 0 displaystyle ker R bar lambda 0 nbsp The operator Rl Dom A H displaystyle R lambda colon operatorname Dom A to H nbsp has now been proven to be bijective so Rl 1 displaystyle R lambda 1 nbsp exists and is everywhere defined The graph of Rl 1 displaystyle R lambda 1 nbsp is the set Rlx x x Dom A displaystyle R lambda x x mid x in operatorname Dom A nbsp Since Rl displaystyle R lambda nbsp is closed because A displaystyle A nbsp is so is Rl 1 displaystyle R lambda 1 nbsp By closed graph theorem Rl 1 displaystyle R lambda 1 nbsp is bounded so l s A displaystyle lambda notin sigma A nbsp Theorem Symmetric operator with real spectrum is self adjoint Proof A displaystyle A nbsp is symmetric therefore A A displaystyle A subseteq A nbsp and A lI A lI displaystyle A lambda I subseteq A lambda I nbsp for every l C displaystyle lambda in mathbb C nbsp Let s A m M displaystyle sigma A subseteq m M nbsp If l m M displaystyle lambda notin m M nbsp then l m M displaystyle bar lambda notin m M nbsp and the operators A lI A l I Dom A H displaystyle A lambda I A bar lambda I operatorname Dom A to H nbsp are both bijective A lI A lI displaystyle A lambda I A lambda I nbsp Indeed H Im A lI Im A lI displaystyle H operatorname Im A lambda I subseteq operatorname Im A lambda I nbsp That is if Dom A lI Dom A lI displaystyle operatorname Dom A lambda I subsetneq operatorname Dom A lambda I nbsp then A lI displaystyle A lambda I nbsp would not be injective i e ker A lI 0 displaystyle ker A lambda I neq 0 nbsp But Im A l I ker A lI displaystyle operatorname Im A bar lambda I perp ker A lambda I nbsp and hence Im A l I H displaystyle operatorname Im A bar lambda I neq H nbsp This contradicts the bijectiveness The equality A lI A lI displaystyle A lambda I A lambda I nbsp shows that A A displaystyle A A nbsp i e A displaystyle A nbsp is self adjoint Indeed it suffices to prove that A A displaystyle A subseteq A nbsp For every x Dom A displaystyle x in operatorname Dom A nbsp and y A x displaystyle y A x nbsp A x y A lI x y lx A lI x y lx Ax y displaystyle A x y Leftrightarrow A lambda I x y lambda x Leftrightarrow A lambda I x y lambda x Leftrightarrow Ax y nbsp Spectral theorem editMain article Spectral theorem In the physics literature the spectral theorem is often stated by saying that a self adjoint operator has an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors Physicists are well aware however of the phenomenon of continuous spectrum thus when they speak of an orthonormal basis they mean either an orthonormal basis in the classic sense or some continuous analog thereof In the case of the momentum operator P iddx textstyle P i frac d dx nbsp for example physicists would say that the eigenvectors are the functions fp x eipx displaystyle f p x e ipx nbsp which are clearly not in the Hilbert space L2 R displaystyle L 2 mathbb R nbsp Physicists would say that the eigenvectors are non normalizable Physicists would then go on to say that these generalized eigenvectors form an orthonormal basis in the continuous sense for L2 R displaystyle L 2 mathbb R nbsp after replacing the usual Kronecker delta di j displaystyle delta i j nbsp by a Dirac delta function d p p displaystyle delta left p p right nbsp 13 Although these statements may seem disconcerting to mathematicians they can be made rigorous by use of the Fourier transform which allows a general L2 displaystyle L 2 nbsp function to be expressed as a superposition i e integral of the functions eipx displaystyle e ipx nbsp even though these functions are not in L2 displaystyle L 2 nbsp The Fourier transform diagonalizes the momentum operator that is it converts it into the operator of multiplication by p displaystyle p nbsp where p displaystyle p nbsp is the variable of the Fourier transform The spectral theorem in general can be expressed similarly as the possibility of diagonalizing an operator by showing it is unitarily equivalent to a multiplication operator Other versions of the spectral theorem are similarly intended to capture the idea that a self adjoint operator can have eigenvectors that are not actually in the Hilbert space in question Multiplication operator form of the spectral theorem edit Firstly let X S m displaystyle X Sigma mu nbsp be a s finite measure space and h X R displaystyle h X to mathbb R nbsp a measurable function on X displaystyle X nbsp Then the operator Th Dom Th L2 X m displaystyle T h operatorname Dom T h to L 2 X mu nbsp defined by Thps x h x ps x ps Dom Th displaystyle T h psi x h x psi x quad forall psi in operatorname Dom T h nbsp where Dom Th ps L2 X m hps L2 X m displaystyle operatorname Dom T h left psi in L 2 X mu h psi in L 2 X mu right nbsp is called a multiplication operator 14 Any multiplication operator is a self adjoint operator 15 Secondly two operators A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp with dense domains Dom A H1 displaystyle operatorname Dom A subseteq H 1 nbsp and Dom B H2 displaystyle operatorname Dom B subseteq H 2 nbsp in Hilbert spaces H1 displaystyle H 1 nbsp and H2 displaystyle H 2 nbsp respectively are unitarily equivalent if and only if there is a unitary transformation U H1 H2 displaystyle U H 1 to H 2 nbsp such that 16 UDom A Dom B displaystyle U operatorname Dom A operatorname Dom B nbsp UAU 13 B3 3 Dom B displaystyle UAU 1 xi B xi quad forall xi in operatorname Dom B nbsp If unitarily equivalent A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp are bounded then A H1 B H2 displaystyle A H 1 B H 2 nbsp if A displaystyle A nbsp is self adjoint then so is B displaystyle B nbsp Theorem Any self adjoint operator A displaystyle A nbsp on a separable Hilbert space is unitarily equivalent to a multiplication operator i e 17 UAU 1ps x h x ps x ps UDom A displaystyle UAU 1 psi x h x psi x quad forall psi in U operatorname Dom A nbsp The spectral theorem holds for both bounded and unbounded self adjoint operators Proof of the latter follows by reduction to the spectral theorem for unitary operators 18 We might note that if T displaystyle T nbsp is multiplication by h displaystyle h nbsp then the spectrum of T displaystyle T nbsp is just the essential range of h displaystyle h nbsp More complete versions of the spectral theorem exist as well that involve direct integrals and carry with it the notion of generalized eigenvectors 19 Functional calculus edit One application of the spectral theorem is to define a functional calculus That is if f displaystyle f nbsp is a function on the real line and T displaystyle T nbsp is a self adjoint operator we wish to define the operator f T displaystyle f T nbsp The spectral theorem shows that if T displaystyle T nbsp is represented as the operator of multiplication by h displaystyle h nbsp then f T displaystyle f T nbsp is the operator of multiplication by the composition f h displaystyle f circ h nbsp One example from quantum mechanics is the case where T displaystyle T nbsp is the Hamiltonian operator H displaystyle hat H nbsp If H displaystyle hat H nbsp has a true orthonormal basis of eigenvectors ej displaystyle e j nbsp with eigenvalues lj displaystyle lambda j nbsp then f H e itH ℏ displaystyle f hat H e it hat H hbar nbsp can be defined as the unique bounded operator with eigenvalues f lj e itlj ℏ displaystyle f lambda j e it lambda j hbar nbsp such that f H ej f lj ej displaystyle f hat H e j f lambda j e j nbsp The goal of functional calculus is to extend this idea to the case where T displaystyle T nbsp has continuous spectrum i e where T displaystyle T nbsp has no normalizable eigenvectors It has been customary to introduce the following notation E l 1 l T displaystyle operatorname E lambda mathbf 1 infty lambda T nbsp where 1 l displaystyle mathbf 1 infty lambda nbsp is the indicator function of the interval l displaystyle infty lambda nbsp The family of projection operators E l is called resolution of the identity for T Moreover the following Stieltjes integral representation for T can be proved T ldE l displaystyle T int infty infty lambda d operatorname E lambda nbsp Formulation in the physics literature edit In quantum mechanics Dirac notation is used as combined expression for both the spectral theorem and the Borel functional calculus That is if H is self adjoint and f is a Borel function f H dE PSE f E PSE displaystyle f H int dE left Psi E rangle f E langle Psi E right nbsp with H PSE E PSE displaystyle H left Psi E right rangle E left Psi E right rangle nbsp where the integral runs over the whole spectrum of H The notation suggests that H is diagonalized by the eigenvectors PSE Such a notation is purely formal The resolution of the identity sometimes called projection valued measures formally resembles the rank 1 projections PSE PSE displaystyle left Psi E right rangle left langle Psi E right nbsp In the Dirac notation projective measurements are described via eigenvalues and eigenstates both purely formal objects As one would expect this does not survive passage to the resolution of the identity In the latter formulation measurements are described using the spectral measure of PS displaystyle Psi rangle nbsp if the system is prepared in PS displaystyle Psi rangle nbsp prior to the measurement Alternatively if one would like to preserve the notion of eigenstates and make it rigorous rather than merely formal one can replace the state space by a suitable rigged Hilbert space If f 1 the theorem is referred to as resolution of unity I dE PSE PSE displaystyle I int dE left Psi E right rangle left langle Psi E right nbsp In the case Heff H iG displaystyle H text eff H i Gamma nbsp is the sum of an Hermitian H and a skew Hermitian see skew Hermitian matrix operator iG displaystyle i Gamma nbsp one defines the biorthogonal basis set Heff PSE E PSE displaystyle H text eff left Psi E right rangle E left Psi E right rangle nbsp and write the spectral theorem as f Heff dE PSE f E PSE displaystyle f left H text eff right int dE left Psi E right rangle f E left langle Psi E right nbsp See Feshbach Fano partitioning method for the context where such operators appear in scattering theory Formulation for symmetric operators edit The spectral theorem applies only to self adjoint operators and not in general to symmetric operators Nevertheless we can at this point give a simple example of a symmetric specifically an essentially self adjoint operator that has an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors Consider the complex Hilbert space L2 0 1 and the differential operator A d2dx2 displaystyle A frac d 2 dx 2 nbsp with Dom A displaystyle mathrm Dom A nbsp consisting of all complex valued infinitely differentiable functions f on 0 1 satisfying the boundary conditions f 0 f 1 0 displaystyle f 0 f 1 0 nbsp Then integration by parts of the inner product shows that A is symmetric nb 1 The eigenfunctions of A are the sinusoids fn x sin npx n 1 2 displaystyle f n x sin n pi x qquad n 1 2 ldots nbsp with the real eigenvalues n2p2 the well known orthogonality of the sine functions follows as a consequence of A being symmetric The operator A can be seen to have a compact inverse meaning that the corresponding differential equation Af g is solved by some integral and therefore compact operator G The compact symmetric operator G then has a countable family of eigenvectors which are complete in L2 The same can then be said for A Pure point spectrum edit Not to be confused with Discrete spectrum mathematics A self adjoint operator A on H has pure point spectrum if and only if H has an orthonormal basis ei i I consisting of eigenvectors for A Example The Hamiltonian for the harmonic oscillator has a quadratic potential V that is D x 2 displaystyle Delta x 2 nbsp This Hamiltonian has pure point spectrum this is typical for bound state Hamiltonians in quantum mechanics clarification needed 20 As was pointed out in a previous example a sufficient condition that an unbounded symmetric operator has eigenvectors which form a Hilbert space basis is that it has a compact inverse Symmetric vs self adjoint operators editSee also Extensions of symmetric operators Although the distinction between a symmetric operator and a essentially self adjoint operator is subtle it is important since self adjointness is the hypothesis in the spectral theorem Here we discuss some concrete examples of the distinction Boundary conditions edit In the case where the Hilbert space is a space of functions on a bounded domain these distinctions have to do with a familiar issue in quantum physics One cannot define an operator such as the momentum or Hamiltonian operator on a bounded domain without specifying boundary conditions In mathematical terms choosing the boundary conditions amounts to choosing an appropriate domain for the operator Consider for example the Hilbert space L2 0 1 displaystyle L 2 0 1 nbsp the space of square integrable functions on the interval 0 1 Let us define a momentum operator A on this space by the usual formula setting Planck s constant equal to 1 Af idfdx displaystyle Af i frac df dx nbsp We must now specify a domain for A which amounts to choosing boundary conditions If we choose Dom A smooth functions displaystyle operatorname Dom A left text smooth functions right nbsp then A is not symmetric because the boundary terms in the integration by parts do not vanish If we choose Dom A smooth functionsf f 0 f 1 0 displaystyle operatorname Dom A left text smooth functions f mid f 0 f 1 0 right nbsp then using integration by parts one can easily verify that A is symmetric This operator is not essentially self adjoint 21 however basically because we have specified too many boundary conditions on the domain of A which makes the domain of the adjoint too big see also the example below Specifically with the above choice of domain for A the domain of the closure Acl displaystyle A mathrm cl nbsp of A is Dom Acl functions f with two derivatives in L2 f 0 f 1 0 displaystyle operatorname Dom left A mathrm cl right left text functions f text with two derivatives in L 2 mid f 0 f 1 0 right nbsp whereas the domain of the adjoint A displaystyle A nbsp of A is Dom A functions f with two derivatives in L2 displaystyle operatorname Dom left A right left text functions f text with two derivatives in L 2 right nbsp That is to say the domain of the closure has the same boundary conditions as the domain of A itself just a less stringent smoothness assumption Meanwhile since there are too many boundary conditions on A there are too few actually none at all in this case for A displaystyle A nbsp If we compute g Af displaystyle langle g Af rangle nbsp for f Dom A displaystyle f in operatorname Dom A nbsp using integration by parts then since f displaystyle f nbsp vanishes at both ends of the interval no boundary conditions on g displaystyle g nbsp are needed to cancel out the boundary terms in the integration by parts Thus any sufficiently smooth function g displaystyle g nbsp is in the domain of A displaystyle A nbsp with A g idg dx displaystyle A g i dg dx nbsp 22 Since the domain of the closure and the domain of the adjoint do not agree A is not essentially self adjoint After all a general result says that the domain of the adjoint of Acl displaystyle A mathrm cl nbsp is the same as the domain of the adjoint of A Thus in this case the domain of the adjoint of Acl displaystyle A mathrm cl nbsp is bigger than the domain of Acl displaystyle A mathrm cl nbsp itself showing that Acl displaystyle A mathrm cl nbsp is not self adjoint which by definition means that A is not essentially self adjoint The problem with the preceding example is that we imposed too many boundary conditions on the domain of A A better choice of domain would be to use periodic boundary conditions Dom A smooth functionsf f 0 f 1 displaystyle operatorname Dom A text smooth functions f mid f 0 f 1 nbsp With this domain A is essentially self adjoint 23 In this case we can understand the implications of the domain issues for the spectral theorem If we use the first choice of domain with no boundary conditions all functions fb x ebx displaystyle f beta x e beta x nbsp for b C displaystyle beta in mathbb C nbsp are eigenvectors with eigenvalues ib displaystyle i beta nbsp and so the spectrum is the whole complex plane If we use the second choice of domain with Dirichlet boundary conditions A has no eigenvectors at all If we use the third choice of domain with periodic boundary conditions we can find an orthonormal basis of eigenvectors for A the functions fn x e2pinx displaystyle f n x e 2 pi inx nbsp Thus in this case finding a domain such that A is self adjoint is a compromise the domain has to be small enough so that A is symmetric but large enough so that D A D A displaystyle D A D A nbsp Schrodinger operators with singular potentials edit A more subtle example of the distinction between symmetric and essentially self adjoint operators comes from Schrodinger operators in quantum mechanics If the potential energy is singular particularly if the potential is unbounded below the associated Schrodinger operator may fail to be essentially self adjoint In one dimension for example the operator H P22m X4 displaystyle hat H frac P 2 2m X 4 nbsp is not essentially self adjoint on the space of smooth rapidly decaying functions 24 In this case the failure of essential self adjointness reflects a pathology in the underlying classical system A classical particle with a x4 displaystyle x 4 nbsp potential escapes to infinity in finite time This operator does not have a unique self adjoint but it does admit self adjoint extensions obtained by specifying boundary conditions at infinity Since H displaystyle hat H nbsp is a real operator it commutes with complex conjugation Thus the deficiency indices are automatically equal which is the condition for having a self adjoint extension In this case if we initially define H displaystyle hat H nbsp on the space of smooth rapidly decaying functions the adjoint will be the same operator i e given by the same formula but on the largest possible domain namely Dom H twice differentiable functions f L2 R ℏ22md2fdx2 x4f x L2 R displaystyle operatorname Dom left hat H right left text twice differentiable functions f in L 2 mathbb R left left frac hbar 2 2m frac d 2 f dx 2 x 4 f x right in L 2 mathbb R right right nbsp It is then possible to show that H displaystyle hat H nbsp is not a symmetric operator which certainly implies that H displaystyle hat H nbsp is not essentially self adjoint Indeed H displaystyle hat H nbsp has eigenvectors with pure imaginary eigenvalues 25 26 which is impossible for a symmetric operator This strange occurrence is possible because of a cancellation between the two terms in H displaystyle hat H nbsp There are functions f displaystyle f nbsp in the domain of H displaystyle hat H nbsp for which neither d2f dx2 displaystyle d 2 f dx 2 nbsp nor x4f x displaystyle x 4 f x nbsp is separately in L2 R displaystyle L 2 mathbb R nbsp but the combination of them occurring in H displaystyle hat H nbsp is in L2 R displaystyle L 2 mathbb R nbsp This allows for H displaystyle hat H nbsp to be nonsymmetric even though both d2 dx2 displaystyle d 2 dx 2 nbsp and X4 displaystyle X 4 nbsp are symmetric operators This sort of cancellation does not occur if we replace the repelling potential x4 displaystyle x 4 nbsp with the confining potential x4 displaystyle x 4 nbsp Non self adjoint operators in quantum mechanics edit See also Non Hermitian quantum mechanics In quantum mechanics observables correspond to self adjoint operators By Stone s theorem on one parameter unitary groups self adjoint operators are precisely the infinitesimal generators of unitary groups of time evolution operators However many physical problems are formulated as a time evolution equation involving differential operators for which the Hamiltonian is only symmetric In such cases either the Hamiltonian is essentially self adjoint in which case the physical problem has unique solutions or one attempts to find self adjoint extensions of the Hamiltonian corresponding to different types of boundary conditions or conditions at infinity Example The one dimensional Schrodinger operator with the potential V x 1 x a displaystyle V x 1 x alpha nbsp defined initially on smooth compactly supported functions is essentially self adjoint for 0 lt a 2 but not for a gt 2 27 28 The failure of essential self adjointness for a gt 2 displaystyle alpha gt 2 nbsp has a counterpart in the classical dynamics of a particle with potential V x displaystyle V x nbsp The classical particle escapes to infinity in finite time 29 Example There is no self adjoint momentum operator p displaystyle p nbsp for a particle moving on a half line Nevertheless the Hamiltonian p2 displaystyle p 2 nbsp of a free particle on a half line has several self adjoint extensions corresponding to different types of boundary conditions Physically these boundary conditions are related to reflections of the particle at the origin 30 Examples editA symmetric operator that is not essentially self adjoint edit We first consider the Hilbert space L2 0 1 displaystyle L 2 0 1 nbsp and the differential operator D ϕ 1iϕ displaystyle D phi mapsto frac 1 i phi nbsp defined on the space of continuously differentiable complex valued functions on 0 1 satisfying the boundary conditions ϕ 0 ϕ 1 0 displaystyle phi 0 phi 1 0 nbsp Then D is a symmetric operator as can be shown by integration by parts The spaces N N defined below are given respectively by the distributional solutions to the equation iu iu iu iu displaystyle begin aligned iu amp iu iu amp iu end aligned nbsp which are in L2 0 1 One can show that each one of these solution spaces is 1 dimensional generated by the functions x e x and x ex respectively This shows that D is not essentially self adjoint 31 but does have self adjoint extensions These self adjoint extensions are parametrized by the space of unitary mappings N N which in this case happens to be the unit circle T In this case the failure of essential self adjointenss is due to an incorrect choice of boundary conditions in the definition of the domain of D displaystyle D nbsp Since D displaystyle D nbsp is a first order operator only one boundary condition is needed to ensure that D displaystyle D nbsp is symmetric If we replaced the boundary conditions given above by the single boundary condition ϕ 0 ϕ 1 displaystyle phi 0 phi 1 nbsp then D would still be symmetric and would now in fact be essentially self adjoint This change of boundary conditions gives one particular essentially self adjoint extension of D Other essentially self adjoint extensions come from imposing boundary conditions of the form ϕ 1 ei8ϕ 0 displaystyle phi 1 e i theta phi 0 nbsp This simple example illustrates a general fact about self adjoint extensions of symmetric differential operators P on an open set M They are determined by the unitary maps between the eigenvalue spaces N u L2 M Pdistu iu displaystyle N pm left u in L 2 M P operatorname dist u pm iu right nbsp where Pdist is the distributional extension of P Constant coefficient operators edit We next give the example of differential operators with constant coefficients Let P x acaxa displaystyle P left vec x right sum alpha c alpha x alpha nbsp be a polynomial on Rn with real coefficients where a ranges over a finite set of multi indices Thus a a1 a2 an displaystyle alpha alpha 1 alpha 2 ldots alpha n nbsp and xa x1a1x2a2 xnan displaystyle x alpha x 1 alpha 1 x 2 alpha 2 cdots x n alpha n nbsp We also use the notation Da 1i a x1a1 x2a2 xnan displaystyle D alpha frac 1 i alpha partial x 1 alpha 1 partial x 2 alpha 2 cdots partial x n alpha n nbsp Then the operator P D defined on the space of infinitely differentiable functions of compact support on Rn by P D ϕ acaDa ϕ displaystyle P operatorname D phi sum alpha c alpha operatorname D alpha phi nbsp is essentially self adjoint on L2 Rn Theorem Let P a polynomial function on Rn with real coefficients F the Fourier transform considered as a unitary map L2 Rn L2 Rn Then F P D F is essentially self adjoint and its unique self adjoint extension is the operator of multiplication by the function P More generally consider linear differential operators acting on infinitely differentiable complex valued functions of compact support If M is an open subset of Rn Pϕ x aaa x Daϕ x displaystyle P phi x sum alpha a alpha x left D alpha phi right x nbsp where aa are not necessarily constant infinitely differentiable functions P is a linear operator C0 M C0 M displaystyle C 0 infty M to C 0 infty M nbsp Corresponding to P there is another differential operator the formal adjoint of P P formϕ aDa aa ϕ displaystyle P mathrm form phi sum alpha D alpha left overline a alpha phi right nbsp Theorem The adjoint P of P is a restriction of the distributional extension of the formal adjoint to an appropriate subspace of L2 displaystyle L 2 nbsp Specifically dom P u L2 M P formu L2 M displaystyle operatorname dom P left u in L 2 M P mathrm form u in L 2 M right nbsp Spectral multiplicity theory editThe multiplication representation of a self adjoint operator though extremely useful is not a canonical representation This suggests that it is not easy to extract from this representation a criterion to determine when self adjoint operators A and B are unitarily equivalent The finest grained representation which we now discuss involves spectral multiplicity This circle of results is called the Hahn Hellinger theory of spectral multiplicity Uniform multiplicity edit We first define uniform multiplicity Definition A self adjoint operator A has uniform multiplicity n where n is such that 1 n w if and only if A is unitarily equivalent to the operator Mf of multiplication by the function f l l on Lm2 R Hn ps R Hn ps measurable and R ps t 2dm t lt displaystyle L mu 2 left mathbf R mathbf H n right left psi mathbf R to mathbf H n psi mbox measurable and int mathbf R psi t 2 d mu t lt infty right nbsp where Hn is a Hilbert space of dimension n The domain of Mf consists of vector valued functions ps on R such that R l 2 ps l 2dm l lt displaystyle int mathbf R lambda 2 psi lambda 2 d mu lambda lt infty nbsp Non negative countably additive measures m n are mutually singular if and only if they are supported on disjoint Borel sets Theorem Let A be a self adjoint operator on a separable Hilbert space H Then there is an w sequence of countably additive finite measures on R some of which may be identically 0 mℓ 1 ℓ w displaystyle left mu ell right 1 leq ell leq omega nbsp such that the measures are pairwise singular and A is unitarily equivalent to the operator of multiplication by the function f l l on 1 ℓ wLmℓ2 R Hℓ displaystyle bigoplus 1 leq ell leq omega L mu ell 2 left mathbf R mathbf H ell right nbsp This representation is unique in the following sense For any two such representations of the same A the corresponding measures are equivalent in the sense that they have the same sets of measure 0 Direct integrals edit The spectral multiplicity theorem can be reformulated using the language of direct integrals of Hilbert spaces Theorem 32 Any self adjoint operator on a separable Hilbert space is unitarily equivalent to multiplication by the function l l on R Hldm l displaystyle int mathbf R oplus H lambda d mu lambda nbsp Unlike the multiplication operator version of the spectral theorem the direct integral version is unique in the sense that the measure equivalence class of m or equivalently its sets of measure 0 is uniquely determined and the measurable function l dim Hl displaystyle lambda mapsto mathrm dim H lambda nbsp is determined almost everywhere with respect to m 33 The function l dim Hl displaystyle lambda mapsto operatorname dim left H lambda right nbsp is the spectral multiplicity function of the operator We may now state the classification result for self adjoint operators Two self adjoint operators are unitarily equivalent if and only if 1 their spectra agree as sets 2 the measures appearing in their direct integral representations have the same sets of measure zero and 3 their spectral multiplicity functions agree almost everywhere with respect to the measure in the direct integral 34 Example structure of the Laplacian edit The Laplacian on Rn is the operator D i 1n xi2 displaystyle Delta sum i 1 n partial x i 2 nbsp As remarked above the Laplacian is diagonalized by the Fourier transform Actually it is more natural to consider the negative of the Laplacian D since as an operator it is non negative see elliptic operator Theorem If n 1 then D has uniform multiplicity mult 2 displaystyle text mult 2 nbsp otherwise D has uniform multiplicity mult w displaystyle text mult omega nbsp Moreover the measure mmult may be taken to be Lebesgue measure on 0 See also editCompact operator on Hilbert space Unbounded operator Hermitian adjoint Normal operator Positive operatorRemarks edit The reader is invited to perform integration by parts twice and verify that the given boundary conditions for Dom A displaystyle operatorname Dom A nbsp ensure that the boundary terms in the integration by parts vanish Notes edit Reed amp Simon 1980 p 255 256 Griffel 2002 pp 224 Hall 2013 Corollary 9 9 Griffel 2002 p 238 Reed amp Simon 1980 p 195 Rudin 1991 pp 326 327 Griffel 2002 pp 224 230 241 Hall 2013 pp 133 177 de la Madrid Modino 2001 pp 95 97 Hall 2013 Section 9 4 Bebiano amp da Providencia 2019 Rudin 1991 pp 327 Hall 2013 pp 123 130 Hall 2013 p 207 Akhiezer 1981 p 152 Akhiezer 1981 pp 115 116 Hall 2013 p 127 207 Hall 2013 Section 10 4 Hall 2013 pp 144 147 206 207 Ruelle 1969 Hall 2013 Proposition 9 27 Hall 2013 Proposition 9 28 Hall 2013 Example 9 25 Hall 2013 Theorem 9 41 Berezin amp Shubin 1991 p 85 Hall 2013 Section 9 10 Berezin amp Shubin 1991 pp 55 86 Hall 2013 pp 193 196 Hall 2013 Chapter 2 Exercise 4 Bonneau Faraut amp Valent 2001 Hall 2013 Section 9 6 Hall 2013 Theorems 7 19 and 10 9 Hall 2013 Proposition 7 22 Hall 2013 Proposition 7 24References editAkhiezer Naum Ilʹich 1981 Theory of Linear Operators in Hilbert Space Boston Pitman ISBN 0 273 08496 8 Berezin F A Shubin M A 1991 The Schrodinger Equation Kluwer Bonneau Guy Faraut Jacques Valent Galliano 2001 Self adjoint extensions of operators and the teaching of quantum mechanics American Journal of Physics 69 3 322 331 arXiv quant ph 0103153 Bibcode 2001AmJPh 69 322B doi 10 1119 1 1328351 ISSN 0002 9505 Bebiano N da Providencia J 2019 01 01 Non self adjoint operators with real spectra and extensions of quantum mechanics Journal of Mathematical Physics 60 1 012104 arXiv 1808 08863 Bibcode 2019JMP 60a2104B doi 10 1063 1 5048577 ISSN 0022 2488 Carey R W Pincus J D May 1974 An Invariant for Certain Operator Algebras Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 71 5 1952 1956 Bibcode 1974PNAS 71 1952C doi 10 1073 pnas 71 5 1952 PMC 388361 PMID 16592156 Carey R W Pincus J D 1973 The structure of intertwining isometries Indiana University Mathematics Journal 7 22 679 703 doi 10 1512 iumj 1973 22 22056 Griffel D H 2002 Applied functional analysis Mineola N Y Dover ISBN 0 486 42258 5 OCLC 49250076 Hall B C 2013 Quantum Theory for Mathematicians Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 267 Springer Bibcode 2013qtm book H ISBN 978 1461471158 Kato T 1966 Perturbation Theory for Linear Operators New York Springer de la Madrid Modino R 2001 Quantum mechanics in rigged Hilbert space language PhD thesis Universidad de Valladolid Moretti V 2017 Spectral Theory and Quantum Mechanics Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theories Symmetries and Introduction to the Algebraic Formulation Springer Verlag Bibcode 2017stqm book M ISBN 978 3 319 70706 8 Narici Lawrence Beckenstein Edward 2011 Topological Vector Spaces Pure and applied mathematics Second ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 978 1584888666 OCLC 144216834 Reed M Simon B 1980 Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics Vol 1 Functional analysis Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 585050 6 Reed M Simon B 1972 Methods of Mathematical Physics Vol 2 Fourier Analysis Self Adjointness Academic Press Rudin Walter 1991 Functional Analysis Boston Mass McGraw Hill Science Engineering amp Mathematics ISBN 978 0 07 054236 5 Schaefer Helmut H Wolff Manfred P 1999 Topological Vector Spaces GTM Vol 8 Second ed New York NY Springer New York Imprint Springer ISBN 978 1 4612 7155 0 OCLC 840278135 Ruelle D 1969 A remark on bound states in potential scattering theory PDF Il Nuovo Cimento A 61 4 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 655 662 Bibcode 1969NCimA 61 655R doi 10 1007 bf02819607 ISSN 0369 3546 S2CID 56050354 Teschl G 2009 Mathematical Methods in Quantum Mechanics With Applications to Schrodinger Operators Providence American Mathematical Society Treves Francois 2006 1967 Topological Vector Spaces Distributions and Kernels Mineola N Y Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 45352 1 OCLC 853623322 Yosida K 1965 Functional Analysis Academic Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Self adjoint operator amp oldid 1204914614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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