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Definition and Basic Properties

Hermitian Operators Defined

Operator \( A \) on Hilbert space \( \mathcal{H} \) is Hermitian (self-adjoint) if \( A = A^\dagger \), where \( A^\dagger \) is the adjoint. Domain \( D(A) = D(A^\dagger) \). Ensures real expectation values.

Linearity and Domain

Hermitian operators are linear: \( A(\alpha \psi + \beta \phi) = \alpha A\psi + \beta A\phi \). Domains are dense subsets of \( \mathcal{H} \) to guarantee well-defined adjoints.

Bounded vs Unbounded

Hermitian operators may be bounded (norm finite) or unbounded (e.g. momentum operator). Unbounded operators require careful domain specification.

Mathematical Structure

Adjoint Operator

Adjoint \( A^\dagger \) defined by \( \langle A\psi | \phi \rangle = \langle \psi | A^\dagger \phi \rangle \) for all \( \psi, \phi \in \mathcal{H} \). Hermiticity demands \( A = A^\dagger \).

Domain Considerations

Operator domains must satisfy \( D(A) = D(A^\dagger) \). Essential for self-adjointness rather than mere symmetry.

Closedness and Self-Adjointness

Hermitian operators are closed or closable. Self-adjointness implies closedness; crucial for spectral analysis.

Physical Interpretation

Observables in Quantum Mechanics

Physical observables correspond to Hermitian operators. Eigenvalues represent possible measurement outcomes.

Expectation Values

Expectation value \( \langle \psi | A | \psi \rangle \) is real for Hermitian \( A \), consistent with physical quantities.

Probability and Measurement

Eigenstates form measurement bases. Probability of outcome linked to projection of state onto eigenvector.

Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors

Real Eigenvalues

Hermitian operators have purely real eigenvalues: \( A|\phi\rangle = \lambda |\phi\rangle, \lambda \in \mathbb{R} \).

Orthogonality

Eigenvectors corresponding to distinct eigenvalues are orthogonal: \( \langle \phi_i | \phi_j \rangle = 0, i \neq j \).

Completeness

Eigenvectors form a complete basis in \( \mathcal{H} \), enabling spectral decomposition.

Spectral Theorem

Statement

Every Hermitian operator admits a spectral decomposition: \( A = \int \lambda dE(\lambda) \), where \( E(\lambda) \) is a projection-valued measure.

Projection-Valued Measures

Families of orthogonal projections satisfying \( E(\lambda)E(\mu) = E(\min(\lambda,\mu)) \), crucial for representing observables.

Functional Calculus

Enables defining functions \( f(A) = \int f(\lambda) dE(\lambda) \), extending operator functions beyond polynomials.

A = ∫ λ dE(λ)f(A) = ∫ f(λ) dE(λ)  

Examples of Hermitian Operators

Position Operator \(\hat{x}\)

Defined on \( L^2(\mathbb{R}) \), acts as multiplication: \( (\hat{x}\psi)(x) = x\psi(x) \). Self-adjoint with continuous spectrum \( \mathbb{R} \).

Momentum Operator \(\hat{p}\)

Defined as \( \hat{p} = -i\hbar \frac{d}{dx} \) on suitable domains. Hermitian and self-adjoint with continuous spectrum.

Spin Operators

Finite-dimensional Hermitian matrices acting on spin space. Eigenvalues correspond to spin projections.

Operator Definition Spectrum
Position \(\hat{x}\) Multiplication by \(x\) Continuous, \(\mathbb{R}\)
Momentum \(\hat{p}\) \(-i\hbar \frac{d}{dx}\) Continuous, \(\mathbb{R}\)
Spin \(S_z\) Pauli matrix \(\sigma_z\) Discrete, \(\pm \hbar/2\)

Hermitian vs Symmetric Operators

Symmetric Operators

Operator \(A\) is symmetric if \( \langle A\psi|\phi \rangle = \langle \psi|A\phi \rangle \) for all \( \psi, \phi \in D(A) \), but domain may differ from adjoint's.

Self-Adjointness as Stronger Condition

Hermiticity (self-adjointness) requires \(A = A^\dagger\) including domain equality. Ensures spectral theorem applicability.

Example: Momentum Operator Domains

Momentum operator symmetric on smooth compact support functions but self-adjoint only on specific Sobolev spaces.

Symmetric: A ⊆ A†Self-adjoint: A = A† and D(A) = D(A†)  

Measurement Postulate and Hermitian Operators

Measurement Outcomes

Possible results: eigenvalues of Hermitian operator representing observable.

State Collapse

Post-measurement state projects onto eigenvector associated with measured eigenvalue.

Probability Rule

Probability of outcome \(\lambda\): \( |\langle \phi_\lambda | \psi \rangle|^2 \), where \( \phi_\lambda \) is eigenvector.

Commutation Relations and Compatibility

Commutators

Operators \(A, B\) commute if \( [A,B] = AB - BA = 0 \). Compatible observables measured simultaneously.

Uncertainty Principle

Non-commuting Hermitian operators imply uncertainty relations: \( \Delta A \Delta B \geq \frac{1}{2}|\langle [A,B] \rangle| \).

Examples

Position and momentum operators satisfy \( [\hat{x}, \hat{p}] = i \hbar \), non-commuting.

Functional Calculus for Hermitian Operators

Definition

Using spectral theorem, define \( f(A) = \int f(\lambda) dE(\lambda) \) for measurable \( f \).

Applications

Exponentials \( e^{iA} \), projectors, and resolvents derived via functional calculus.

Example: Time Evolution

Time propagator \( U(t) = e^{-iHt/\hbar} \) from Hamiltonian \(H\) Hermitian operator.

Extensions and Generalizations

Unbounded Operators

Many physical observables are unbounded Hermitian operators requiring rigged Hilbert space treatment.

Positive Operators

Hermitian operators with non-negative spectrum used in density matrices and quantum states.

Non-Hermitian Generalizations

PT-symmetric and pseudo-Hermitian operators studied beyond standard quantum mechanics framework.

Applications in Quantum Mechanics

Quantum Measurement

Hermitian operators encode measurement outcomes and probabilities in quantum experiments.

Quantum Dynamics

Hamiltonian Hermitian operator governs system evolution via Schrödinger equation.

Quantum Computing

Hermitian operators represent observables and measurement operators in qubit manipulation.

Application Area Role of Hermitian Operators
Measurement Define observable outcomes and probabilities
Dynamics Hamiltonian operator generating time evolution
Quantum Computing Observable measurement and state manipulation

References

  • J.J. Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics, Addison-Wesley, 1994, pp. 45-78.
  • M. Reed, B. Simon, Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics I: Functional Analysis, Academic Press, 1980, pp. 234-290.
  • R. Shankar, Principles of Quantum Mechanics, Springer, 1994, pp. 120-165.
  • J. von Neumann, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Princeton University Press, 1955, pp. 210-260.
  • G. Teschl, Mathematical Methods in Quantum Mechanics, AMS, 2009, pp. 150-200.
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