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Definition and Fundamental Properties

Vector Space Structure

Hilbert space: vector space over complex numbers with vector addition, scalar multiplication. Dimension: finite or infinite. Basis: orthonormal or complete set spans space.

Inner Product Space

Inner product: complex-valued function ⟨ψ|φ⟩ satisfying linearity, conjugate symmetry, positivity. Provides geometric structure: angle, length.

Complete Metric Space

Induced norm from inner product: ‖ψ‖ = sqrt(⟨ψ|ψ⟩). Completeness: every Cauchy sequence converges within space. Ensures analytic rigor.

Inner Product and Norm

Properties of Inner Product

Linearity: ⟨aψ + bφ|χ⟩ = a⟨ψ|χ⟩ + b⟨φ|χ⟩. Conjugate symmetry: ⟨ψ|φ⟩ = ⟨φ|ψ⟩*. Positive-definiteness: ⟨ψ|ψ⟩ ≥ 0; equality iff ψ=0.

Norm Induced by Inner Product

Norm: ‖ψ‖ = sqrt(⟨ψ|ψ⟩). Satisfies triangle inequality, homogeneity, positivity. Defines metric d(ψ,φ) = ‖ψ - φ‖.

Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality

Fundamental inequality: |⟨ψ|φ⟩| ≤ ‖ψ‖‖φ‖. Basis for many proofs in quantum mechanics and functional analysis.

For all ψ, φ ∈ H:|⟨ψ|φ⟩| ≤ ‖ψ‖‖φ‖Equality iff ψ, φ linearly dependent.

Completeness and Metric Structure

Cauchy Sequences

Sequence {ψ_n} is Cauchy if ∀ε>0 ∃N: m,n > N ⇒ ‖ψ_n - ψ_m‖ < ε. Completeness: limit ψ exists in H.

Completion of Inner Product Spaces

Every inner product space can be completed to a Hilbert space by including limits of Cauchy sequences.

Metric Topology

Metric d(ψ,φ) = ‖ψ - φ‖ induces topology: convergence, continuity, open/closed sets defined accordingly.

Orthogonality and Orthonormal Bases

Orthogonality

Vectors ψ, φ orthogonal if ⟨ψ|φ⟩ = 0. Orthogonal sets simplify expansions and decompositions.

Orthonormal Systems

Set {e_i} is orthonormal if ⟨e_i|e_j⟩ = δ_ij and each ‖e_i‖=1. Basis: orthonormal set whose linear span is dense in H.

Parseval's Identity

For orthonormal basis {e_i}, any ψ ∈ H satisfies:‖ψ‖² = ∑ |⟨e_i|ψ⟩|².Ensures norm preservation under decomposition.

Property Description
Orthogonality ⟨ψ|φ⟩ = 0
Orthonormality ⟨e_i|e_j⟩ = δ_ij, ‖e_i‖=1
Completeness Span dense in H

Linear Operators in Hilbert Space

Definition and Types

Operator A: linear map H → H. Types: bounded, unbounded, self-adjoint, unitary, projection operators.

Boundedness and Continuity

Operator A bounded if ‖Aψ‖ ≤ C‖ψ‖ for some C ∈ ℝ⁺. Bounded operators continuous; unbounded operators require domain specification.

Adjoint Operators

Adjoint A† defined by ⟨ψ|Aφ⟩ = ⟨A†ψ|φ⟩ ∀ψ,φ ∈ H. Self-adjoint if A = A†; essential in quantum observables.

Given A linear operator:Find A† satisfying⟨ψ|Aφ⟩ = ⟨A†ψ|φ⟩, ∀ ψ, φ ∈ H.

Spectral Theorem

Statement

Self-adjoint operator A admits spectral decomposition: A = ∫ λ dE(λ), where E(λ) projection-valued measure.

Implications

Diagonalization of observables, functional calculus, measurement postulate in quantum mechanics.

Discrete and Continuous Spectra

Discrete spectrum: eigenvalues with eigenvectors. Continuous spectrum: no eigenvectors, spectral measure continuous.

Spectrum Type Characteristics
Discrete Spectrum Countable eigenvalues, normalizable eigenvectors
Continuous Spectrum No eigenvectors, spectral measure continuous

Representation of Quantum States

State Vectors

Pure quantum states: unit vectors |ψ⟩ ∈ H. Global phase irrelevant: physical states correspond to rays.

Density Operators

Mixed states: positive trace-class operators ρ with Tr(ρ)=1. Represent probabilistic mixtures of pure states.

Superposition Principle

Any linear combination of states is valid quantum state. Amplitudes encode probability amplitudes.

Bra-Ket Notation

Dirac Notation

Ket |ψ⟩: vector in H. Bra ⟨φ|: linear functional in dual space H*. Inner product ⟨φ|ψ⟩ complex number.

Outer Products

Operator |ψ⟩⟨φ| maps vector χ to |ψ⟩⟨φ|χ⟩. Useful in projection operators, density matrices.

Advantages

Compact, intuitive representation of states, operators, inner products. Widely adopted in quantum mechanics formalism.

Example:|ψ⟩ ∈ H,⟨φ| ∈ H*,⟨φ|ψ⟩ ∈ ℂ,|ψ⟩⟨φ|: operator on H.

Tensor Products and Composite Systems

Construction

Hilbert space of composite system: H_total = H₁ ⊗ H₂. Vectors: linear combinations of tensor products |ψ⟩⊗|φ⟩.

Entanglement

States not factorizable as product states exhibit entanglement. Fundamental resource in quantum information.

Operators on Composite Spaces

Operators act as A ⊗ B, where A acts on H₁ and B on H₂. Tensor product preserves linearity and inner product structure.

Role in Functional Analysis

Hilbert Spaces as Function Spaces

Examples: L²(ℝ) space of square-integrable functions, essential for wavefunction representation.

Riesz Representation Theorem

Every continuous linear functional on H represented as inner product with fixed vector in H.

Operator Theory

Study of bounded and unbounded operators, spectral theory, semigroups of operators, all within Hilbert space context.

Applications in Quantum Mechanics

Quantum Observables

Observables represented by self-adjoint operators on Hilbert space. Measurement outcomes correspond to spectra.

Quantum Dynamics

Time evolution via unitary operators U(t) = exp(-iHt/ħ), H: Hamiltonian self-adjoint operator.

Quantum Measurement

Projection postulate: measurement projects state onto eigenbasis of observable operator.

Historical Context and Development

Origins

Introduced by David Hilbert in early 20th century for integral equations. Adopted in quantum theory by von Neumann.

Von Neumann's Formalism

Established Hilbert space framework for quantum mechanics (1932), rigorizing wavefunction and operator methods.

Modern Developments

Extensions to rigged Hilbert spaces, applications in quantum field theory, functional analysis, and quantum information science.

References

  • John von Neumann, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Princeton University Press, 1932, pp. 1-300.
  • Reed M., Simon B., Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 1: Functional Analysis, Academic Press, 1980, pp. 1-400.
  • Hall B.C., Quantum Theory for Mathematicians, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 267, Springer, 2013, pp. 1-700.
  • Riesz F., Sz.-Nagy B., Functional Analysis, Dover Publications, 1990, pp. 1-350.
  • Sakurai J.J., Napolitano J., Modern Quantum Mechanics, 2nd Edition, Addison-Wesley, 2011, pp. 1-600.
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