- Hermitian adjoint
In
mathematics , specifically infunctional analysis , eachlinear operator on aHilbert space has a corresponding adjoint operator. Adjoints of operators generalizeconjugate transpose s ofsquare matrices to (possibly) infinite-dimensional situations. If one thinks of operators on a Hilbert space as "generalized complex numbers", then the adjoint of an operator plays the role of thecomplex conjugate of a complex number.The adjoint of an operator "A" is also sometimes called the Hermitian adjoint (after
Charles Hermite ) of "A" and is denoted by "A"* or "A"† (the latter especially when used in conjunction with thebra-ket notation ).Definition for bounded operators
Suppose "H" is a
Hilbert space , withinner product . Consider a continuouslinear operator "A" : "H" → "H" (this is the same as abounded operator ).Using the
Riesz representation theorem , one can show that there exists a unique continuous linear operator"A*" : "H" → "H" with the following property::
This operator "A"* is the adjoint of "A".
This can be seen as a generalization of the
conjugate transpose or "adjoint" matrix of a square matrix which has a similar property involving the standard complex inner product.Properties
Immediate properties:
# "A"** = "A"
# If "A" is invertible, so is "A"*. Then, ("A"*)−1 = ("A"−1)*
# ("A" + "B")* = "A"* + "B"*
# (λ"A")* = λ* "A"*, where λ* denotes thecomplex conjugate of thecomplex number λ
# ("AB")* = "B"* "A"*If we define the
operator norm of "A" by:then:.Moreover,:The set of bounded linear operators on a Hilbert space "H" together with the adjoint operation and the operator norm form the prototype of a
C* algebra .The relationship between the image of and the kernel of its adjoint is given by:::
Proof of the first equation::
The second equation follows from the first by taking the orthogonal space on both sides. Note that in general, the image need not be closed, but the kernel of a continuous operator always is.
Hermitian operators
A bounded operator "A" : "H" → "H" is called Hermitian or
self-adjoint if : "A" = "A"*which is equivalent to:In some sense, these operators play the role of the real numbers (being equal to their own "complex conjugate"). They serve as the model of real-valued
observable s inquantum mechanics . See the article onself-adjoint operator s for a full treatment.Adjoints of unbounded operators
Many operators of importance are not continuous and are only defined on a
subspace of a Hilbert space. In this situation, one may still define an adjoint, as is explained in the article onself-adjoint operator s.Other adjoints
The equation: is formally similar to the defining properties of pairs of
adjoint functor s incategory theory , and this is where adjoint functors got their name.See also
* Mathematical concepts
**Linear algebra
**Inner product
**Hilbert space
**Hermitian operator
** Norm
**Operator norm
** Transpose of a linear maps
* Physical applications
**Dual space
**Bra-ket notation
**Quantum mechanics
** Observables
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