PlanetPhysics/Hilbert Space 3

From Wikiversity
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Basic concepts[edit | edit source]

An inner-product space with complex scalars, , is a vector space with complex scalars, together with a complex-valued function , called the inner product, defined on , which has the following properties:

  • (1) For all .
  • (2) If then .
  • (3) For all and in , .
  • (4) For all and in , .
  • (5) For all in V, and all scalars , one has that .(The inner product is linear in the first variable, and conjugate linear in the second.)

A Banach space is a normed vector space such that is complete under the metric induced by the norm .

Hilbert space[edit | edit source]

A Hilbert space is an inner product space which is complete as a metric space, that is for every sequence of vectors in , if as and both tend to infinity, there is in , a vector such that as . (In quantum physics, all Hilbert spaces are tacitly assumed to be infinite dimensional)

Remarks[edit | edit source]

Sequences with the property that are called Cauchy sequences . Usually one works with Hilbert spaces because one needs to have available such limits of Cauchy sequences. Finite dimensional inner product spaces are automatically Hilbert spaces. However, it is the infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces that are important for the proper foundation of quantum mechanics.

A Hilbert space is also a Banach space in the norm induced by the inner product, because both the norm and the inner product induce the same metric.