Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Hermitian adjoint
In mathematics, specifically in functional analysis, one associates to every linear operator on a Hilbert space its adjoint operator. Adjoints of operators generalize conjugate transposes of square 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 the complex conjugate of a complex number.
The adjoint of an operator A is is also sometimes called the Hermitian adjoint of A and is denoted by A* or
(the latter especially when used in conjunction with the bra-ket notation).
| Contents |
Definition for bounded operators
Suppose H is a Hilbert space, with inner product <.,.>. Consider a continuous linear operator A : H → H (this is the same as a bounded 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.
Properties
Immediate properties:
- A** = A
- (A + B )* = A* + B*
- (λA)* = λ* A*, where λ* denotes the complex conjugate of the complex 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-star algebra.
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 observables in quantum mechanics. See the article on self-adjoint operators 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 on self-adjoint operators.
Other adjoints
The equation
is formally similar to the defining properties of pairs of adjoint functors in category theory, and this is where adjoint functors got their name.
See also
- Mathematical concepts
- Physical application
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


