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Stone'sTheorem
Stephen Crowley edited this page Jun 28, 2023
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Given a densely defined, closed, self-adjoint operator A on a Hilbert space H, Stone's Theorem states that there exists a unique one-parameter unitary group
Here's a brief explanation of each component of the theorem:
- Densely defined: The domain of the operator is a dense subset of the Hilbert space.
- Closed operator: The operator for which the graph (a subset of H×H) is a closed set in the topology induced by H×H.
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Self-adjoint: The operator equals its own adjoint, i.e.,
$\langle\psi|A\phi\rangle = \langle A\psi|\phi\rangle$ for all$\psi, \phi$ in the domain of A. -
One-parameter unitary group: A family of operators
$U(t)$ indexed by a real number t, with the properties that$U(t)$ is a unitary operator for each t,$U(0)$ is the identity operator, and$U(s + t) = U(s)U(t)$ for all real numbers s and t. -
Strongly continuous: The map
$t \to U(t)\psi$ is continuous for each fixed$\psi$ in H, in the strong operator topology.
The proof outline of the theorem is as follows:
- Define a new operator B by setting
$B\psi = -i \frac{d}{dt} U(t)\psi|_{t=0}$ for each$\psi$ in the domain of A. This operator is initially only densely defined, but we can extend it to the entire Hilbert space by continuity. - Show that B is a self-adjoint extension of A. This involves showing that
$B\psi = A\psi$ for all$\psi$ in the domain of A, and that the domain of B includes the entire Hilbert space. The first part requires using the strong continuity of$U(t)$ , while the second part uses the fact that A is densely defined. - Show that
$e^{itB} = U(t)$ for all t. This requires using the functional calculus for self-adjoint operators, which allows us to define the exponential of an operator. - Show that the operator B is unique. This follows from the spectral theorem for self-adjoint operators, which tells us that two self-adjoint operators are equal if they have the same spectral projections.
Thus, the theorem provides a profound connection between the abstract properties of self-adjoint operators and the concrete representations of time evolution in quantum mechanics.
## References:
- Reed, M. & Simon, B. (1972) "Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics I: Functional Analysis". Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-585050-6.
- Hall, B.C. (2013) "Quantum Theory for Mathematicians". Graduate Texts in Mathematics 267. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4614-7116-5.