Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups

In mathematics, Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups is a basic theorem of functional analysis that establishes a one-to-one correspondence between self-adjoint operators on a Hilbert space and one-parameter families

of unitary operators that are strongly continuous, i.e.,

and are homomorphisms, i.e.,

Such one-parameter families are ordinarily referred to as strongly continuous one-parameter unitary groups.

The theorem was proved by Marshall Stone (1930, 1932), and Von Neumann (1932) showed that the requirement that be strongly continuous can be relaxed to say that it is merely weakly measurable, at least when the Hilbert space is separable.

This is a very stunning theorem, as it allows to define the derivative of the mapping , which is only supposed to be continuous. It is also related to the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras.

Formal statement

Let be a strongly continuous one-parameter unitary group. Then there exists a unique (not necessarily bounded) self-adjoint operator such that

Conversely, let be a (not necessarily bounded) self-adjoint operator on a Hilbert space . Then the one-parameter family of unitary operators defined by (using the Spectral Theorem for Self-Adjoint Operators)

is a strongly continuous one-parameter group.

The infinitesimal generator of is defined to be the operator iA. This mapping is a bijective correspondence. Furthermore, will be a bounded operator if and only if the operator-valued mapping is norm-continuous.

Stone's Theorem can be recast using the language of the Fourier transform. The real line is a locally compact abelian group. Non-degenerate *-representations of the group C*-algebra are in one-to-one correspondence with strongly continuous unitary representations of , i.e., strongly continuous one-parameter unitary groups. On the other hand, the Fourier transform is a *-isomorphism from to , the -algebra of continuous complex-valued functions on the real line that vanish at infinity. Hence, there is a one-to-one correspondence between strongly continuous one-parameter unitary groups and *-representations of . As every *-representation of corresponds uniquely to a self-adjoint operator, Stone's Theorem holds.

Therefore, the procedure for obtaining the infinitesimal generator of a strongly continuous one-parameter unitary group is as follows:

and then extending to all of by continuity.

The precise definition of is as follows. Consider the *-algebra , the continuous complex-valued functions on with compact support, where the multiplication is given by convolution. The completion of this *-algebra with respect to the -norm is a Banach *-algebra, denoted by . Then is defined to be the enveloping -algebra of , i.e., its completion with respect to the largest possible -norm. It is a non-trivial fact that, via the Fourier transform, is isomorphic to . A result in this direction is the Riemann-Lebesgue Lemma, which says that the Fourier transform maps to .

Example

The family of translation operators

is a one-parameter unitary group of unitary operators; the infinitesimal generator of this family is an extension of the differential operator

defined on the space of continuously differentiable complex-valued functions with compact support on . Thus

In other words, motion on the line is generated by the momentum operator.

Applications

Stone's theorem has numerous applications in quantum mechanics. For instance, given an isolated quantum mechanical system, with Hilbert space of states H, time evolution is a strongly continuous one-parameter unitary group on . The infinitesimal generator of this group is the system Hamiltonian.

Generalizations

The Stone–von Neumann theorem generalizes Stone's theorem to a pair of self-adjoint operators, , satisfying the canonical commutation relation, and shows that these are all unitarily equivalent to the position operator and momentum operator on .

The Hille–Yosida theorem generalizes Stone's theorem to strongly continuous one-parameter semigroups of contractions on Banach spaces.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.