Mathematical operator-value measure of interest in quantum mechanics and functional analysis
In mathematics, particularly in functional analysis, a projection-valued measure (or spectral measure) is a function defined on certain subsets of a fixed set and whose values are self-adjointprojections on a fixed Hilbert space.[1] A projection-valued measure (PVM) is formally similar to a real-valuedmeasure, except that its values are self-adjoint projections rather than real numbers. As in the case of ordinary measures, it is possible to integratecomplex-valued functions with respect to a PVM; the result of such an integration is a linear operator on the given Hilbert space.
The second and fourth property show that if and are disjoint, i.e., , the images and are orthogonal to each other.
Let and its orthogonal complement denote the image and kernel, respectively, of . If is a closed subspace of then can be wrtitten as the orthogonal decomposition and is the unique identity operator on satisfying all four properties.[4][5]
For every and the projection-valued measure forms a complex-valued measure on defined as
i.e., as multiplication by the indicator function on L2(X). Then defines a projection-valued measure.[6] For example, if , , and there is then the associated complex measure which takes a measurable function and gives the integral
Extensions of projection-valued measures
If π is a projection-valued measure on a measurable space (X, M), then the map
extends to a linear map on the vector space of step functions on X. In fact, it is easy to check that this map is a ring homomorphism. This map extends in a canonical way to all bounded complex-valued measurable functions on X, and we have the following.
Theorem — For any bounded Borel function on , there exists a unique bounded operator such that
[7][8]
where the integral extends to an unbounded function when the spectrum of is unbounded.[10]
Direct integrals
First we provide a general example of projection-valued measure based on direct integrals. Suppose (X, M, μ) is a measure space and let {Hx}x ∈ X be a μ-measurable family of separable Hilbert spaces. For every E ∈ M, let π(E) be the operator of multiplication by 1E on the Hilbert space
Then π is a projection-valued measure on (X, M).
Suppose π, ρ are projection-valued measures on (X, M) with values in the projections of H, K. π, ρ are unitarily equivalentif and only if there is a unitary operator U:H → K such that
for every E ∈ M.
Theorem. If (X, M) is a standard Borel space, then for every projection-valued measure π on (X, M) taking values in the projections of a separable Hilbert space, there is a Borel measure μ and a μ-measurable family of Hilbert spaces {Hx}x ∈ X, such that π is unitarily equivalent to multiplication by 1E on the Hilbert space
The measure class[clarification needed] of μ and the measure equivalence class of the multiplicity function x → dim Hx completely characterize the projection-valued measure up to unitary equivalence.
A projection-valued measure π is homogeneous of multiplicityn if and only if the multiplicity function has constant value n. Clearly,
Theorem. Any projection-valued measure π taking values in the projections of a separable Hilbert space is an orthogonal direct sum of homogeneous projection-valued measures:
the measurable space is the value space for some quantum property of the system (an "observable"),
the projection-valued measure expresses the probability that the observable takes on various values.
A common choice for is the real line, but it may also be
(for position or momentum in three dimensions ),
a discrete set (for angular momentum, energy of a bound state, etc.),
the 2-point set "true" and "false" for the truth-value of an arbitrary proposition about .
Let be a measurable subset of and a normalized vector quantum state in , so that its Hilbert norm is unitary, . The probability that the observable takes its value in , given the system in state , is
We can parse this in two ways. First, for each fixed , the projection is a self-adjoint operator on whose 1-eigenspace are the states for which the value of the observable always lies in , and whose 0-eigenspace are the states for which the value of the observable never lies in .
Second, for each fixed normalized vector state , the association
is a probability measure on making the values of the observable into a random variable.
A measurement that can be performed by a projection-valued measure is called a projective measurement.
If is the real number line, there exists, associated to , a self-adjoint operator defined on by
which reduces to
if the support of is a discrete subset of .
The above operator is called the observable associated with the spectral measure.
Generalizations
The idea of a projection-valued measure is generalized by the positive operator-valued measure (POVM), where the need for the orthogonality implied by projection operators is replaced by the idea of a set of operators that are a non-orthogonal partition of unity[clarification needed]. This generalization is motivated by applications to quantum information theory.
Hall, Brian C. (2013). Quantum Theory for Mathematicians. New York: Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN978-1-4614-7116-5.
Mackey, G. W., The Theory of Unitary Group Representations, The University of Chicago Press, 1976
Moretti, Valter (2017), Spectral Theory and Quantum Mechanics Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theories, Symmetries and Introduction to the Algebraic Formulation, vol. 110, Springer, Bibcode:2017stqm.book.....M, ISBN978-3-319-70705-1
Narici, Lawrence; Beckenstein, Edward (2011). Topological Vector Spaces. Pure and applied mathematics (Second ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN978-1584888666. OCLC144216834.