Skip to main content

2021 | Buch

A Guide to Spectral Theory

Applications and Exercises

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

This textbook provides a graduate-level introduction to the spectral theory of linear operators on Banach and Hilbert spaces, guiding readers through key components of spectral theory and its applications in quantum physics. Based on their extensive teaching experience, the authors present topics in a progressive manner so that each chapter builds on the ones preceding. Researchers and students alike will also appreciate the exploration of more advanced applications and research perspectives presented near the end of the book.
Beginning with a brief introduction to the relationship between spectral theory and quantum physics, the authors go on to explore unbounded operators, analyzing closed, adjoint, and self-adjoint operators. Next, the spectrum of a closed operator is defined and the fundamental properties of Fredholm operators are introduced. The authors then develop the Grushin method to execute the spectral analysis of compact operators. The chapters that follow are devoted to examining Hille-Yoshida and Stone theorems, the spectral analysis of self-adjoint operators, and trace-class and Hilbert-Schmidt operators. The final chapter opens the discussion to several selected applications. Throughout this textbook, detailed proofs are given, and the statements are illustrated by a number of well-chosen examples. At the end, an appendix about foundational functional analysis theorems is provided to help the uninitiated reader.
A Guide to Spectral Theory: Applications and Exercises is intended for graduate students taking an introductory course in spectral theory or operator theory. A background in linear functional analysis and partial differential equations is assumed; basic knowledge of bounded linear operators is useful but not required. PhD students and researchers will also find this volume to be of interest, particularly the research directions provided in later chapters.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. A FIRST LOOK AT SPECTRAL THEORY
Abstract
The aim of this opening chapter is to give a flavor of basic problems in spectral theory. This starts in Section 1.1 with some general comments on quantum physics and related mathematical issues. This is done more concretely in Section 1.2 where a practical question coming from the variational calculus is used to motivate the study of unbounded operators and their spectral properties.
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 2. UNBOUNDED OPERATORS
Abstract
The aim of this chapter is to describe what a (closed) linear operator is. It also aims at drawing the attention of the Reader to the domain of such an operator. Such domains will be explicitly described (such as the domain of the Dirichlet Laplacian).
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 3. SPECTRUM
Abstract
This chapter describes the various elementary properties of the spectrum. We will first discuss the important case of bounded operators, and especially the remarkable resolvent bound for normal operators. Then, we will progressively consider more general closed operators and discuss the famous Riesz projections. Finally, we will say a few words about the Fredholm operators (and their indices). The main reason to do that is to define the discrete and the essential spectrum of a closed operator. Somehow, we will see that the Fredholm operators of index 0 are very close to being square matrices, at least from the spectral point of view.
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 4. COMPACT OPERATORS
Abstract
This chapter recalls various elementary facts about compact operators. We prove the fundamental fact that \(K-z\mathrm {Id}\) is a Fredholm operator when \(z\ne 0\) and when \(K\in \mathcal {L}(E)\) is compact. This fact has important spectral consequences for compact operators (especially once we will have proved that the index of \(K-z\mathrm {Id}\) is actually 0).
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 5. FREDHOLM THEORY
Abstract
In this chapter, we discuss basic facts about Fredholm theory. We show that a Fredholm operator is bijective if and only if some matrix is bijective (and this can only happen for Fredholm operators with index 0). We see that this property implies that the index of a Fredholm operator is locally constant. This fact in mind, we deduce that \(K-z\mathrm {Id}\) is a Fredholm operator with index 0 for \(K\in \mathcal {L}(E)\) compact and \(z\ne 0\).
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 6. SPECTRUM OF SELF-ADJOINT OPERATORS
Abstract
This chapter is devoted to the special case of self-adjoint operators. We explain that the discrete spectrum and the essential spectrum form a partition of the spectrum, and we give various criteria (via Weyl sequences) to characterize these spectra. We also prove the famous min-max theorem, which characterizes the low lying eigenvalues of a self-adjoint operator bounded from below. This chapter is illustrated by means of various canonical examples, such as the Hamiltonian of the hydrogen atom.
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 7. HILLE–YOSIDA AND STONE’S THEOREMS
Abstract
This chapter is about the relation between \(\mathscr {C}^0\)-groups and their generators. In particular, we explain why to each unitary \(\mathscr {C}^0\)-group we may associate a unique self-adjoint operator. More importantly, we prove that any self-adjoint operator generates a unitary \(\mathscr {C}^0\)-group which solves an evolution equation, (e.g., the Schrödinger equation).
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 8. ABOUT THE SPECTRAL MEASURE
Abstract
The purpose of this chapter is to introduce the Reader to the notion of spectral measure associated with a self-adjoint operator. Let \(\mathscr {L}\) be a self-adjoint operator on \( \mathsf {H}\).
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 9. TRACE-CLASS AND HILBERT-SCHMIDT OPERATORS
Abstract
We complete here our study of unbounded, bounded, and compact operators by two new classes: trace-class and Hilbert–Schmidt (H-S.) operators. The general picture is the following:
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Chapter 10. SELECTED APPLICATIONS OF THE FUNCTIONAL CALCULUS
Abstract
The aim of this chapter is to illustrate how useful the functional calculus can be. In particular, we prove a version of the Lieb’s Variational Principle (to estimate traces of operators by means of density matrices). Then, we prove Stone’s formula that relates the spectral projections to the resolvent.
Christophe Cheverry, Nicolas Raymond
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
A Guide to Spectral Theory
verfasst von
Christophe Cheverry
Nicolas Raymond
Copyright-Jahr
2021
Electronic ISBN
978-3-030-67462-5
Print ISBN
978-3-030-67461-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67462-5