Stone–von Neumann theorem

Stone–von Neumann theorem

In mathematics and in theoretical physics, the Stone–von Neumann theorem is any one of a number of different formulations of the uniqueness of the canonical commutation relations between position and momentum operators. The name is for Marshall Stone and John von Neumann.

Trying to represent the commutation relations

In quantum mechanics, physical observables are represented mathematically by linear operators on Hilbert spaces.For a single particle moving on the real line R, there are two important observables: position and momentum. In the quantum-mechanical description of such a particle, the position operator "Q" and momentum operator "P" are respectively given by: [Q psi] (x) = x psi(x) quad : [P psi] (x) = frac{hbar}{i}psi'(x) on the domain "V" of infinitely differentiable functions of compact support on R. We assume hbar is a fixed "non-zero" real number — in quantum theory hbar is (up to a factor of 2π) Planck's constant, which is not dimensionless; it takes a small numerical value in terms of units in the macroscopic world. The operators "P", "Q" satisfy the commutation relation: Q P- P Q = -frac{hbar}{i} mathbf{1} Already in his classic volume, Hermann Weyl observed that this commutation law was impossible for linear operators "P", "Q" acting on finite dimensional spaces (as is clear by applying the trace of a matrix), unless hbar vanishes.

In the theory of quantization of classical mechanics, the question naturally arises whether it is possible to classify pairs of operators which satisfy the above commutation relations. The answer in general is no, without additional assumptions. To give a simple counterexample, consider the operators "Q"+ and "P"+ defined as operators in the same form as "Q", "P" above, but acting on a different space, that is the space of infinitely differentiable functions of compact support on (0, ∞). The multiplication operator "Q"+ is an essentially self-adjoint operator. It is also a non-negative operator, that is

: langle Q_+ psi | psi angle geq 0 quad forall psi in operatorname{dom}(Q)

so cannot possibly be equivalent to "Q". Note that "P"+ fails to be an essentially self adjoint operator on the given domain.

Weyl form of the canonical commutation relations

Instead of considering the operators "P", "Q", we will consider the pair of one-parameter groups of unitary operators ei"a P" and ei"b Q"; these operators are well-defined since "P", "Q" are essentially self-adjoint on the domain "V" and so have unique self-adjoint extensions. Clearly ei"b Q" is multiplication by the function ei"b" "x", while ei"a" "P" is the operator of left translation by "a", that is,: [operatorname{e}^{iaP} psi] (x) = psi(x + hbar a).

Theorem. Let "H" be a separable Hilbert space and "A", "B" self-adjoint operators on "H". If : operatorname{e}^{ibA} operatorname{e}^{iaB} = operatorname{e}^{i hbar a b}operatorname{e}^{iaB} operatorname{e}^{ibA}quad then "H" is a finite or countably infinite Hilbert direct sum of Hilbert spaces {"H""k"}"k", each one invariant under both unitary groups ei"b A" and ei"a B". Moreover, for each index "k" there is a unitary operator "V""k" : "H""k" → L2(R)such that: V_k operatorname{e}^{ibA} V_k^* = operatorname{e}^{ibQ} : V_k operatorname{e}^{iaB} V_k^* = operatorname{e}^{iaP} Stated another way, any representation of the canonical commutation relations is a countable direct sum of isomorphic copies of ei"a P" and ei"b Q".

This statement is usually referred to as the uniqueness of the Weyl form of the canonical commutation relations.

Another formulation

We can formulate this somewhat differently, noting that the unitary groups {ei"s P"} and {ei"t Q"} are jointly irreducible. This means that there are no closed subspaces other than {0} and L2(R) which are invariant under all the operators ei"s P" and ei"t Q".

Theorem. Let "H" be a (non-trivial) separable Hilbert space "A", "B" self-adjoint operators on "H" such that the Weyl commutation relations above hold and the operators {ei"t A"} and {ei"s B"} for "s" and "t" ranging over real numbers are jointly irreducible. Then in the previous theorem the direct sum reduces to a single (non-trivial) summand.

Historically this theorem was significant because it was a key step in proving that Heisenberg's matrix mechanics which presents quantum mechanical observables and dynamics in terms of infinite matrices, is unitarily equivalent to Schrödinger's wave mechanical formulation (see Schrödinger picture).

The Heisenberg group

The commutation relations for "P", "Q" look very similar to the commutation relations that define the Lie algebra of general Heisenberg group H"n" for "n" a positive integer. This is the Lie group of ("n"+2) × ("n"+2) square matrices of the form

: operatorname{M}(a,b,c) = egin{bmatrix} 1 & a & c \ 0 & 1_n & b \ 0 & 0 & 1 end{bmatrix}

In fact, using the Heisenberg group, we can formulate a far-reaching generalization of the Stone von Neumann theorem. Note that the center of H"n" consists of matrices M(0, 0, "c").

Theorem. For each non-zero real number "h" there is an irreducible representation "U""h" acting on the Hilbert space L2(R"n") by: [U_h(operatorname{M}(a,b,c))] psi(x) = e^{i (b cdot x + h c)} psi(x+h a) All these representations are unitarily inequivalent and any irreducible representation which is not trivial on the center of H"n" is unitarily equivalent to exactly one of these.

Note that "U""h" is a unitary operator because it is the composition of two operators which are easily seen to be unitary: the translation to the "left" by "h a" and multiplication by a function of absolute value 1. To show "U""h" is multiplicative is a straightforward calculation. The hard part of the theorem is showing the uniqueness which is beyond the scope of the article. However, below we sketch a proof of the corresponding Stone–von Neumann theorem for certain finite Heisenberg groups.

In particular, irreducible representations π, π' of the Heisenberg group H"n" which are non-trivial on the center of H"n" are unitarily equivalent if and only if π("z") = π'("z") for any "z" in the center of H"n".

One representation of the Heisenberg group that is important in the number theory and the theory of modular forms is the theta representation, so named because the Jacobi theta function is invariant under the action of the discrete subgroup of the Heisenberg group.

Relation to the Fourier transform

For any non-zero "h", the mapping : alpha_h: operatorname{M}(a,b,c) ightarrow operatorname{M}(-h^{-1} b,h a, c -a b) is an automorphism of H"n" which is the identity on the center of H"n". In particular, the representations "U""h" and "U""h" α are unitarily equivalent. This means that there is a unitary operator"W" on L2(R"n") such that for any "g" in H"n",: W U_h(g) W^* = U_h alpha (g) quad Moreover, by irreducibility of the representations "U""h", it follows that up to a scalar, such an operator "W" is unique (cf. Schur's lemma).

Theorem. The operator "W" is, up to a scalar multiple, the Fourier transform on L2(R"n").

This means that (ignoring the factor of (2 π)"n"/2 in the definition of the Fourier transform): int_{mathbb{R}^n} e^{-i x cdot p} e^{i (b cdot x + h c)}psi (x+h a) dx = e^{ i (h a cdot p + h (c - b cdot a))} int_{mathbb{R}^n} e^{-i y cdot ( p - b)} psi(y) dy

The previous theorem can actually be used to prove the unitary nature of the Fourier transform, also known as the Plancherel theorem. Moreover, note that: (alpha_h)^2 operatorname{M}(a,b,c) =operatorname{M}(- a, -b, c)

Theorem. The operator "W"1 such that : W_1 U_h W_1^* = U_h alpha^2 (g) quad is the reflection operator : [W_1 psi] (x) = psi(-x).quad

From this fact the Fourier inversion formula easily follows.

Representations of finite Heisenberg groups

The Heisenberg group H"n"(K) is defined for any commutative ring K. In this section let us specialize to the field K = Z/"p" Z for "p" a prime. This field has the property that there is an imbedding ω of K as an additive group into the circle group T. Note that H"n"(K) is finite with cardinality |K|2 n+1. For finite Heisenberg group H"n"(K) one can give a simple proof of the Stone–von Neumann theorem using simple properties of character functions of representations. These properties follow from the orthogonality relations for characters of representations of finite groups.

For any non-zero "h" in K define the representation "U""h" on the finite-dimensional inner product space "l"2(K"n") by: [U_h operatorname{M}(a,b,c) psi] (x) = omega(b cdot x + h c) psi(x+ h a)

Theorem. For a fixed non-zero "h", the character function χ of "U""h" is given by:: chi (operatorname{M}(a,b,c)) = left{ egin{matrix} |mathbf{K}|^n omega( h c) & mbox{ if } a = b = 0 \ 0 & mbox{ otherwise} end{matrix} ight. It follows that: frac{1} sum_{g in operatorname{H}_n(mathbf{K})} |chi(g)|^2 = frac{1}{|mathbf{K}|^{2 n+1 |mathbf{K}|^{2 n} |mathbf{K}| = 1 By the orthogonality relations for characters of representations of finite groups this fact implies the corresponding Stone–von Neumann theorem for Heisenberg groups H"n"(Z/"p" Z), particularly:
* Irreducibility of "U""h"
* Pairwise inequivalence of all the representations "U""h".

Generalizations

The Stone–von Neumann theorem admits numerous generalizations. Much of the early work of George Mackey was directed at obtaining a formulation of the theory of induced representations developed originally by Frobenius for finite groups to the context of unitary representations of locally compact topological groups.

ee also

* Weyl quantization
* CCR algebra
* Moyal product
* Weyl algebra

References

* G. W. Mackey, "The Theory of Unitary Group Representations", The University of Chicago Press, 1976
* H. Weyl, "The Theory of Groups and Quantum Mechanics", Dover Publications, 1950
* A. Kirillov, "Éléments de la Théorie des Représentations", Editions MIR, 1974


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