Understanding the Associative Axiom in Sakurai's First Chapter

  • Thread starter broegger
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In summary, Sakurai is discussing the associative axiom and how it applies to the hermitian conjugate of a ket. He notes that the hermitian conjugate arises only when one is finding the dual bra of a ket, and vice versa. He then provides an example of how the associative axiom is applied in two different ways.
  • #1
broegger
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I'm reading in Sakurai's 1st chapter that this follows from the "associative axiom":

[tex]
\langle\beta|\cdot\left(X|\alpha\rangle\right) = \left(\langle\beta|X\right)\cdot|\alpha\rangle
[/tex]

so we might as well write [tex]\langle\beta|X|\alpha\rangle[/tex]. I know this is basic stuff, but I thought this notation only made sense when X is hermitian since when you let X act on the bra instead of the ket you must take the hermitian conjugate. Like this:

[tex]
\langle\beta|\cdot\left(X|\alpha\rangle\right) = \left(\langle\beta|X^\dagger\right)\cdot|\alpha\rangle
[/tex]

It's pretty bad that I'm in trouble already in the first chapter (exam next thursday).
 
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  • #2
I believe the Hermitian conjugate arises only when one is finding the dual bra of a ket, and vice versa. So, the associativity axiom applies as Sakurai describes since we are not taking the conjugate of anything.
 
  • #3
[tex]\langle\Psi|X = \langle X^* \Psi|[/tex]
[tex](X|\Psi\rangle)^* = \langle\Psi|X^*[/tex]
 
  • #4
broegger said:
It's pretty bad that I'm in trouble already in the first chapter (exam next thursday).

[tex]
\langle\beta|\cdot\left(X|\alpha\rangle\right) = \left(\langle\beta|X\right)\cdot|\alpha\rangle
[/tex]It works even if α and β are different but only because everything is added
together to a single scalar at the end.

You can see it more easily if you work it out for simplified vectors α and β
and matrix X, where α and β both have only a single non-zero element.
X now has only a single relevant element while all other positions may be zero.

Work it out for this elementary case. Then have a look how the general case
is a just a linear combination of this simple case. Remember that an operator
acting "to the left" works as being transposed.

You'll see that in the first case you sum over the rows and then the columns
while in the second case it is columns first and then rows. The end result is
the same.Regards, Hans
 
  • #5
Yeah, that's pretty much the definition of what the Hermitian conjugate is, is that [tex] \langle \Phi |(\Omega |\Psi \rangle) = (\langle \Phi | \Omega^{\dagger}) |\Psi \rangle [/tex]. Most mathematicians consider this to be the DEFINITION for a Hermitian conjugate, is the change in the operator that makes that statement true.
 
  • #6
Here's the trick:

[tex] \langle \alpha ,\hat{X} \beta\rangle [/tex]
is to be understood as follows:

it is the scalar product between the vector [itex] \alpha [/itex] and the vector which results when applying the linear operator [itex] \hat{X} [/itex] on an arbitrary vector from its domain [itex] \beta [/itex].
But at the same time
it is the value of the linear functional [itex] F_{\alpha} [/itex] (which is continuous on the image of the linear operator [itex] \hat{X}[/itex]) when acting on the vector [itex] \beta [/itex].

What Sakurai is saying is that this complex number is equal to this number
[tex] \left (\tilde{\hat{X}} F_{\alpha}\right) \beta [/tex]
which is nothing but the value of the linear functional obtained when applying the dual operator [itex] \tilde{\hat{X}} [/itex] on the linear functional [itex] F_{\alpha}[/itex] when acting on the vector [itex] \beta [/itex] .

That's all.

Daniel.
 
Last edited:

1. What is the definition of a "ket" in quantum mechanics?

A "ket" in quantum mechanics is a mathematical notation used to represent a quantum state or vector in a Hilbert space. It is typically denoted by a vertical line, such as |ψ⟩, and is used to describe the state of a quantum system.

2. What is the purpose of using "bras" in quantum mechanics?

"Bras" in quantum mechanics are the dual vectors to kets and are denoted by ⟨ψ|. They represent the conjugate transpose of a ket and are used to calculate inner products and expectation values of quantum states.

3. What is the significance of "hermiticity" in quantum mechanics?

Hermiticity is a property of operators in quantum mechanics, where the operator is equal to its own conjugate transpose. This property is important because it ensures that the eigenvalues of the operator are real and the operator is self-adjoint, making it useful for calculating physical observables.

4. How are kets and bras related to each other?

Kets and bras are related to each other through the inner product operation. The inner product of a ket |ψ⟩ and a bra ⟨ϕ| is denoted by ⟨ϕ|ψ⟩ and is equal to the probability amplitude of measuring |ψ⟩ when the system is in the state |ϕ⟩.

5. Can kets and bras be used for any quantum system?

Yes, kets and bras can be used for any quantum system, as long as the system can be described by a Hilbert space. This includes systems such as particles, atoms, and even complex systems like molecules and solids.

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