Rigged Hilbert Space: Definition & Examples by de la Madrid (2005)

In summary: PhD in math?)A spectrum is a subset of the complex plane that includes all the eigenvalues of a bounded linear operator. It can be shown to be a non-empty compact set, and to only contain real numbers when the operator is self-adjoint.
  • #1
Rasalhague
1,387
2
Rafael de la Madrid writes:

Loosely speaking, a rigged Hilbert space is a triad of spaces [itex]\Phi \subset \cal{H} \subset \Phi^{\times}[/itex] such that [itex]\cal{H}[/itex] is a Hilbert space, [itex]\Phi[/itex] is a dense subspace of [itex]\cal{H}[/itex], and [itex]\Phi^{\times}[/itex] is the space of antilinear functionals on [itex]\Phi[/itex].

[...]

In addition, the elements of [itex]\Phi[/itex] are represented by smooth, continuous functions that have a definitive value at each point, in contrast to the elements of [itex]\cal{H}[/itex] which are represented by classes of functions that can vary arbitrarily on sets of zero Lebesgue measure.

- de la Madrid (2005): "The role of the rigged Hilbert space in Quantum Mechanics"

Could the second paragraph be restated as: "The elements of [itex]\Phi[/itex], the vectors, regarded as equivalence classes of functions differing only on sets of zero Lebesgue measure, can be represented by smooth (and thus continuous) functions (although these smooth functions may be equivalent to functions which are not smooth), whereas a general element of [itex]\cal{H}[/itex], considered as such an equivalence class, will not necessarily contain a smooth function."
 
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  • #3
dextercioby said:
Why would they be equivalence classes ?
Because [itex]\Phi[/itex] is a subspace of [itex]L^2(\mathbb R^3)[/itex], which is a vector space whose members are equivalence classes of functions?

I don't understand that quote from the article. If the vectors in [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] are equivalence classes of functions, then so are the vectors in any subspace. It sounds like he's not considering a subspace of [itex]L^2(\mathbb R^3)[/itex], but a subspace of the semi-inner product space [itex]\mathcal L^2(\mathbb R^3)[/itex] whose members are square-integrable functions. That sounds pretty weird to me, but I don't know much about this stuff.
 
  • #4
Two functions f(x) and g(x) which differ on a set of measure zero are 'identical w.r.t. the relevant functionals F' like integration with test functions etc. For the difference f-g the results for these operations is exactly zero, i.e. F[f-g] = 0. Therefore f and g should be considered as identical, which means that the single elements are not functions but equivalence classes of functions: f ~ g.
 
  • #5
Equivalence classes because otherwise wavefunctions wouldn't comprise a vector space.

Let [itex]f[/itex] and [itex]g[/itex] be square integrable functions from [itex]\mathbb{R}[/itex] to [itex]\mathbb{C}[/itex]. Consider the inner product defined by

[tex]([f],[g])=\int_{-\infty}^\infty \overline{f(x)}\cdot g(x) \; dx.[/tex]

Suppose that, there exists a function [itex]f[/itex] such that [itex](f,f)=0[/itex]. Then, by the inner product axioms, [itex]f=0[/itex]. But if [itex]g[/itex] differs from [itex]f[/itex] only on a set of Lebesgue measure zero, then we also have [itex](g,g)=0[/itex]. So [itex]g=0[/itex]. A group, such as a vector space with addition, contains at most one identity element. Therefore, [itex]f[/itex] must represent the same vector as [itex]g[/itex].
 
  • #6
Rasalhague said:
Equivalence classes because otherwise wavefunctions wouldn't comprise [strike]a vector space[/strike] an inner product space.
FYP.

It's a vector space with a semi-inner product, so it's a semi-inner product space, but not an inner product space, and therefore not a Hilbert space.
 
  • #7
Ah, I see. Thanks for the correction.
 
  • #8
More basic question - when the paper refers to the RHS as "the Hilbert space equipped with distribution theory" can someone elaborate or provide a link to what the author is referring to as "distribution theory"?

Also a link or explanation of "spectra" would be much appreciated. Ballentine refers to the term without (unless I missed it) ever really defining it
 
  • #9
Wikipedia is an OK place to start: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_(mathematics).

The spectrum of a bounded linear operator A is the set of all complex numbers λ such that A-λ is not invertible. Consider an eigenvalue equation Ax=λx, rewritten as (A-λ)x=0. If A-λ is invertible, we have x=0, so A doesn't have any eigenvectors. The spectrum is therefore a subset of the complex plane that contains all the eigenvalues. It can be shown to be a non-empty compact set, and to only contain real numbers when A is self-adjoint.

There's a definition for unbounded operators too, but I don't remember it. Check out a book on functional analysis, e.g. "Functional analysis: spectral theory" by V.S. Sunder. It can be downloaded legally here.
 
  • #10
I haven't read these, but they're on my list of things to read:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_(mathematics)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_function

Likewise, I need to learn more about the idea of spectra. As I currently understand it, the spectrum of a linear operator (linear function from a vector space to itself) is a generalization of the concept of eigenvalues. When the vector space is finite-dimensional, the spectrum of a linear operator is its set of eigenvalues. When the vector space is infinite-dimensional, the spectrum may include other kinds of values. There's a definition here:

http://www.mathematik.hu-berlin.de/~berg/Functional_Analysis_Seminar_2010_03_29.pdf (Tillmann Berg)
 
  • #11
Cool, thanks
 
  • #12
@all,

Yes, I overlooked the necessity of building an inner product in the context of Lebesgue integration. I was thinking about the completion procedure where one passes from vectors in a pre-Hilbert space to equivalence classes, as well.
 
  • #13
Rasalhague said:
Could the second paragraph be restated as:
The whole thing might make more sense when given some more context.

When we are considering negligible functions (functions that are zero almost except on a set of measure zero) to be actually zero, most equivalence classes of functions don't come with a good choice of representative -- it is intellectually more efficient to think of such things as equivalence classes of normal functions.

But for the special case of continuous functions, the equivalence class does have a very, very good choice of representative. (the unique one that is continuous) In this case, is often intellectually more convenient to think not in terms of the equivalence class, but instead to think of this choice of representative.

e.g. while x/x and 1 are not equal as (partial) functions, their difference is negligible, and so they are actually equivalent. Correspondingly, in calculus, when we divide x by x, we usually mentally substitute 1 as the result.
 
  • #14
In addition, the elements of Φ are represented by smooth, continuous functions that have a definitive value at each point, in contrast to the elements of [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] which are represented by classes of functions that can vary arbitrarily on sets of zero Lebesgue measure.
I read section 2.3 where this quote appears. He claims to be talking about a Hilbert space, but the whole section is about the semi-inner product space [itex]\mathcal L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] of square-integrable functions on ℝ, not about the Hilbert space [itex]L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] of equivalence classes of square-integrable functions on ℝ.

It should be clear that the rigged Hilbert space is just a combination of the Hilbert
space with distribution theory.
It's really weird that he uses a semi-inner product space instead of a Hilbert space to try to justify this claim.
 
  • #15
Fredrik, the semi-inner product finesse appears to be overlooked, but he is not really motivated to go into this detail. He's really interested in building the nuclear space, he doesn't care if there are equivalence classes wrt a.e. equality.
 
  • #16
φ=D(G) H=L₂(G) and φˣ=D`(G), where G is a nonempty open set of ℝⁿ with n≥1. D is short for the space of continuously differentiable functions with compact support, and D` is the space dual to D.

REMARK:
For u∈D, u:G→ℂ
 
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  • #17
Fredrik said:
I read section 2.3 where this quote appears. He claims to be talking about a Hilbert space, but the whole section is about the semi-inner product space [itex]\mathcal L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] of square-integrable functions on ℝ, not about the Hilbert space [itex]L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] of equivalence classes of square-integrable functions on ℝ.

By "semi-inner product space", I guess you mean a "partial inner product space". I.e., a space in which the inner product is not necessarily well-defined between all pairs of vectors?

The Hilbert space [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] is meant to be the norm-completion of [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex]. The point about [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex] is that the usual quantum operators Q and P are well-defined everywhere on [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex], which is not generally true on [itex]\mathcal H[/itex].

Since the inner product on [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex] is inherited from that on [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] (i.e., a Lebesgue integral), the usual caveats about equivalence of functions on sets of measure zero apply. But Hurkyl already resolved the question incisively when he said:

Hurkyl said:
But for the special case of continuous functions, the equivalence class does have a very, very good choice of representative. (the unique one that is continuous) In this case, is often intellectually more convenient to think not in terms of the equivalence class, but instead to think of this choice of representative.

The significance of this remark is that smoothness and continuity are critically important on [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex], because we want the P operator (derivative) to be well-defined everywhere.
 
  • #18
strangerep said:
By "semi-inner product space", I guess you mean a "partial inner product space". I.e., a space in which the inner product is not necessarily well-defined between all pairs of vectors?
"Semi-inner product" is the term used in Conway's "A first course in functional analysis" for a sesquilinear form that satisfies all the properties of an inner product except <x,x>=0 only if x=0. The form <,> on the set of square-integrable functions, defined by [tex]\langle f,g\rangle=\int f(x)^*g(x)dx[/tex] for all f,g is a semi-inner product, because the 0 function isn't the only one that satisfies <f,f>=0. Consider e.g. the function f that takes 0 to 1 and everything else to 0. It also satisfies <f,f>=0.

By "semi-inner product space", I mean a vector space equipped with a semi-inner product, like the vector space of square-integrable functions with the semi-inner product defined above. I don't know if the term is standard. I think the analysis books by Knapp used the term "pseudo-inner product". I'm less fond of that term. Because of how the term "pseudo-Riemannian metric" is used, I kind of expect a "pseudo-inner product" to not satisfy <x,x>≥0, but a semi-inner product does.

strangerep said:
The Hilbert space [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] is meant to be the norm-completion of [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex].
[itex]\Phi[/itex] is supposed to be dense in [itex]\mathcal H[/itex], so [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] can also be described as the closure of [itex]\Phi[/itex]. I consider this description to be slightly simpler. But closure and completion is the same thing when the closure is a complete metric space, so it's certainly OK to describe [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] as the completion of [itex]\Phi[/itex].

strangerep said:
Since the inner product on [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex] is inherited from that on [itex]\mathcal H[/itex] (i.e., a Lebesgue integral), the usual caveats about equivalence of functions on sets of measure zero apply. But Hurkyl already resolved the question incisively when he said:
Yes, I believe it makes sense to say that [itex]\Phi[/itex] is the subspace consisting of equivalence classes [f] such that one of the members of [f] satisfies an appropriate "niceness" condition, like continuity or smoothness. But de la Madrid is still wrong to describe a subspace of the Hilbert space [itex]L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] as not consisting of equivalence classes of functions.

Edit: What I think he should have done, in order to stay as close as possible to the presentation he chose without saying anything that's wrong, is to start with the semi-inner product space of square-integrable functions, find an appropriate subspace M, and then convert this picture to the Hilbert space of equivalence classes of square-integrable functions, by defining [itex]\Phi[/itex] as the subspace of equivalence classes [f] such that f is in M.
 
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  • #19
Fredrik said:
then convert this picture to the Hilbert space of equivalence classes of square-integrable functions, by defining [itex]\Phi[/itex] as the subspace of equivalence classes [f] such that f is in M.
At some point, it becomes more convenient to use the term "subspace" to refer to any injective map, rather than ones that are literally inclusions. I confess that I wouldn't have even blinked at a description like
The space of rapidly decreasing functions is a subspace of [itex]L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex]​
because of the obvious injective homomorphism from the former to the latter.


Category theoretically, that's actually how the term "subobject" is defined -- a subobject of X is an (equivalence class) of monomorphisms whose codomain is X. (the details of the equivalence relation can easily be looked up, e.g. on Wikipedia)
 
  • #20
Let S denote the space of "rapidly decreasing functions", then (on top of that already mentioned in the o.p.) we have the following string of set inclusions:

φ=D(G) ⊂ S ⊂ H=L₂(G) ⊂ φˣ=D`(G).
 
  • #21
Rasalhague said:
Rafael de la Madrid writes

Is he a mathematician?
 
  • #22
matphysik said:
Is [Rafael de la Madrid] a mathematician?

Afaict, he's a theoretical/mathematical physicist who has been active in areas
related to resonances, Gamow vectors, rigged Hilbert space, Hardy space, etc,
for quite a while.
 
  • #23
Fredrik said:
[...] I believe it makes sense to say that [itex]\Phi[/itex] is the subspace consisting of equivalence classes [f] such that one of the members of [f] satisfies an appropriate "niceness" condition, like continuity or smoothness. But de la Madrid is still wrong to describe a subspace of the Hilbert space [itex]L^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] as not consisting of equivalence classes of functions.

Umm, have you studied the whole paper, or are you just commenting on particular bits?

In the context of even just section 2.3, I think Rafa is in fact correct to describe [itex]\Phi[/itex] as he does. See his remarks near eqs (2.22) and (2.23). He wants a space in which not only f is square integrable, but also all its derivatives. That rules out many pathological cases like the one you mentioned earlier.

What I think he should have done, in order to stay as close as possible to the presentation he chose without saying anything that's wrong, is to start with the semi-inner product space of square-integrable functions, find an appropriate subspace M, and then convert this picture to the Hilbert space of equivalence classes of square-integrable functions, by defining [itex]\Phi[/itex] as the subspace of equivalence classes [f] such that f is in M.

No, that would be the opposite of what's needed in the RHS framework. In QM we want a state space on which all the physical observables are defined everywhere as self-adjoint operators. I.e., we want the space [itex]\Phi[/itex], as Rafa describes it, and its dual [itex]\Phi'[/itex]. The Hilbert space recedes slightly in importance, being just the closure of [itex]\Phi[/itex], (afaict, only needed to help with the analysis and spectral theory, etc, on the dual pair [itex]\Phi, \Phi'[/itex]). We don't need all those extra pathological a.e.-equivalent functions which pollute the Hilbert space.
 
  • #24
I only have time for a very short answer. I haven't read the paper. I'm just commenting on an issue that was brought up. Earlier in the paper, he said that [itex]\Phi[/itex] is a subspace of a Hilbert space [itex]\mathcal H[/itex]. But then he defines [itex]\Phi[/itex] as a subspace of a semi-inner product space, not a Hilbert space. So he's at least contradicting himself.
 
  • #25
Fredrik said:
I only have time for a very short answer. I haven't read the paper. I'm just commenting on an issue that was brought up. Earlier in the paper, he said that [itex]\Phi[/itex] is a subspace of a Hilbert space [itex]\mathcal H[/itex]. But then he defines [itex]\Phi[/itex] as a subspace of a semi-inner product space, not a Hilbert space. So he's at least contradicting himself.

I don't see any contradiction in what he's actually written. But maybe this discussion should wait until you read the paper, or at least section 2.3
 
  • #26
Strangerep: I think you're missing three points:
  1. Any partial operator on [itex]\mathcal{L}^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] is defined on equivalence classes, not on individual functions.
  2. There do not exist any functions which are literally elements of [itex]\mathcal{L}^2(\mathbb R)[/itex].

As long as a class contains just one function that is differentiable, you can apply the derivative operator to the class.

And depending on just how you define a derivative partial operator, it may include classes that don't include anything differentiable at all. (e.g. it would be enough to have a representative that is differentiable almost everywhere)


AFAIK, the main reason algebraic reason why you want your test functions to be (equivalent to) continuous functions is so that the space of distributions contain delta functions.
 
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  • #27
strangerep said:
The point about [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex] is that the usual quantum operators Q and P are well-defined everywhere on [itex]\mathcal \Phi[/itex]


Q and P are defined for all ψ∈S⊃φ (not φ).
 
  • #28
matphysik said:
Q and P are defined for all ψ∈S⊃φ (not φ).

Yes. (I was using the symbol [itex]\Phi[/itex] as in Rafa's paper. It corresponds to your S.)
 
  • #29
Hurkyl said:
Strangerep: I think you're missing three points:
  1. Any partial operator on [itex]\mathcal{L}^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] is defined on equivalence classes, not on individual functions.
  2. There do not exist any functions which are literally elements of [itex]\mathcal{L}^2(\mathbb R)[/itex].

Yes, I did understand these 2 points. Maybe there's been a miscommunication...

IIRC, you're starting from the Hilbert space [itex]\mathcal{L}^2(\mathbb R)[/itex] which, as you say, is defined on equivalence classes. One can then restrict to a subspace such that multiplication by x and differentiation wrt to x are defined on the whole space. Performed in this way, yes we still have equivalence classes.

I had understood that Rafa was starting from a linear space of [itex]C^\infty[/itex] functions such that multiplication by x yields another [itex]C^\infty[/itex] function in the space. Then one restricts the space further to just those functions which are square-integrable, and extends this to define an inner product. But... would you then argue that one could just as well start with a more general space of functions which are only [itex]C^\infty[/itex] almost everywhere, then take equivalence classes, and that boils down to the same thing as the above construction which used restriction on a Hilbert space of equivalence classes?
 

What is a Rigged Hilbert Space?

A Rigged Hilbert Space, also known as a Gelfand triple, is a mathematical concept that extends the traditional Hilbert space by including a wider class of functions. It consists of a dense subspace of functions called the test space, a larger space called the space of distributions, and a continuous embedding of the test space into the space of distributions.

Why was the concept of Rigged Hilbert Space developed?

The concept of Rigged Hilbert Space was developed to provide a rigorous mathematical framework for dealing with functions that are not necessarily square-integrable. This is important in quantum mechanics, where many functions of interest fall outside the traditional Hilbert space.

What are some examples of Rigged Hilbert Spaces?

One example of a Rigged Hilbert Space is the space of Schwartz functions, which consists of infinitely differentiable functions with rapid decay. Another example is the space of tempered distributions, which includes functions with polynomial growth.

How does the concept of Rigged Hilbert Space relate to quantum mechanics?

In quantum mechanics, the wave functions that describe the state of a system may not be square-integrable, meaning they do not belong to the traditional Hilbert space. The concept of Rigged Hilbert Space allows for a more general class of functions to be used, providing a more complete mathematical description of quantum systems.

Who introduced the concept of Rigged Hilbert Space?

The concept of Rigged Hilbert Space was first introduced by the mathematician Israel Gelfand in the 1950s. It has since been further developed and applied in various fields, including quantum mechanics, signal processing, and functional analysis.

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