Understanding Hilbert Space to Bilinear and Quadratic Forms

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around understanding concepts related to Hilbert spaces, specifically focusing on bilinear forms, sesquilinear forms, conjugate linear transformations, and quadratic forms. Participants explore definitions and relationships among these mathematical constructs, as well as their relevance to operator theory and functional analysis.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses confusion about bilinear, sesquilinear, and conjugate linear forms, seeking clarification on whether these are functionals or forms.
  • Another participant provides a definition of antilinear transformations and sesquilinear forms, noting their linearity properties in relation to complex vector spaces.
  • A suggestion is made to refer to "Functional Analysis" by Lax as a resource for better understanding.
  • A different book, "Introduction to Hilbert Spaces with Applications" by Debnath & Mikusinski, is also recommended for further reading.
  • Clarifications are provided regarding the definitions of bilinear and sesquilinear forms, as well as the concept of functionals, with distinctions made between their properties.
  • One participant elaborates on the definitions of inner product spaces and Hilbert spaces, explaining the relationship between inner products, norms, and distance functions.
  • The original poster indicates they will have specific questions after completing their analysis homework.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the definitions and properties of bilinear and sesquilinear forms, but there is no consensus on the best resources for understanding these concepts, as different books are suggested. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the original poster's specific questions and confusion.

Contextual Notes

Some definitions and properties discussed depend on the context of complex vector spaces and may require further exploration of inner product spaces and their characteristics. There are also unresolved aspects related to the original poster's understanding and specific queries.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for students and individuals interested in functional analysis, operator theory, and the mathematical foundations of Hilbert spaces.

benorin
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OK, so I've been there before, Hilbert Space that is. You know, infinite dimensional function space. At least I thought I had, that is until I started reading A Hilbert Space Problem Book by Halmos. So operator theory, right.

What's are bilinear, sesquilinear, conjugate linear, ect. - functionals or forms?

What's a quadradic form?

Someone, anyone, please help me: I'm lost in Hilbert Space.

Edit:I understand inner product spaces, are these things definable in such terms?
 
Last edited:
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A quick google got me this (on borgfinder.com)
"In mathematics, a real linear transformation f from a complex vector space V to another is said to
be antilinear (or conjugate-linear or semilinear) if :f(cx+dy)={c*}f(x)+{d*}f(y) for all c, d in C
and all x, y in V. " c* is the complex conjugate of c.
In mathematics, a sesquilinear form on a complex vector space V is a map V ×× V →? C that is
linear in one argument and antilinear in the other. (The name originates from the numerical prefix
sesqui- meaning "one and a half".) Compare with a bilinear form, which is linear in both
arguments. “
 
try starting from Functional Analysis by Lax. I'm using it this semester and its pretty good.
 
There's a book by Debnath & Mikusinski :"Introduction to Hilbert Spaces with Applications".

Daniel.
 
benorin said:
What's are bilinear, sesquilinear, conjugate linear, ect. - functionals or forms?

Bilinear means linear in both slots, sesquilinear means linear in one slot and not in the other, conjugate linear means linear in the second slot and the first slot requires conjugation.

A functional is some animal that takes functions for arguments.
 
benorin said:
Edit:I understand inner product spaces, are these things definable in such terms?

A vector space with an inner product defined on it (which satisfies the requirements for inner products -- look in Wikipedia for that) gives you an inner product space. A vector space with a distance function defined on it (which satisfies the required properties -- again see Wikipedia) is called a metric space.

A Hilbert space is a particular case of a inner product space (the inner product denoted by [itex]\langle a | b \rangle[/itex]) where the norm of a vector is defined by the inner product so that

[tex]\|a\|^2=\langle a | a \rangle[/tex]

(in fact we always want the positive root of the RHS). Further, the distance function between two points [itex]a, b[/itex] is defined to be [itex]\|b-a\|[/itex] (where we have associated every vector with a point; remember this does not necessarily have anything to do with Euclidean space or [itex]\mathbb{R}^n[/itex] or [itex]\mathbb{C}^n[/itex] or whatever, but clearly resembles some of their features).That's all there is to it.
 
Last edited:
Thank you all for your responses. I have some specific questions now; I will post them after my analysis homework deadline.
 

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