Alesak said:
Hi,
I'm beginning to learn QM, and I've never seen any treatment of vector spaces with infinite bases. Countable case is quite digestible, but uncountable just flies over my head.
Can anyone recommend me place where to learn this more advanced part of linear algebra, with focus on stuff needed for QM? I already know a lot of finite-dimensional linear algebra algebra, but I can't find anything that would skip this and go into this more intermediate-level stuff directly.
I would recommend "Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics" ( Von Neumann, 1932 ).
The only problem may be his notation and nomenclature that is a bit dated.
If you want more modern books about the mathematics behind non-relativistic quantum mechanics I would recommend: "Functional Analysis" (Walter Rudin), "Fundamentals of the Theory of Operator Algebras" (Kadison and Ringrose, two volumes), "Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics" (Reed and Simon, four volumes).
In short: you choose a Separable Complex Hilbert Space. The Pure States of your system will be represented by (equivalence classes of) unit vectors. The Observables will be represented by Self-Adjoint Operators (Bounded or not Bounded) on this Complex Separable Hilbert Space. (The Domain of the not-Bounded ones will be a dense strict subspace).
To every Self-Adjoint Operator on a Separable Complex Hilbert Space corresponds a unique Spectral Resolution of the Identity. This unique Spectral Resolution of the Identity (for each Self-Adjoint Operator) gives you, for each unit vector state, a Probability Measure on the Borel Sets of the real line.
So, given ANY Borel Set of the real line, the Probability Measure of that Set (as I said, the Probability Measure given for each unit vector state, by the unique Spectral Resolution of the Identity that corresponds to each Self-Adjoint Operator) represents the relative frequency for an infinite number of identical systems identically prepared in the same state, for the experimental value when measuring the Observable (that corresponds to that Self-Adjoint Operator) to be in that given Borel Set.
So, mathematically speaking, you don't even need to talk about "bases" if you don't want to.
But if you are not already a mathematician, I would recommend you better to get used to the mnemotechnic bra-ket Dirac notation and rules, because it is much faster to more or less understand and start doing things with it.
After that, if you want to actually understand what is really happening behind many "apparent paradoxes" in Quantum Mechanics, then you need to understand it in a more rigorous mathematical way.