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Homework Statement
In Sakurai's Modern Physics, the author says, "... consider an outer product acting on a ket: (1.2.32). Because of the associative axiom, we can regard this equally well as as (1.2.33), where \left<\alpha|\gamma\right> is just a number. Thus the outer product acting on a ket is just another ket; in other words, \left|\beta\right>\left<|\alpha\right| can be regarded as an operator. Because (1.2.32) and (1.2.33) are equal, we may as well omit the dots and let \left|\beta\right>\left<\alpha|\gamma\right> standing for the operator \left|\beta\right>\left<\alpha\right| acting on \left|\gamma\right> or, equivalently, the number \left<\alpha|\gamma\right> multiplying \left|\beta\right>. (On the other hand, if (1.2.33) is written as \left(\left<\alpha|\gamma\right>\right)\cdot\left|\beta\right>, we cannot afford to omit the dot and brackets because the resulting expression would look illegal.) Notice that the operator \left|\beta\right>\left<\alpha\right| rotates \left|\gamma\right> into the direction \left|\beta\right> . It is easy to see that if (1.2.34) then (1.2.35), which is left as an exercise.
Homework Equations
\left(\left|\beta\right>\left<\alpha\right|\right)\cdot\left|\gamma\right>\qquad (1.2.32)
\left|\beta\right>\cdot\left<\alpha|\gamma\right>\qquad (1.2.33)
X=\left|\beta\right>\left<\alpha\right|\qquad (1.2.34)
X^\dagger=\left|\alpha\right>\left<\beta\right|\qquad (1.2.35)
The Attempt at a Solution
I know that the definition of an adjoint involves taking the complex conjugate of the tranpose of a complex-vallued quantity. I can't just turn all the bras into kets and all the kets into bras, because then I end up with an inner product \left<\alpha|\beta\right>, which isn't right since the outer product is an operator (a matrix). What am I missing? Thanks!
Edit: I have noticed that this may be relevant. The dual correspondence principle.
c_{\alpha}\left|\alpha\right>+c_{\beta}\left|\beta\right>\stackrel{\text{DC}}{\leftrightarrow}c_{\alpha}^{*}\left<\alpha\right|+c_{\beta}^{*}\left<\beta\right|
If I start with all the \beta coefficients being zero, I should just get that the \alpha ket has a corresponding bra. Can I then "multiply" both sides of the equation with \left<\beta\right|? I guess I can't because then I end up with the same issue. I would get an inner product.
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