Hurkyl said:
So what does the algebra of operators look like? Is it nothing more than a real Banach algebra?
In the SMA, which as I mentioned above must exist at the heart of every quantum theory, the fundamental operators are projection operators and the fundamental equation that they satisfy is therefore:
[tex]M M = M[/tex]
Addition is associative and commutative because it does not matter what order you combine the outputs of two or three Stern-Gerlach filters. Multiplication is not commutative because the order in which you measure a given particle is important, but because the order in which you hook up a sequence of three filters is not important, multiplication is associative.
These rules match the rules for multiplying and adding matrices, and also match the rules for a Clifford algebra. Consequently, one can model the opreator algebra by matrices or with a Clifford algebra. The advantage of using a Clifford algebra is that you can get geometric content into the theory that way.
So, is that the definition of a "real Banach algebra"?
Hurkyl said:
Or do we have additional constraints like [itex]||A||^2 = ||A^2||[/itex] by analogy with C*-algebras?
I don't think that the constraint you mention here is compatible with the algebra of projection operators. Since any projection operator satisfies AA=A, the above would imply that ||A||=1 for any projection operator. Since all of 1 and [tex](1\pm\sigma_z)/2[/tex] are projection operators, this would imply that the probability of a random (i.e. unoriented) particle surviving all these very different filters must be equal. In other words, what I'm saying is that this would an impractical restriction for a norm intended to be used as a probability measure.
Hurkyl said:
Is there a corresponding construction here? What is the right sort of algebra to use?
Yes, there is a construction. Instead of starting with spinors and defining the density matrices as a sort of side show, you begin with the SMA and define the spinors from them. I'm busily writing it up and should be done in a matter of days.
The basic idea for how one obtains spinors from the SMA is (following Schwinger, more or less) to choose one element as the "vacuum", which we can call Z. Given projection operators R, G, and B, the associated bras and kets are defined by:
[tex]|R> = RZ/T_{RZ}[/tex]
[tex]<G| = ZG/T_{GZ}[/tex]
where [tex]T_{GZ}[/tex] is a real number that corresponds to the loss in amplitude associated with putting the two filters in order. For example, if there is an angle of theta between R and Z, and we are using the usual Pauli algebra, then [tex]T_{GZ} = \sqrt{(1+\cos(\theta))/2}[/tex].
The technical reason for having to come up with a Z state is that this is what is required to allow a Clifford algebraic analog of complex numbers to be used. In short, products of projection operators that begin and end with "Z", naturally commute with an exponential that acts just like a complex phase. Thus the complex numbers show up when you make spinors out of density matrices.
The above definition of spinors is subject to a disadvantge in that it blows up if R or G is antiparallel (i.e. annihilates) to Z. Now if R annihilates Z, then R does not annihilate -Z, so one can usually change the definition of the vacuum to avoid the issue. The usual spinor formalism seen in use in QM avoids this issue by keeping track of the above for both Z and -Z.
It should be noted that these difficulties that show up in the definition of spinors are purely mathematical. If you simply leave the theory in density matrix form none of this shows up. On the other hand, if you insist on the spinors as the basis for QM, you cannot avoid unphysical gauge freedoms.
I should be done with my paper in a few days. It is about 40 pages long and goes through numerous examples and has lots of exercises.
Carl