maddogtheman
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If you had an operator A-hat whose eigenvectors form a complete basis for the Hilbert space has only real eigenvalue how would you prove that is was Hermitian?
Hurkyl said:You wouldn't. That's not even true when restricted to 2x2 matrices whose entries are all real!
(And please don't post the same thing multiple times. We don't tolerate it on this forum)
A diagonal matrix with real eigenvalues is Hermitian. But not necessarily if the matrix is merely diagonalizable with real eigenvalues. Why should (PDP^{-1})^* = PDP^{-1}?jostpuur said:If 2x2 matrix is diagonalizable with real eigenvalues, isn't it quite Hermitian then?
jostpuur said:The problem is that T\mapsto T^{\dagger} does not commute with all linear coordinate transformations, so actually we never should speak about a linear mapping being Hermitian. A simple fact, which I had never thought about before. Instead, we should speak about linear mapping being Hermitian with respect to some basis (or with respect to a certain kind of collection of different basis).