Domnu said:
Let A be an operator while |B> be a state vector. Are all of the following correct?
A|B> = (<B|A^\dagger)
<B|A = A<B|
<B|A = <A^\dagger B|
I'm a bit shaky on the second one... importantly, |B> doesn't have to be an eigenstate of A.
For practical purposes, none of these equations are correct. For the first equation,
the right hand side should be ((<B|A^\dagger)) ^\dagger) -- it takes a dagger to turn a <B| into |B>, and vice versa.
<B| is, for all practical purposes, a row vector; A is an operator. In QM,
operator times row vector is not defined -- however, one could express the product in terms of matrix and vector components, and thus give sense to a very inelegant construction.
The last one is simply not defined in normal QM -- although, again, components could be used -- as in, if D is a three dimensional rotation matrix, then something like
R|x> = |Dx>, could hold, where R and D refer to the same rotation. R acts on states, D acts on coordinates. Why pull the operator inside the state vector in the first place?
The safest way to proceed with Dirac notation is simply to think of operators as matrices, which multiply column vectors, and can be multiplied by row vectors. Then, just follow the rules for matrix notation.
Regards,
Reilly Atkinson