kweierstrass
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What is meant when writing a "one-ket" like this |1> ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bra-ket_notation#Most_common_use:_Quantum_mechanics"
In quantum mechanics, the state of a physical system is identified with a ray in a complex separable Hilbert space, \mathcal{H}, or, equivalently, by a point in the projective Hilbert space of the system. Each vector in the ray is called a "ket" and written as |\psi\rangle, which would be read as "ket psi". (The \psi\! can be replaced by any symbols, letters, numbers, or even words—whatever serves as a convenient label for the ket.) The ket can be viewed as a column vector and (given a basis for the Hilbert space) written out in components,
|\psi\rangle = [ c_0 \; c_1 \; c_2 \; \dots ] ^T,
when the considered Hilbert space is finite-dimensional. In infinite-dimensional spaces there are infinitely many components and the ket may be written in complex function notation, by prepending it with a bra (see below). For example,
\langle x|\psi\rangle = \psi(x)\ = c e^{- ikx}.