DrDu said:
The distinction between hermitean, maximal hermitean and hypermaximal hermitean was often dropped in introductory qm texts.
Yes, and I think that in introductory qm courses it is quite OK to skip this.
I come from a mathematical physics community and the usual terminology over there is:
A is hermitian = bounded and A = A* (where A* in this case is the adjoint of A, which is defined as a bounded operator using the Riesz lemma)
A is symmetric = A is densely defined and A is a restriction of its adjoint A* (which is now defined in a different way than for bounded operators, if A is densely defined and linear everything is ok). This condition is equivalent to the the fact that for any f,g in the domain of A one has <f, A g> = <A f, g>.
A is self-adjoint = A is densely defined and A = A* (i.e. both A and A* has the same domain and Af = A*f for any f from this domain).
Notes:
1) spectrum of a self adjoint operator is a subset of the real line. The spectral theorem (essential for solving the Schrodinger equation and other stuff) holds *only* for self adjoint operators, not symmetric ones.
2) the spectrum of a (closed) symmetric operator is either the entire complex (upper/lower) half plane or a subset of the real line (and in this case it is self adjoint).
3) symmetric + defined everywhere => hermitian (Hellinger-Toeplitz theorem)
4) If one has symmetric operator, than the question whether it has any self-adjoint extension is solved by von Neuman's theory of deficiency indices (or in more modern terms by boundary triples:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/math-ph/0611088).
5) If i remember correctly, von Neuman's terminology is as follows:
"hermitian" = symmetric
"hypermaximal hermitian" = self adjoint
"maximal hermitian" = symmetric with no self-adjoint extensions (i.e. operators useless for physics, they do not correspond to any observable, classical example is the momentum on the half line (which, to be honest, is quite a puzzle for me :-))).