Home
Archaeology
Astronomy
Biology
Books
Business
Chemistry
Coins
Computers
Conservation
Cooking
Earth Science
Farming
Economics
Finance
Games
Geography
Health Science
History by Date
Hobbies
Law
Mathematics
Medicine
Military Technology
Movies
Music
People
Pharmacology
Philosophy
Physics
Psychology
Religion
Science History
Technology
Sports
Television
Video
Visual Art
Privacy
Contact Us



Riesz representation theorem

The Riesz representation theorem in functional analysis establishes an important connection between a Hilbert space and its dual space: if the ground field is the real numbers, the two are isometrically isomorphic; if the ground field is the complex numbers, the two are isometrically anti-isomorphic. The theorem is the justification for the bra-ket notation popular in the mathematical treatment of quantum mechanics. The (anti-) isomorphism is a particular natural one as will be described next.

Let H be a Hilbert space, and let H ' denote its dual space, consisting of all continuous linear functions from H into the base field R or C. If x is an element of H, then φx defined by

φx(y) = <x, y>    for all y in H
is an element of H '. The Riesz representation theorem states that every element of H ' can be written in this form, and that furthermore the assignment Φ(x) = φx defines an isometric (anti-) isomorphism
Φ : H -> H '
meaning that
  • Φ is bijective
  • The norms of x and Φ(x) agree: ||x|| = ||Φ(x)||
  • Φ is additive: Φ(x1 + x2) = Φ(x1) + Φ(x2)
  • If the base field is R, then Φ(λ x) = λ Φ(x) for all real numbers λ
  • If the base field is C, then Φ(λ x) = λ* Φ(x) for all complex numbers λ, where λ* denotes the complex conjugation of λ

The inverse map of Φ can be described as follows. Given an element φ of H ', the orthogonal complement of the kernel of φ is a one-dimensional subspace of H. Take a non-zero element z in that subspace, and set x = φ(z) / ||z||2 · z. Then Φ(x) = φ.


Copyright 2004. All rights reserved.