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Lecture 01

1. The document summarizes fundamental concepts in quantum mechanics, including Hilbert spaces, wavefunctions, operators, and Dirac notation. 2. A Hilbert space is a linear space equipped with an inner product, and contains normalizable wavefunctions as elements. Quantum states are represented by 'kets' and linear functionals by 'bras'. 3. Operators are linear mappings between Hilbert spaces. A complete orthonormal basis spans the Hilbert space and satisfies a resolution of identity.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
16 views15 pages

Lecture 01

1. The document summarizes fundamental concepts in quantum mechanics, including Hilbert spaces, wavefunctions, operators, and Dirac notation. 2. A Hilbert space is a linear space equipped with an inner product, and contains normalizable wavefunctions as elements. Quantum states are represented by 'kets' and linear functionals by 'bras'. 3. Operators are linear mappings between Hilbert spaces. A complete orthonormal basis spans the Hilbert space and satisfies a resolution of identity.

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raja haha
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Summary of Lecture #1: fundamental concepts

Goals and Requirements:

• Reflect on what you have learned about the basic objects in quantum mechanics:
wavefunctions & operators.

• Establish the basic picture about the math structure of quantum mechanics
(NOTE: these are not mathematically rigorous)

Hilbert space H linear space equipped with an inner product


quantum states (‘ket’) |ψi elements in the linear space H
‘bra’ hψ| linear functionals defined on H: H 7→ C
quantum mechanical operators linear mappings: H1 7→ H2 .

• Be familiarized with the general description of a quantum state: the density matrix.
Get some taste of quantum entropy and quantum entanglement if time permits.

• By the end of this lecture, you should feel comfortable about


dealing with abstract quantum states without reference to the wavefunctions, and
dealing with abstract quantum operators without reference to matrices.

• NOTE: statements with ? are advanced topics/challenge questions/extra exercises


(NOT required).

References:
J.J. Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics, Chapter 1.
P.A.M. Dirac, The Principle of Quantum Mechanics, Sections I.5-6, Chapter III.
J. von Neumann, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Chapters I,II.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 1/15


I THE HILBERT SPACE

I. THE HILBERT SPACE

A. The Wavefunction

• ψ(x) is a complex-valued function defined on some “coordinate” space V (x ∈ V ).


R
• Strictly speaking, ψ(x) shall be normalizable: |ψ(x)|2 dV < ∞.
2
• Probability of the system being in “volume element” dV is R|ψ(x)| dV . − Max Born.
|ψ(x)|2 dV

• Normalized ψ(x) has “dimension”(unit) of “volume”−1/2 (usually not dimensionless).

• Be careful when you parametrize the coordinate space. You might need to absorb the
Jacobian into the wavefunction (depending on the definition of dV ), and/or introduce
artificial “boundary conditions”.

• We may need non-normalizable wavefunctions when the space V is not compact


R
( dV = ∞), e.g. plane waves in open space. We usually regularize this problem
by first taking a finite V , and finally taking the limit that the volume goes to infinity.

• Most wavefunctions we will deal with are continuous, and (piecewise) smooth.

• Example:
V is the unit sphere S 2 parametrized by polar and
azimuth angles x = (θ, ϕ) ∈ [0, π] × [0, 2π], dV = sin θ dθdϕ,
legitimate ψ(θ, ϕ) are normalizable complex functions
R 2π R π
( ϕ=0 θ=0 |ψ(θ, ϕ)|2 sin θ dθdϕ < ∞)
with the “boundary condition” ψ(θ, 0) = ψ(θ, 2π), ∀θ
and ψ(0, ϕ) = ψ(0, 0), ψ(π, ϕ) = ψ(π, 0), ∀ϕ.
A basis of such wavefunctions are spherical harmonics Y`m (θ, φ).

B. The Hilbert Space

• The Hilbert space H(V ) defined on a coordinate space V is the complex linear space
formed by normalizable wavefunctions defined on V .

– Being a linear space: if ψ1 and ψ2 are elements of H (legitimate wavefunc.), then


so does λ1 ψ1 + λ2 ψ2 , for any complex numbers λ1 and λ2 . Exercise: prove this.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 2/15


I THE HILBERT SPACE

• There is a natural inner product(“overlap”) of two wavefunctions φ and ψ,


(φ, ψ) = φ∗ (x) ψ(x) dV , satisfying the three important “axioms”
R

– Hermiticity: (φ, ψ) = (ψ, φ)∗ .

– Linearity: (φ, λ1 ψ1 + λ2 ψ2 ) = λ1 · (φ, ψ1 ) + λ2 · (φ, ψ2 ), for λ1 , λ2 ∈ C.

∗ Above two properties lead to, (λ1 φ1 + λ2 φ2 , ψ) = λ∗1 · (φ1 , ψ) + λ∗2 · (φ2 , ψ).

– Positive definiteness: (ψ, ψ) ≥ 0, and (ψ, ψ) = 0 if and only if “ψ = 0”.

λ∗i · (ψi , ψj ) · λj ≥ 0 ⇒
P P P
• One consequence: ( i λi ψi , j λj ψj ) = i,j

the Gram matrix (ψi , ψj ) (where i is row-index, j is column-index) is Hermitian and


positive semi-definite.

– The Gram determinant det[(ψi , ψj )] ≥ 0.

– n = 2 case is the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality, (ψ1 , ψ1 )(ψ2 , ψ2 ) ≥ |(ψ1 , ψ2 )|2 .

– The states ψi are linearly dependent if and only if the matrix (ψi , ψj ) is singular,
or equivalently det[(ψi , ψj )] = 0.

C. Combining Hilbert Spaces: Direct Sum & Tensor Product

• Direct sum of two Hilbert spaces 


H1 (V1 ) ⊕ H2 (V2 ):
 ψ (x), x ∈ V ;
1 1
the wavefunction (ψ1 ⊕ ψ2 )(x) =
 ψ2 (x), x ∈ V2 .
The inner product becomes (φ1 ⊕ φ2 , ψ1 ⊕ ψ2 )V1 ⊕V2 = (φ1 , ψ1 )V1 + (φ2 , ψ2 )V2 =
R ∗
φ1 ψ1 dV1 + φ∗2 ψ2 dV2 .
R

– Note: you need consistent definition of the “volumes” of V1,2 .

• Tensor product of two Hilbert spaces H1 (V1 ) ⊗ H2 (V2 ):


the wavefunction (ψ1 ⊗ ψ2 )(x1 , x2 ) = ψ1 (x1 ) · ψ2 (x2 ), for x1 ∈ V1 and x2 ∈ V2 .
The inner product becomes (φ1 ⊗ φ2 , ψ1 ⊗ ψ2 )V1 ⊗V2 = (φ1 , ψ1 )V1 · (φ2 , ψ2 )V2 .

– Entanglement: wavefunctions in H1 ⊗ H2 may not be a direct product ψ1 ⊗ ψ2 .

– Identical particles: will be treated later.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 3/15


I THE HILBERT SPACE

• Example:
direct sum: vs. tensor product:
one particle in two potential wells two inequivalent particles in two wells
need to know if it is in left or right need to know both left & right particles’ state

H1 ⊕ H 2 H1 ⊗ H2

D. The Dirac Notation

• ‘kets’ |ψi: element(quantum state) in Hilbert space corresponding to wavefunction ψ.

• ‘bras’ hψ|: linear functional defined on the Hilbert space: H 7→ C, φ 7→ (ψ, φ).

ψ ∗ φ dV .
R
– Short-hand notation: hψ|φi ≡ (ψ, φ) =

– ‘bra’ is a linear functional: hψ|λ1 φ1 + λ2 φ2 i = λ1 hψ|φ1 i + λ2 hψ|φ2 i.

– ‘bras’ form an anti-linear space: λ∗1 hψ1 | + λ∗2 hψ2 | = hλ1 ψ1 + λ2 ψ2 |.

– Any ‘continuous’ linear functional f : H 7→ C, φ 7→ f (φ), corresponds to a


wavefunction ψf so that f = hψf |, f (φ) = (ψf , φ). − Riesz-Fréchet theorem.
P
With complete orthonormal basis |ei i, hψf | = i f (ei ) hei |,
so |ψf i = i f (ei )∗ |ei i.
P

• Short-hand notation: |ψ1 i + |ψ2 i with ψ1 ∈ H1 , ψ2 ∈ H2 means the direct sum state
ψ1 ⊕ ψ2 ∈ H1 ⊕ H2 .

• Short-hand notation: |ψ1 i|ψ2 i with ψ1 ∈ H1 , ψ2 ∈ H2 means the tensor product state
ψ1 ⊗ ψ2 ∈ H1 ⊗ H2 .

• Short-hand notation: |ψ1 ihψ2 | with ψ1 ∈ H1 , ψ2 ∈ H2 is a linear operator: H2 7→


H1 , φ 7→ (ψ2 , φ)ψ1 ≡ |ψ1 ihψ2 |φi.

• Other labels like quantum numbers or just an index, are often used in ‘bras’ & ‘kets’:
e.g. |L = 2, Lz = 0i, |0i.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 4/15


I THE HILBERT SPACE

E. Complete Orthonormal Basis

• (Discrete) Orthonormal basis ei (i = 0, 1, . . . ) satisfy hei |ej i = δij .


P
• Complete orthonormal basis: for any ψ ∈ H, |ψi = i |ei ihei |ψi.

– For finite dimensional Hilbert space, this is just


‘number of orthonormal basis’=‘dimension of Hilbert space’.

– For infinite dimensional Hilbert space, completeness is usually very hard to prove.

• Resolution of identity: 1 =
P
i |ei ihei |, the sum is over a complete orthonormal basis.

– We will see the resolution of identity in terms of overcomplete basis later.


P P P
– Application: change of basis, for |ψi = j c̃j |ẽj i = i ci |ei i = i,j ci |ẽj ihẽj |ei i,
P
coefficients c̃j = i ci hẽj |ei i, where ẽj are another complete orthonormal basis.

∗ The matrix Uji = hẽj |ei i is a unitary matrix. (U · U † )jk = i Uji (U † )ik =
P

i hẽj |ei ihei |ẽk i = hẽj |ẽk i (by resolution of identity) = δjk = (1)jk . Above
P
P
relation is c̃j = i Uji ci or c̃ = U · c in short form.
∗ Conversely, given a unitary matrix U and complete orthonormal basis |ei i,
P
then |ẽj i ≡ i Uji |ei i form a new set of complete orthonormal basis.
Exercise: is the “U ” here same as the “U ” in previous item?

• Example: Fourier series.


Particle moving on a ring parametrized by angle θ, legitimate
wavefunctions are normalizable ψ(θ) with period 2π, ψ(θ + 2π) = ψ(θ).
A complete orthonormal basis is en (θ) = √1

exp(inθ) for n ∈ Z.

• Basis of composite Hilbert space:


if |ei i (i = 1, . . . , n) are the basis of H1 , and |e0j i (j = 1, . . . , m) are the basis of H2 ,

– the (n + m) basis of H1 ⊕ H2 can be chosen as


(|e1 i, |e2 i, . . . , |en i, |e01 i, |e02 i, . . . , |e0m i).

– the (n × m) basis of H1 ⊗ H2 can be chosen as |ei i ⊗ |e0j i, namely


(|e1 i|e01 i, |e1 i|e02 i, . . . , |e1 i|e0m i, |e2 i|e01 i, . . . , |e2 i|e0m i, · · · , |en i|e01 i, . . . , |en i|e0m i).

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 5/15


II QUANTUM MECHANICAL OPERATORS

II. QUANTUM MECHANICAL OPERATORS

A. Quantum Mechanical Operators

• Linear operators: linear mappings between two (often the same) Hilbert spaces:
Ô|ψi ∈ H2 for |ψi ∈ H1 , and Ô|λ1 ψ1 + λ2 ψ2 i = λ1 Ô|ψ1 i + λ2 Ô|ψ2 i.

• Anti-linear operators: replace the last condition of linear operators by


Ô|λ1 ψ1 + λ2 ψ2 i = λ∗1 Ô|ψ1 i + λ∗2 Ô|ψ2 i.

– Example: the operator of “taking complex conjugate” K: φ(x) 7→ φ(x)∗ .

• Hermitian conjugate (adjoint) of linear operators: Ô† is a linear operator satisfying


(Ô† ψ, φ) = (ψ, Ôφ) for any ψ & φ, or hÔ† ψ| = hψ|Ô for any ψ.

– (Ô† )† = Ô.
“Proof”: for any ψ & φ, by definitions of inner product and hermitian conjugate,
(ψ, ((Ô† )† )φ) = (((Ô† )† )φ, ψ)∗ = (φ, (Ô† )ψ)∗ = ((Ô† )ψ, φ) = (ψ, Ôφ). Then
((Ô† )† ) and Ô must be the same.

– (λÔ)† = λ∗ Ô† , (ÂB̂)† = B̂ † † .


Exercise: try to “prove” these as the “proof” for the previous relation.

– Hermitian operators: those satisfy Ô† = Ô.


Anti-Hermitian operators: Ô† = −Ô.

– Any operator is the sum of its Hermitian & anti-Hermitian part:


Ô+Ô† Ô−Ô†
Ô = 2
+ 2
, the 1st term is Hermitian, 2nd term is anti-Hermitian.

• Matrix representation: under a complete orthonormal basis |ni, the operator Ô has
‘matrix elements’ Omn ≡ hm|Ô|ni. (O† )mn = (Onm )∗ .

– Matrix represention under non-orthogonal/overcomplete basis can also be useful.

– Expectation value of Ô in state ψ: hψ|Ô|ψi/hψ|ψi.

P
• Trace: TrÔ = n hn|Ô|ni, summing over a complete orthonormal basis.
The result of trace is independent of the choice of basis.
Cyclic property: Tr(ÂB̂) = Tr(B̂ Â), for ‘finite’ operators Â, B̂ (e.g. finite dimensional)

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 6/15


II QUANTUM MECHANICAL OPERATORS

• Eigenvalue λ and eigenstate |Ô = λi of operator Ô: defined by Ô|Ô = λi = λ|Ô = λi.

– Eigenvalues of Hermitian operators are real.

• (Not required) Singular value decomposition (SVD):

P
– Any operator can be written as Ô = n |ñi ρn hn|, where n labels the singular
value ρn ≥ 0, and the two sets of orthonormal basis |ni & |ñi are eigenstates of
Ô† Ô & ÔÔ† respectively.

– In complete orthonormal basis |ei i, the above relations becomes


Oij = hei |Ô|ej i = n hei |ñi ρn hn|ej i = (U · ρ · V † )ij ,
P

where the unitary matrices Uin = hei |ñi and Vjn = hej |ni,
and the diagonal matrix ρ has diagonal elements ρn . And
(O† O)ij = hei |Ô† Ô|ej i = n hei |ni ρ2n hn|ej i = (V · ρ2 · V † )ij , and
P

(OO† )ij = hei |ÔÔ† |ej i = n hei |ñi ρ2n hñ|ej i = (U · ρ2 · U † )ij .
P

• Projection operators: operators P̂ : H 7→ H, satisfying P̂ P̂ = P̂ .


P
– Hermitian projection operators P̂ = i |ei ihei |, ei are a set of orthonormal basis,
and P̂ have eigenvalues 1 and 0 only.

– 1 − P̂ is also a projection operator. Exercise: check that (1 − P̂ )(1 − P̂ ) = (1 − P̂ ).

• Inverse of an operator: Â−1 must satisfy Â−1 ·  = 1 and  · Â−1 = 1

– ? In infinite dimensional Hilbert space, there can be cases with B̂ Â = 1 while


ÂB̂ 6= 1, B̂ shall not be called Â−1 .

• Unitary operators: linear operators with


(Û ψ, Û φ) = (ψ, φ), ∀ψ, φ. Or equivalently Û † Û = 1.
P
– Unitary operators are of the form i |ẽi ihei |, where ei is a set of complete or-
thonormal basis, ẽi is another set of orthonormal basis.

– If Ĥ is Hermitian, then exp(iĤ) is unitary. Exercise: is the converse true?

• Anti-unitary operators: anti-linear operators with


(Û ψ, Û φ) = (ψ, φ)∗ , ∀ψ, φ.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 7/15


II QUANTUM MECHANICAL OPERATORS

B. Abstract Calculations with Operators

• Commutator & anti-commutator of  & B̂: [Â, B̂] ≡ ÂB̂ − B̂ Â, {Â, B̂} ≡ ÂB̂ + B̂ Â.

– For notation simplicity, define ‘Lie derivative’ LÂ B̂ ≡ [Â, B̂].

• Elementary functions of operators may be defined by their power series expansion, e.g.
exp(Â) = ∞ n
P
n=0 (Â) /n! (let’s not worry about convergence).

– Note: Â · f (B̂) · Â−1 = f (Â · B̂ · Â−1 ) for such functions f that can be defined as
power series, because  · (B̂)n · Â−1 = ( · B̂ · Â−1 )n .

• Jacobi identity: [Â, [B̂, Ĉ]] + [B̂, [Ĉ, Â]] + [Ĉ, [Â, B̂]] = 0. Or [LÂ , LB̂ ]Ĉ = L[Â,B̂] Ĉ.

• ‘Leibniz’s rule’:
[Â, B̂1 B̂2 · · · B̂n ] = [Â, B̂1 ]B̂2 · · · B̂n + B̂1 [Â, B̂2 ] · · · B̂n + · · · + B̂1 B̂2 · · · [Â, B̂n ]. Or
LÂ (B̂1 B̂2 · · · B̂n ) = (LÂ B̂1 )B̂2 · · · B̂n + B̂1 (LÂ B̂2 ) · · · B̂n + · · · + B̂1 B̂2 · · · (LÂ B̂n ).

• Baker-Hausdorff formula: e B̂e− = B̂ + [Â, B̂]/1! + [Â, [Â, B̂]]/2! + . . .


Or formally e B̂e− = exp(L )B̂.

– A heuristic “proof”:
define fˆ(t) = et B̂e−t , then fˆ(0) = B̂.
d tÂ
Take derivative with respect to t, note that dt e = Âet = et Â,
then d fˆ(t) = Â · fˆ(t) − fˆ(t) · Â = [Â, fˆ(t)] = L fˆ(t).
dt Â

The formal solution of this ordinary differential equation is then fˆ(t) = etLÂ fˆ(0),
so e B̂e− = fˆ(1) = exp(L )B̂. Â

• Direct sum & tensor product of operators are defined similarly to wavefunctions:
for operator  defined on H1 , and B̂ defined on H2 ,  ⊗ B̂ is an operator defined on
H1 ⊗ H2 , such that (Â ⊗ B̂)|ψ ⊗ φi = (Â|ψi) ⊗ (B̂|φi), for states ψ ∈ H1 and φ ∈ H2 .

– (Â ⊗ B̂) · (Ĉ ⊗ D̂) = ÂĈ ⊗ B̂ D̂.

– When  is referred to within Ĥ1 ⊗ Ĥ2 , it usually means  ⊗ 1. With this


convention, Â⊗ B̂ is usually written as ÂB̂, which means (Â⊗ 1)·(1 ⊗ B̂) = Â⊗ B̂.

– Tr1⊗2 (Â ⊗ B̂) = Tr1 (Â) · Tr2 (B̂), where the three different traces are taken in
Hilbert spaces H1 ⊗ H2 , H1 , H2 , respectively.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 8/15


II QUANTUM MECHANICAL OPERATORS

– With complete orthonormal basis, |ei i ∈ H1 (i = 1, . . . , n) and |e0j i ∈ H2 (j =


1, . . . , m), the matrix representation of  ⊗ B̂ is a (n × m)-row (n × m)-column
matrix, (Â ⊗ B̂)(i,j)(i0 ,j 0 ) ≡ hei |he0j |Â ⊗ B̂|ei0 i|e0j 0 i = hei |Â|ei0 i · he0j |B̂|e0j 0 i = Aii0 Bjj 0 .
The combination (i, j)[(i0 , j 0 )] is the row[column] index (i, i0 = 1, . . . , n and j, j 0 =
1, . . . , m).

C. Back to Wavefunction

• The coordinate operator x̂: φ(x) 7→ x · φ(x). It is obviously Hermitian.

– Worry #1: x · φ(x) may not be normalizable!

– Worry #2: What are the eigenstate wavefunctions of x̂? Are they normalizable?

• Despite the above worries, denote the eigenstates of x̂ by |xi, i.e. x̂|xi = x|xi.

– ‘Normalization’: hx0 |xi = δ(x0 − x), where δ is the Dirac-δ ‘function’.

– Resolution of identity: 1 = |xihx| dx.


R

– The wavefunction ψ(x): expansion coefficients of state ψ in the basis |xi.


R
ψ(x) = hx|ψi. And |ψi = ψ(x)|xi dx.

• The momentum operator p̂: φ(x) 7→ −ih̄ ∂x



φ(x). It is not-so-obviously Hermitian.

– Canonical commutation relation [x̂, p̂] = ih̄.

– Similar worries as for the coordinate operator.

– Nonetheless, denote the eigenstate of p̂ as |pi, p̂|pi = p|pi.

– ‘Normalization’: hp0 |pi = δ(p0 − p).

– Resolution of identity: 1 = |pihp| dp.


R

ipx/h̄
e√
– hx|pi = 2πh̄
for 1D infinite space.

• ? Construct examples of normalizable φ(x) so that x̂ φ(x) or p̂ φ(x) is not normalizable.

• IMPORTANT: h̄ will be frequently omitted hereafter.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 9/15


III DENSITY MATRIX & ENTANGLEMENT

III. DENSITY MATRIX & ENTANGLEMENT

A. Density Matrix

• Density matrix of a normalized ‘pure state’ ψ: ρ̂ψ = |ψihψ| is a projection operator.

– Expectation value of Ô in ψ is hψ|Ô|ψi = Tr(ρ̂ψ Ô) = Tr(Ô ρ̂ψ ).

– ρ̂ is independent of the complex phase of |ψi, is a ‘better’ description of the state.

• Generic density matrix ρ: linear Hermitian non-negative operator of trace unity.


ρ̂† = ρ̂; hφ|ρ̂|φi ≥ 0, ∀φ; and Tr(ρ̂) = 1.

P P
– ρ= i λi |ei ihei |, with some orthonormal basis ei , and λi > 0, i λi = 1.

– Expectation value of Ô in generic ‘mixed state’ is Tr(ρ̂ Ô).


P
– If ρ̂j are density matrices, and cj > 0, and j cj = 1,
P
then j cj ρ̂j is also a density matrix.

• The density matrix of Hamiltonian H


b at finite temperature T :
b B T )/Z = P exp(−Ei /kB T ) |Ei ihEi |,
ρ = exp(−H/k Ei Z

where Ei are eigenvalues, |Ei i are corresponding eigenstates,


b B T )] = P exp(−Ei /kB T ).
Z = Tr[exp(−H/k Ei

B. ? Some Quantum Information Basics (not required)

P
• von Neumann entropy of a density matrix ρ̂: S ≡ −Tr(ρ̂ ln ρ̂) = − i λi ln λi .

– Pure states have zero entropy & ρ̂2 = ρ̂.


Mixed states have positive entropy & ρ̂2 < ρ̂.

– In n(finite)-dimensional Hilbert space, 0 ≤ S[ρ̂] ≤ ln(n).


ln[Tr(ρ̂n )]
– Rényi entropy: Sn ≡ 1−n
. Note: formally limn→1 Sn = S.

• ? ? ? Concavity of von Neumann entropy: mixing two systems increases entropy.


S[λ ρ̂1 + (1 − λ) ρ̂2 ] ≥ λ S[ρ̂1 ] + (1 − λ) S[ρ̂2 ],
for two density matrices ρ̂1,2 and 0 < λ < 1.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 10/15


III DENSITY MATRIX & ENTANGLEMENT

• Reduced density matrix: given a density matrix ρ̂ on Ha ⊗ Hb , reduced density matrix


ρa on Ha is ρ̂a = Trb (ρ̂), obtained by taking partial trace over Hb .

P
– Meaning of partial trace: for any ψ1,2 ∈ Ha , hψ1 |ρ̂a |ψ2 i = i hψ1 ⊗ φi |ρ̂|ψ2 ⊗ φi i,
and the sum is over a complete orthonormal basis φi of Hb . The matrix elements
of ρ̂a under a orthonormal basis Ha can be computed by this relation.

– ? ? ? Subadditivity of entropy: information is ‘lost’ by separating two subsystems.


Sa⊗b [ρ̂] = Tra⊗b (−ρ̂ ln ρ̂) ≤ Sa [ρ̂a ] + Sb [ρ̂b ] = Tra (−ρ̂a ln ρ̂a ) + Trb (−ρ̂b ln ρ̂b ) =
Sa⊗b [ρ̂a ⊗ ρ̂b ].

• Special case: ρ̂ = |ψihψ| is for a normalized pure state ψ ∈ Ha ⊗ Hb .

– “Entanglement entropy”: von Neumann entropy of reduced density matrix:


Sa = −Tra (ρ̂a ln ρ̂a ), where ρ̂a = Trb (ρ̂).

– The degrees of freedom of a and b are ‘entangled’ in this state ψ if Sa > 0.

– The state ψ is a disentangled product state ψa ⊗ φb if and only if Sa = 0.


P
– Schmidt decomposition (just SVD): |ψi = i λi |φi i ⊗ |ϕi i,
where (λi )2 are eigenvalues of ρ̂a , φi (ϕi ) are orthonormal eigenstates of ρ̂a (ρ̂b ).

– ? Reciprocity: define reduced density matrix ρ̂b = Tra (ρ̂) on Hb .


Sb = Trb (−ρ̂b ln ρ̂b ) equals to Sa above for a pure state in Ha ⊗ Hb .

• Example: Bell state.


Ha (Hb ) is 2-dimensional, with orthonormal basis |0i, |1i (|0̃i, |1̃i).
One of the Bell states is √1 (|0i|1̃i − |1i|0̃i).
2
Exercise: write down the reduced density matrices ρ̂a and ρ̂b . Compute the entangle-
ment entropy.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 11/15


IV MEASUREMENT & THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE

IV. MEASUREMENT & THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE

A. Measurement

• Measurement can be done for a Hermitian operator  on pure or mixed states ρ̂.

• The outcome of the measurement will be eigenvalues of Â.

• The probability of outcome λ is Pλ = Tr(P̂λ ρ̂), P̂λ is the projection to eigenvalue-λ


P
subspace. P̂λ = | = λih = λ|, summing over orthonormal eigenstates of  with
eigenvalue λ.

– If all eigenvalues λ0 of  are known, then P̂λ can be formally obtained by the
Â−λ0 1
Q  
“Lagrange interpolating polynomial”, P̂λ = λ0 , λ0 6=λ λ−λ0 .

– The statistical average of outcome is the expectation value of  in state ρ̂,


P P P
Tr(Â ρ̂) = Tr[( λ λ P̂λ ) ρ̂] = λ λ Tr(P̂λ ρ̂) = λ λ Pλ .
For pure state ρ̂ = |ψihψ|, this is hψ|Â|ψi.

• The “collapse” postulate:


P̂λ ρ̂ P̂λ
if the measurement outcome is λ, the quantum state will “collapse” to Tr(P̂λ ρ̂)
.

– If eigenvalue-λ eigenstate is unique, this is the familiar statement


that the system collapses to eigenstate |Â = λi.

• ? ? ? Information is gained by measurement: ‘entropy’ decreases.


P
S[ρ̂] ≥ λ Pλ S[ρ̂λ ], Pλ is the probability of outcome λ, ρ̂λ is the collapsed state.

• An example:

– DefinePauli
 matrices
     
1 0 0 1 0 −i 1 0
σ0 =  , σ1 =  , σ2 =  , σ 3 =  .
0 1 1 0 i 0 0 −1
– Consider a state described by the density matrix ρ̂, represented in some basis as
0 0 i
 
1
1 −i 0
 
0
ρ̂ = 41   = 4 [1 − σ1 ⊗ σ2 ]. Exercise: is this a pure state?
  1
0
 i 1 0 
−i 0 0 1

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 12/15


IV MEASUREMENT & THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE

– Measure a Hermitian operator Â, represented in the same basis as  = σ1 ⊗ σ3 .

– Eigenvalues of  are ±1.


(−1)−Â 1−Â .
Corresponding projection operators are P̂+1 = (−1)−1
and P̂−1 = 1−(−1)

– Outcome +1: probability Tr(ρ̂ P̂+1 ) = 1/2,


collapsed state is ρ̂+1 = (1/4)[1 + σ1 ⊗ σ3 ].
Outcome −1: probability Tr(ρ̂ P̂−1 ) = 1/2,
collapsed state is ρ̂−1 = (1/4)[1 − σ1 ⊗ σ3 ].

– ? Exercise: compute entropies S[ρ̂], S[ρ̂+1 ] and S[ρ̂−1 ], check if any informa-
tion can be gained by this measurement, namely whether S[ρ̂] > (1/2)S[ρ̂+1 ] +
(1/2)S[ρ̂−1 ] ?

B. The Uncertainty Principle

• For Hermitian  & B̂, (hÂ2 i − hÂi2 )(hB̂ 2 i − hB̂i2 ) ≥ 41 |h[Â, B̂]i|2 . − W. Heisenberg
h·i is the expectation value under a quantum state ρ̂.

– Rough description: product of variances of measurement outcomes for  & B̂ is


bounded below by the square of their commutator’s expectation value.

– Variances of measurement outcome: λ Pλ (λ − λ̄)2 = ( λ Pλ λ2 ) − λ̄2 , where λ


P P
P
are eigenvalues, Pλ is the probability of outcome λ, λ̄ = λ Pλ λ is the ‘average’.

– Proof:
Define the inner product of two operators Â, B̂ as (Â, B̂) = h† B̂i = Tr(† B̂ ρ̂).
Exercise: check that this indeed satisfies the “axioms” of inner product.
Define two new operators Â0 = Â − hÂi, B̂ 0 = B̂ − hB̂i. For Hermitian Â, B̂,
1
4
|h[Â, B̂]i|2 = 41 |h[Â0 , B̂ 0 ]i|2 = 12 (Â0 , B̂ 0 )(B̂ 0 , Â0 ) − 14 (Â0 , B̂ 0 )2 − 14 (B̂ 0 , Â0 )2
= [Im(Â0 , B̂ 0 )]2 ≤ |(Â0 , B̂ 0 )|2 ≤ (Â0 , Â0 )(B̂ 0 , B̂ 0 ) = (hÂ2 i − |hÂi|2 )(hB̂ 2 i − |hB̂i|2 ).
The last inequality used here is Cauchy-Schwarz.

– Exercise: what is the condition for the equality to be true?

• Familiar case: Â = x̂, B̂ = p̂. hx̂2 − x̄2 ihp̂2 − p̄2 i ≥ h̄2 /4.

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 13/15


A ? ABOUT THE STATEMENTS WITH ? (NOT REQUIRED)

Appendix A: ? About the Statements with ? (not required)

• ? In infinite dimensional Hilbert space, there can be cases with B̂ Â = 1 while ÂB̂ 6= 1,
B̂ shall not be called Â−1 .

– Example:
Assume |0i, |1i, . . . are complete orthonormal basis.
Define  = ∞
P
n=0 |n + 1ihn| = |1ih0| + |2ih1| + . . . .

Consider B̂ = ∞ n=0 |nihn| = 1.


P P∞
n=0 |nihn + 1|, then B̂ · Â =

However  · B̂ = n=0 |n + 1ihn + 1| = 1 − |n = 0ihn = 0| 6= 1.


P∞

• ? Construct examples of normalizable φ(x) so that x̂ φ(x) or p̂ φ(x) is not normalizable.

– Example:
sin(x3 )
φ(x) = x
, defined on real axis of x.
Check that φ is normalizable while both x̂ φ and p̂ φ are not.

• ? ? ? Concavity of von Neumann entropy: S[λ ρ̂1 + (1 − λ) ρ̂2 ] ≥ λ S[ρ̂1 ] + (1 − λ) S[ρ̂2 ],


for two density matrices ρ̂1,2 and 0 < λ < 1.

– Proof: see e.g., M.A. Nielsen, I.L. Chuang, Quantum Computation and Quantum
Information, section 11.3.5.

• ? ? ? Subadditivity of entropy: Sa⊕b [ρ̂] = Tra⊕b (−ρ̂ ln ρ̂) ≤ Sa [ρ̂a ] + Sb [ρ̂b ] =


Tra (−ρ̂a ln ρ̂a ) + Trb (−ρ̂b ln ρ̂b ) = Sa⊕b [ρ̂a ⊗ ρ̂b ].

– Proof: see H. Araki, E. H. Lieb, Commun. Math. Phys. 18, 160 (1970).

• ? Reciprocity: define reduced density matrices ρ̂a = Trb (ρ̂) & ρ̂b = Tra (ρ̂) on subspace
Ha & Hb respectively, where ρ = |ψihψ| is a pure state on Ha ⊗ Hb . Then Sb =
Trb (−ρ̂b ln ρ̂b ) = Sa = Tra (−ρ̂a ln ρ̂a ).

– Proof:
This a simple consequence of the Schmidt decomposition of a pure state.
P
|ψi = i λi |ei i⊗|ẽi i, with orthonormal basis ei for Ha and ẽi for Hb , and real pos-
itive singular values λi . Then the reduced density matrix on Ha is i λ2i |ei ihei |,
P

and on Hb is i λ2i |ẽi ihẽi |. So Sa = − i λ2i ln(λ2i ) = Sb .


P P

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 14/15


A ? ABOUT THE STATEMENTS WITH ? (NOT REQUIRED)

• ? ? ? Information is gained by measurement: ‘entropy’ decreases.


P
S[ρ̂] ≥ λ Pλ S[ρ̂λ ], Pλ is the probability of outcome λ, ρ̂λ is the collapsed state.

– Proof: see G. Lindblad, Commun. Math. Phys. 28, 245 (1972).

Advanced Quantum Mechanics, Fall 2018 15/15

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