Lecture 01
Lecture 01
• 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)
• 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.
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.
A. The Wavefunction
• 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”.
• 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).
• The Hilbert space H(V ) defined on a coordinate space V is the complex linear space
formed by normalizable wavefunctions defined on V .
∗ Above two properties lead to, (λ1 φ1 + λ2 φ2 , ψ) = λ∗1 · (φ1 , ψ) + λ∗2 · (φ2 , ψ).
λ∗i · (ψi , ψj ) · λj ≥ 0 ⇒
P P P
• One consequence: ( i λi ψi , j λj ψj ) = i,j
– The states ψi are linearly dependent if and only if the matrix (ψi , ψj ) is singular,
or equivalently det[(ψi , ψj )] = 0.
• 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
• ‘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) =
• 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 .
• Other labels like quantum numbers or just an index, are often used in ‘bras’ & ‘kets’:
e.g. |L = 2, Lz = 0i, |0i.
– 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.
∗ 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,
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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?
• 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.
– (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.
• Matrix representation: under a complete orthonormal basis |ni, the operator Ô has
‘matrix elements’ Omn ≡ hm|Ô|ni. (O† )mn = (Onm )∗ .
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• 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)
• Eigenvalue λ and eigenstate |Ô = λi of operator Ô: defined by Ô|Ô = λi = λ|Ô = λi.
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– 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.
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
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(OO† )ij = hei |ÔÔ† |ej i = n hei |ñi ρ2n hñ|ej i = (U · ρ2 · U † )ij .
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• Commutator & anti-commutator of  & B̂: [Â, B̂] ≡ ÂB̂ − B̂ Â, {Â, B̂} ≡ ÂB̂ + B̂ Â.
• Elementary functions of operators may be defined by their power series expansion, e.g.
exp(Â) = ∞ n
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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 ).
– 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 .
– Tr1⊗2 (Â ⊗ B̂) = Tr1 (Â) · Tr2 (B̂), where the three different traces are taken in
Hilbert spaces H1 ⊗ H2 , H1 , H2 , respectively.
C. Back to Wavefunction
– 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.
ipx/h̄
e√
– hx|pi = 2πh̄
for 1D infinite space.
A. Density Matrix
P P
– ρ= i λi |ei ihei |, with some orthonormal basis ei , and λi > 0, i λi = 1.
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• von Neumann entropy of a density matrix ρ̂: S ≡ −Tr(ρ̂ ln ρ̂) = − i λi ln λi .
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– 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.
A. Measurement
• Measurement can be done for a Hermitian operator  on pure or mixed states ρ̂.
– 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 .
• An example:
– DefinePauli
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
– ? 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 ] ?
• 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.
– 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.
• Familiar case: Â = x̂, B̂ = p̂. hx̂2 − x̄2 ihp̂2 − p̄2 i ≥ h̄2 /4.
• ? 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  = ∞
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n=0 |n + 1ihn| = |1ih0| + |2ih1| + . . . .
– 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.
– Proof: see e.g., M.A. Nielsen, I.L. Chuang, Quantum Computation and Quantum
Information, section 11.3.5.
– 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.
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|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 |,
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