This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2011) |
In mathematics, especially functional analysis, a normal operator on a complex Hilbert space H is a continuous linear operator N : H → H that commutes with its Hermitian adjoint N*, that is: NN* = N*N.[1]
Normal operators are important because the spectral theorem holds for them. The class of normal operators is well understood. Examples of normal operators are
- unitary operators: N* = N−1
- Hermitian operators (i.e., self-adjoint operators): N* = N
- skew-Hermitian operators: N* = −N
- positive operators: N = MM* for some M (so N is self-adjoint).
A normal matrix is the matrix expression of a normal operator on the Hilbert space Cn.
Properties
editNormal operators are characterized by the spectral theorem. A compact normal operator (in particular, a normal operator on a finite-dimensional inner product space) is unitarily diagonalizable.[2]
Let be a bounded operator. The following are equivalent.
- is normal.
- is normal.
- for all (use ).
- The self-adjoint and anti–self adjoint parts of commute. That is, if is written as with and then [note 1]
If is a bounded normal operator, then and have the same kernel and the same range. Consequently, the range of is dense if and only if is injective.[clarification needed] Put in another way, the kernel of a normal operator is the orthogonal complement of its range. It follows that the kernel of the operator coincides with that of for any Every generalized eigenvalue of a normal operator is thus genuine. is an eigenvalue of a normal operator if and only if its complex conjugate is an eigenvalue of Eigenvectors of a normal operator corresponding to different eigenvalues are orthogonal, and a normal operator stabilizes the orthogonal complement of each of its eigenspaces.[3] This implies the usual spectral theorem: every normal operator on a finite-dimensional space is diagonalizable by a unitary operator. There is also an infinite-dimensional version of the spectral theorem expressed in terms of projection-valued measures. The residual spectrum of a normal operator is empty.[3]
The product of normal operators that commute is again normal; this is nontrivial, but follows directly from Fuglede's theorem, which states (in a form generalized by Putnam):
- If and are normal operators and if is a bounded linear operator such that then .
The operator norm of a normal operator equals its numerical radius[clarification needed] and spectral radius.
A normal operator coincides with its Aluthge transform.
Properties in finite-dimensional case
editIf a normal operator T on a finite-dimensional real[clarification needed] or complex Hilbert space (inner product space) H stabilizes a subspace V, then it also stabilizes its orthogonal complement V⊥. (This statement is trivial in the case where T is self-adjoint.)
Proof. Let PV be the orthogonal projection onto V. Then the orthogonal projection onto V⊥ is 1H−PV. The fact that T stabilizes V can be expressed as (1H−PV)TPV = 0, or TPV = PVTPV. The goal is to show that PVT(1H−PV) = 0.
Let X = PVT(1H−PV). Since (A, B) ↦ tr(AB*) is an inner product on the space of endomorphisms of H, it is enough to show that tr(XX*) = 0. First it is noted that
Now using properties of the trace and of orthogonal projections we have:
The same argument goes through for compact normal operators in infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces, where one make use of the Hilbert-Schmidt inner product, defined by tr(AB*) suitably interpreted.[4] However, for bounded normal operators, the orthogonal complement to a stable subspace may not be stable.[5] It follows that the Hilbert space cannot in general be spanned by eigenvectors of a normal operator. Consider, for example, the bilateral shift (or two-sided shift) acting on , which is normal, but has no eigenvalues.
The invariant subspaces of a shift acting on Hardy space are characterized by Beurling's theorem.
Normal elements of algebras
editThe notion of normal operators generalizes to an involutive algebra:
An element x of an involutive algebra is said to be normal if xx* = x*x.
Self-adjoint and unitary elements are normal.
The most important case is when such an algebra is a C*-algebra.
Unbounded normal operators
editThe definition of normal operators naturally generalizes to some class of unbounded operators. Explicitly, a closed operator N is said to be normal if
Here, the existence of the adjoint N* requires that the domain of N be dense, and the equality includes the assertion that the domain of N*N equals that of NN*, which is not necessarily the case in general.
Equivalently normal operators are precisely those for which[6]
with
The spectral theorem still holds for unbounded (normal) operators. The proofs work by reduction to bounded (normal) operators.[7][8]
Generalization
editThe success of the theory of normal operators led to several attempts for generalization by weakening the commutativity requirement. Classes of operators that include normal operators are (in order of inclusion)
See also
edit- Continuous linear operator
- Contraction (operator theory) – Bounded operators with sub-unit norm
Notes
edit- ^ In contrast, for the important class of Creation and annihilation operators of, e.g., quantum field theory, they don't commute
References
edit- ^ Hoffman, Kenneth; Kunze, Ray (1971), Linear algebra (2nd ed.), Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc., p. 312, MR 0276251
- ^ Hoffman & Kunze (1971), p. 317.
- ^ a b Naylor, Arch W.; Sell George R. (1982). Linear Operator Theory in Engineering and Sciences. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-95001-3. Archived from the original on 2021-06-26. Retrieved 2021-06-26.
- ^ Andô, Tsuyoshi (1963). "Note on invariant subspaces of a compact normal operator". Archiv der Mathematik. 14: 337–340. doi:10.1007/BF01234964. S2CID 124945750.
- ^ Garrett, Paul (2005). "Operators on Hilbert spaces" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-09-18. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
- ^ Weidmann, Lineare Operatoren in Hilberträumen, Chapter 4, Section 3
- ^ Alexander Frei, Spectral Measures, Mathematics Stack Exchange, Existence Archived 2021-06-26 at the Wayback Machine, Uniqueness Archived 2021-06-26 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ John B. Conway, A Course in Functional Analysis, Second Edition, Chapter X, Section §4