Let $\mathcal{H}$ be a finite-dimensional inner product space over $\mathbb{C}$. Suppose $A_{1},...,A_{N}$ are linear operators on $\mathcal{H}$ such that: $$\{A_{i},A_{j}\} = 0 \quad \mbox{and} \quad \{A_{i}^{*},A_{j}\} = \delta_{ij}1$$ with $1$ being the identity matrix, $A_{i}^{*}$ being the adjoint of $A_{i}$ and $\{A,B\} := AB+BA$. It is known that, in this case, $\mathcal{H}$ must have a dimension which is a multiple of $2^{N}$ and each $A_{i}$ can be represented as a matrix operator on $\mathbb{C}^{2^{N}}$.
In physics, one postulates the existence of a unique vector (vacuum vector) $\Omega \in \mathcal{H}$ such that: $$A_{i} \Omega = 0 $$ for every $i=1,...,N$ and such that $\Omega$, $\Omega_{i}$, $\Omega_{i_{1}, i_{2}}$ ($i_{1}<i_{2}$),..., $\Omega_{i_{1},...,i_{N}}$ $(i_{1}<\cdots < i_{n}$) form a basis for $\mathcal{H}$, with: $$\Omega_{i_{1},...,i_{k}} = A_{i_{1}}^{*}\cdots A_{i_{k}}^{*}\Omega.$$
Question: Why does $\Omega$ exists and is unique? What about $\Omega = 0$? And why is it so evident that those $\Omega_{i_{1},...,i_{k}}$ as defined above form a basis for $\mathcal{H}$? I know these are $2^{N}$ vectors, so it would suffice to prove linear independence, and this could (in principle, assuming neither of these vectors are the zero vector) be proved because these vectors are all pairwise orthogonal, but how to garantee that neither of them are the zero vector?