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2 votes
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Inequality with Hermite polynomials

Consider the (physicist's) Hermite polynomials $H_n(x)$ which are divided by $$\sqrt{\sqrt{\pi} 2^n n!}$$ for the purpose of normalization. These are orthogonal with respect to the weight function $e^{...
T. Amdeberhan's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
192 views

Reference request: an introduction to nuclear spaces

I am looking for a short introduction to nuclear spaces and nuclear operators. I am interested in these spaces as they often arise in mathematically rigorous quantum field theories. I have read the ...
CBBAM's user avatar
  • 721
1 vote
0 answers
111 views

Schrödinger equation approximation – continuity of eigenvalues with respect to potential

The question has been crossposted from Stackexchange after receiving no answers. Setup: the time-independent Schrödinger equation (eigenvalue problem): $(-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\Delta +V)\psi = E\psi$ (On ...
Rohan Didmishe's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
252 views

GNS Representation — A theorem from Thirring’s book

After the GNS representation for $C^{*}$-algebras is presented in Thirring's book Quantum mathematical physics, the author states the following theorem. The Spectral Theorem: For any given Hermitian (...
MathMath's user avatar
  • 1,305
1 vote
1 answer
294 views

Spectral perturbation theory of discrete spectra in presence of continuous spectrum

This is a 2 part question: 1). I am looking for a (hopefully accessible to beginning grad student who knows matrix perturbation theory) reference for doing concrete calculations of perturbed discrete ...
Piyush Grover's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
155 views

Resource on spectral theory for differential operators with symmetry groups

In Methods of Mathematical Physics IV by Reed and Simon, the authors cover Floquet theory in detail in Section XIII.16. On page 280, they note that "A part of the analysis of [the periodic ...
Yonah Borns-Weil's user avatar
18 votes
6 answers
4k views

What is the best place to learn about the mathematical foundations of quantum mechanics?

I'm looking for good references to learn about the mathematical foundations of quantum mechanics. By mathematical foundations, I do not mean rigorous quantum mechanics in general but the axioms behind ...
MathMath's user avatar
  • 1,305
2 votes
0 answers
145 views

Are Weyl sequences polynomially bounded?

Look at the Hilbert space $l^2( \mathbb{Z}) $ and let $A$ be a translation invariant band operator. I.e. if $\{ e_n \}_{n \in \mathbb Z} $ is the standard basis for $l^2( \mathbb{Z}) $ then it holds ...
Frederik Ravn Klausen's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
66 views

Well-posedness of hyperbolic system with constant coefficients in finite domains

I'm studying the PDE $$ \frac{\partial u}{\partial t} + A_x\frac{\partial u}{\partial x} + A_y\frac{\partial u}{\partial y} + A_z\frac{\partial u}{\partial z} = 0 $$ with $A_x, A_y, A_z$ being ...
viviaxenov's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
127 views

Rigorous stability analysis of infinite dimensional ODEs : How to bound the tails?

My question is about linear stability analysis of dynamical systems obtained by discretizing linear(ized) partial differential equations. Consider, $\dot{x}=Ax$, where $x$ is the infinite dimensional ...
Piyush Grover's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
145 views

“Chapman-Kolmogorov”-convolution vs. smoothness

Let $K:\mathbb{R}^n \times \mathbb{R}^n \to \mathbb{R}$ be a so-called "integral-kernel": we certainly require $K(x,.)$ and $K(.,y)$ to be Lebesgue measurable for almost all $x,y \in \mathbb{R}^n$. An ...
5th decile's user avatar
  • 1,461
4 votes
0 answers
93 views

Conditions on the Hamiltonian of a classical system that yeild essentially self-adjoint quantum Hamiltonian

What are the conditions on the Hamiltonian of a classical system that under these conditions the quantum Hamiltonian obtained via Weyl quantization will be essentially self-adjoint in $L_2(\mathbb{R}^...
Glinka's user avatar
  • 381
1 vote
0 answers
75 views

Derivation of the vortex filament equation from Euler equation

How can the vortex filament equation $$\partial_t \chi = \partial_s \chi \wedge \partial_{ss} \chi,$$ where $\chi(t,s)$ is a curve in $\mathbb R^3$, be derived from the Euler equation $$\partial_t \...
Kei's user avatar
  • 277
6 votes
1 answer
243 views

How to choose phase to give a desired Fourier transform

Cross posted from MSE. I have a mathematical problem arising from a physics application, which I feel must have been solved before, but I don't know the terminology associated with it. I am looking ...
Yly's user avatar
  • 956
2 votes
2 answers
380 views

Criteria for Schrödinger operator on real line to have simple spectrum

Consider a Schrödinger operator $H:=-\Delta+V$ on $\mathbb R$, where $V$ is such that $H$ has a purely discrete spectrum $-\infty<\lambda_1\leq\lambda_2\leq\cdots$ converging to $+\infty$. Do there ...
user78370's user avatar
  • 891
4 votes
1 answer
615 views

Representation of Heisenberg-Weyl elements and their exponentials

There is possibly a huge literature on the subject but I am a newcomer on analytic representations and my need is rather specific. I simplify it below. Let $A,B$ be two symbols (standing for ...
Duchamp Gérard H. E.'s user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
877 views

Path integral methods

Are there detailed expositions of the path integral methods in (mathematical) physics other than Feynman-Hibbs and Glimm-Jaffe?
asv's user avatar
  • 21.8k
1 vote
1 answer
403 views

Derivative of a time evolution operator w.r.t. a parameter

Let $N\geq1$ be an integer and let $H:[0,1]^2\to\mathbb C^{N\times N}$ be a pointwise hermitean matrix valued function. For $y\in[0,1]$ and $0\leq a\leq b\leq 1$, let $U_y(b,a)$ be the time evolution ...
Joonas Ilmavirta's user avatar
4 votes
3 answers
490 views

Positivity of the Coulomb energy in two dimensions

In dimensions $d\geq 3$ the Coulomb energy is always non-negative (since the Fourier transform of $\frac{1}{\|\cdot\|^{d-2}}$ is non-negative). What can one say about positivity properties of the ...
whz's user avatar
  • 255
13 votes
2 answers
1k views

Applications of non-separable Hilbert spaces

In applications, Hilbert spaces of interest are often assumed to be separable. In addition to being extremely convenient mathematically, this assumption can often be justified on computational or ...
0 votes
0 answers
155 views

General form of a symplectic map

A symplectic automorphism of a Hilbert space has the form $T=U(\cosh S+J\sinh S)$ for a unitary $U$, an antilinear involution $J$ and a positive operator $S$. In fact a version of this goes through in ...
Ollie's user avatar
  • 1,411