Questions tagged [hilbert-spaces]

For questions involving Hilbert spaces, that is, complete normed spaces whose norm comes from an inner product.

Let $H$ a vector space over the field $\mathbb C$, and $\langle \cdot,\cdot\rangle\colon H\times H\to \mathbb{C}$ a map which satisfies

  1. $\langle x,x\rangle =0\Longrightarrow x=0$ and $\langle x,x\rangle\geqslant 0$ for all $x\in H$,
  2. $(\forall x,y\in H):\langle x,y\rangle=\overline{\langle y,x\rangle}$,
  3. $(\forall x_1,x_2,y\in H)(\forall\alpha_1,\alpha_2\in\mathbb C):\langle \alpha_1 x_1+\alpha_2 x_2,y\rangle=\alpha_1\langle x_1,y\rangle+\alpha_2\langle x_2,y\rangle$.

The map $\lVert\cdot\rVert\colon H\to\mathbb R_+$, defined by $\lVert x\rVert =\langle x,x\rangle^{\frac 12}$ is a norm.

If $(H,\lVert \cdot\rVert)$ is complete, then $H$ is called a Hilbert space.

Example: The space $H$ of all sequences $x_0,x_1,x_2,\ldots$ of complex numbers such that $\sum_{n=0}^\infty|x_n|^2<\infty$, with the inner product $$\bigl\langle(x_0,x_1,x_2,\ldots),(y_0,y_1,y_2,\ldots)\bigr\rangle =\sum_{n=0}^{+\infty}x_n\overline{y_n}$$is a Hilbert space.

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Is it true that $M$ is complete?

If $H$ is a Hilbert space and $M$ is a nonempty,closed, bounded and convex subset(not necessarily a subspace)of $H$, then is it true that $M$ is complete? If it is, then can we use it without proof? I mean is it a theorem?
Extremal
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Prove that $\int_{\mathbb{R}}x^me^{2ax}e^{-x^2/2}=e^{2a^2}\int_{\mathbb{R}}(x+2a)^me^{-x^2/2}$

As the title indicates, I've been trying for quite some time now to prove that $$\int_{\mathbb{R}}x^me^{2ax}e^{-x^2/2}=e^{2a^2}\int_{\mathbb{R}}(x+2a)^me^{-x^2/2}$$ $\forall m \in \mathbb{N}, \forall a \in \mathbb{R}$. After having derived (using…
Archaick
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Linear dependence

Let $X$ be a Hilbert space and let $f:X\to\mathbb{R}$. Let $M=\{x\in X:f(x)=0\}$ be the nullspace of $f$. Let $M^\perp=\{x\in X:(x,y)=0\text{ for all }y\in M\}$ be the orthogonal complement of $M$. Show that $M^\perp$ is at most one-dimensional,…
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Direct sum of unitary operators is unitary

Is it true that if I have a Hilbert space $X$ that can be written $X = A \oplus B$ and unitary operators $T_1: A \to A$, $T_2: B \to B$ then the operator $T: A \oplus B \to A \oplus B$ given by $T(a+b) = T_1(a)+T_2(b)$ is unitary? I think it's true…
Wooster
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Follow up on Hilbert spaces: chicken egg problem with projection and is the kernel always closed?

I am having a chicken egg problem with projections in Hilbert spaces. I was trying to show that if a Hilbert space can be written as $H = U \oplus U^\bot$ where $U$ is any subspace then $U$ is closed. In an answer it was pointed out to me that I can…
user167889
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Orthogonal and algebraic compement inclusion

Let $H$ be a Hilbert space. Let $U$ be a subspace and let $E$ be any complement such that $$ H = U \oplus E$$ I am wondering if it can be said that $U^\bot$ is contained in $E$. If not can it at least be said that $\mathrm{dim}(U^\bot) \le …
user167889
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If $H$ is a Hilbert space and $T$ an isometric operator, then $\overline{R(T-I)}=H \implies N(T-I)=\{0\}$?

Let $H$ be a Hilbert space. Let $T$ be a linear operator and $R(T)$, $D(T)$, $N(T)$ the range, domain and kernel of $T$, respectively. If $\|Tx\|=\|x\|$ for all $x \in D(T)$, then $T$ is called an $\textit{isometric operator}$. Let $T$ be an…
Twnk
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Proving a system is linearly independent in a Hilbert Space

http://i.stack.imgr.com/QfTyD.png Okay, I've done part (i) but I'm stumped on part (ii) and how I can show that. Any help would be appreciated please.
user109331
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Range of $Df(a)$ contained in the subspace $\{f(a)\}^{\perp}$ with $f$ differentiable

Let $A$ a open set in a Hilbert Space $H$, suppose that $f:A\to F$ is differentiable at $a\in A$ and that $||f(x)||=c$ forall $x\in A$. Show that range of $Df(a)$ is contained in the subspace $\{f(a)\}^{\perp}$. Note: $f$ is differentiable in $a$…
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Hilbert space with a "norm" that does not respect the triangle inequality?

I have a Hilbert space that has an inner product and is complete. But it has no norm. Is this acceptable? The axioms of the Hilbert space says complete inner product vector space, so I assume it is one. But it threw me off having no norm. If I…
Anon21
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Show that there exists $x \in \mathcal{H}$ such that $\langle x,e_n \rangle = \alpha^n$

In my homework I have the following problem. Let $(e_n)_{n=1}^\infty$ be an orthonormal basis for a Hilbert space and $\alpha \in \mathbb{R}$. Show that there exists $x \in \mathcal{H}$ such that $\langle x,e_n \rangle = \alpha^n$ for all $n \geq 1$…
Daniel
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Why is the span of $\{e_1 - e_2, e_2 - e_3, \cdots \}$ dense in $\mathcal{l}^2$?

Consider the Hilbert space $\mathcal{l}^2$. I have to show that the span of $$S:=\{e_1 - e_2, e_2 - e_3, \cdots \}$$ is dense in $\mathcal{l}^2$. My idea is to show that something is dense in $\mathcal{l}^2$ if and only if $e_1$ (or more generally…
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Show that every diagonalizable operator is normal

Could anyone show that a diagonalizable operator is normal in Hilbert spaces? Every hint is appreciated.
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Why is $f(e_k)^2=f(f(e_k)e_k)$?

Why is $f(e_k)^2=f(f(e_k)e_k)$? Rather than $f(e_k)f(e_k)$ $f$ is linear bounded functional.
mavavilj
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Hilbert spaces and quantum mechanics

how is Hilbert spaces applied in quantum mechanics? the differences between the application of C* -algebra and Hilbert spaces on quantum mechanics.
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