Self-adjoint operator/Related Articles

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Self-adjoint operator.
See also changes related to Self-adjoint operator, or pages that link to Self-adjoint operator or to this page or whose text contains "Self-adjoint operator".

Parent topics

Subtopics

Other related topics

Bot-suggested topics

Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Self-adjoint operator. Needs checking by a human.

  • Adjoint (operator theory) [r]: The adjoint of an operator A is the operator A* satisfying ⟨u, Av⟩ = ⟨A*u, v⟩. [e]
  • Energy (science) [r]: A measurable physical quantity of a system which can be expressed in joules (the metric unit for a quantity of energy) or other measurement units such as ergs, calories, watt-hours or Btu. [e]
  • Hermitian operator [r]: linear operator on an inner product space that is equal to its Hermitian adjoint; also called self-adjoint operator. [e]
  • Hilbert space [r]: A complete inner product space. [e]
  • Molecular Hamiltonian [r]: Quantum mechanical operator describing the energy associated with motions and interactions of the electrons and nuclei that constitute a molecule. [e]
  • Quantum mechanics [r]: An important branch of physics dealing with the behavior of matter and energy at very small scales. [e]
  • Trace (mathematics) [r]: Sum of diagonal elements of matrix; for linear operator T, the trace is Σkvk|T|vk⟩ where {vk} is an orthonormal basis. [e]

Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)

  • Quantum operation [r]: A mathematical formalism used to describe a broad class of transformations that a quantum mechanical system can undergo. [e]
  • Inner product space [r]: A vector space that is endowed with an inner product and the corresponding norm. [e]
  • Dirac delta function [r]: Sharply peaked function, generalization of the Kronecker delta; a distribution that maps a regular function onto a single function value. [e]
  • Entropy (thermodynamics) [r]: Thermodynamic variable S appearing in the second law of thermodynamics. [e]