Antilinear map
In mathematics, a mapping 
 from a complex vector space to another is said to be antilinear (or conjugate-linear or semilinear, though the latter term is more general) if
for all 
 and all 
, where 
 and 
 are the complex conjugates of 
 and 
 respectively. The composition of two antilinear maps is complex-linear.
An antilinear map 
 may be equivalently described in terms of the linear map 
 from 
 to the complex conjugate vector space 
.
Antilinear maps occur in quantum mechanics in the study of time reversal and in spinor calculus, where it is customary to replace the bars over the basis vectors and the components of geometric objects by dots put above the indices.
References
- Horn and Johnson, Matrix Analysis, Cambridge University Press, 1985. ISBN 0-521-38632-2. (antilinear maps are discussed in section 4.6).
 - Budinich, P. and Trautman, A. The Spinorial Chessboard. Springer-Verlag, 1988. ISBN 0-387-19078-3. (antilinear maps are discussed in section 3.3).
 
See also
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