Complex conjugate vector space
In mathematics, the complex conjugate of a complex vector space is a complex vector space
, which has the same elements and additive group structure as
, but whose scalar multiplication involves conjugation of the scalars. In other words, the scalar multiplication of
satisfies
where is the scalar multiplication of
and
is the scalar multiplication of
.
The letter
stands for a vector in
,
is a complex number, and
denotes the complex conjugate of
.[1]
More concretely, the complex conjugate vector space is the same underlying real vector space (same set of points, same vector addition and real scalar multiplication) with the conjugate linear complex structure J (different multiplication by i).
Motivation
If and
are complex vector spaces, a function
is antilinear if
With the use of the conjugate vector space , an antilinear map
can be regarded as an ordinary linear map of type
. The linearity is checked by noting:
Conversely, any linear map defined on gives rise to an antilinear map on
.
This is the same underlying principle as in defining opposite ring so that a right -module can be regarded as a left
-module, or that of an opposite category so that a contravariant functor
can be regarded as an ordinary functor of type
.
Complex conjugation functor
A linear map gives rise to a corresponding linear map
which has the same action as
. Note that
preserves scalar multiplication because
Thus, complex conjugation and
define a functor from the category of complex vector spaces to itself.
If and
are finite-dimensional and the map
is described by the complex matrix
with respect to the bases
of
and
of
, then the map
is described by the complex conjugate of
with respect to the bases
of
and
of
.
Structure of the conjugate
The vector spaces and
have the same dimension over the complex numbers and are therefore isomorphic as complex vector spaces. However, there is no natural isomorphism from
to
.
The double conjugate is identical to
.
Complex conjugate of a Hilbert space
Given a Hilbert space (either finite or infinite dimensional), its complex conjugate
is the same vector space as its continuous dual space
.
There is one-to-one antilinear correspondence between continuous linear functionals and vectors.
In other words, any continuous linear functional on
is an inner multiplication to some fixed vector, and vice versa.
Thus, the complex conjugate to a vector , particularly in finite dimension case, may be denoted as
(v-star, a row vector which is the conjugate transpose to a column vector
).
In quantum mechanics, the conjugate to a ket vector
is denoted as
– a bra vector (see bra–ket notation).
See also
References
- ↑ K. Schmüdgen (11 November 2013). Unbounded Operator Algebras and Representation Theory. Birkhäuser. p. 16. ISBN 978-3-0348-7469-4.
Further reading
- Budinich, P. and Trautman, A. The Spinorial Chessboard. Springer-Verlag, 1988. ISBN 0-387-19078-3. (complex conjugate vector spaces are discussed in section 3.3, pag. 26).
External links
- K. Joanidis, A hurried note on conjugate vector spaces