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The term "unbounded operator" can be misleading, since
"unbounded" should be understood as "not necessarily bounded";
"operator" should be understood as "linear operator" (as in the case of "bounded operator");
the domain of the operator is a linear subspace, not necessarily the whole space (in contrast to "bounded operator");
this linear subspace is not necessarily closed; often (but not always) it is assumed to be dense;
in the special case of a bounded operator, still, the domain is usually assumed to be the whole space.
In contrast to bounded operators, unbounded operators on a given space do not form an algebra, nor even a linear space, because each one is defined on its own domain.
The term "operator" often means "bounded linear operator", but in the context of this article it means "unbounded operator", with the reservations made above. The given space is assumed to be a Hilbert space. Some generalizations to Banach spaces and more general topological vector spaces are possible.
The theory of unbounded operators was stimulated by attempts in the late 1920s to put quantum mechanics on a rigorous mathematical foundation. The systematic development of the theory is due to John von Neumann[1] and Marshall Stone.[2] The technique of using the graph to analyze unbounded operators was introduced by von Neumann in "Über Adjungierte Funktionaloperatoren".[3][4]
Let and be Banach spaces. An unbounded linear operator (or simply operator)
is a linear map from a linear subspace of — the domain of — to the space [5] Contrary to the usual convention, may not be defined on the whole space
An operator is said to be densely defined if is dense in [5] This also includes operators defined on the entire space since the whole space is dense in itself. The denseness of the domain is necessary and sufficient for the existence of the adjoint and the transpose (see below).
The operations of unbounded operators are more complicated than in the bounded case, since one has take care of the domains of the operators.
Let and be Banach spaces over
For an operator and an scalar the operator is given by
and for
For two operator one define the operator by
and for
For an operators and an operator the operator is defined by
and for
The inverse of exists if i.e. is injective. Then the operator is defined by
on that is the Hilbert space of all square-integrable functions on (more exactly, equivalence classes; the functions must be measurable, either real-valued or complex-valued) with the norm defined on the domain the set of all continuously differentiable functions on the closed interval The definition of is correct, since a continuous (the more so, continuously differentiable) function cannot vanish almost everywhere, unless it vanishes everywhere.
This is a linear operator, since a linear combination of two continuously differentiable functions is also continuously differentiable, and
The operator is not bounded. For example, the functions defined on by satisfy but
The operator is densely defined, and not closed.
The same operator can be treated as an operator for many Banach spaces and is still not bounded. However, it is bounded as an operator for some pairs of Banach spaces , and also as operator for some topological vector spaces . As an example consider , for some open interval and the norm being where is the Supremum norm.
on the Banach space of all continuous functions on an interval with the Supremum norm. If one takes its domain to be then is a closed operator. (Note that one could also set to be the set of all differentiable functions including those with non-continuous derivative. That operator is not closed!)
The Operator is not bounded. For example, for the sequence one has but for it is for
If one takes to be instead the set of all infinitely differentiable functions, will no longer be closed, but it will be closable, with the closure being its extension defined on
For two Banch spaces an operator is called closable if the following equivalent properties hold:
has a closed extension.
The closure of the graph of is the graph of some operator.
For every sequence such that and holds
For every pair of sequences both converging to such that both and converge, one has
The operator with the graph is said to be the closure of and is denoted by It follows that is the restriction of to
Note, that other, non-minimal closed extensions may exist.[8][9]
A core of a closable operator is a subset of such that the closure of the restriction of to is
Remark Not all operators are closable as the following example shows:
Let be a densely defined operator on a Banach space and Then is called to be in the resolvent set of denoted by if the operator is bijective and is a bounded operator. It follows by the closed graph theorem that the resolvent is bounded for all if is a closed operator.
For the resolvent of is defined by
The set is called the spectrum of denoted by
The spectrum of an unbounded operator can be divided into three parts in exactly the same way as in the bounded case:
The point spectrum is the set of eigenvalues and is defined by is not injective
The continuous spectrum is given by is injective and has dense range, but not surjective
The residual spectrum is the set is injective, but its range is not dense
Remark The spectrum of an unbounded operator can be any closed set, including and The domain plays an important role as the following example shows:
Consider the banach space and the operators defined by and and
If , then Thus, For the linear differential equation exists a unique solution which defines an inverse for Therefore
Let be an densely defined operator between Banach spaces and the continuous dual space of Using the notation the transpose (or dual) of is an operator satisfying:
for all and
The operator is defined by
for all and for .
Remark The necessary and sufficient condition for the transpose of to exist is that is densely defined (for essentially the same reason as to adjoints, see below.)
Let be a banach space and be a normed vector space. Suppose that is a collection of bounded linear operators from to The uniform boundedness principle states that if for all in we have , then
Let be banach spaces and surjective. Then is an open map.
In particular: Bounded inverse theorem If bijective und bounded, then its inverse is also bounded.
For an unbounded operator the definition of the adjoint is more complicated than in the bounded case, since it is necessary to take care of the domains of the operators.
The adjoint of an unbounded operator can be defined in two equivalent ways. First, it can be defined in a way analogous to how we define the adjoint of a bounded operator.
For a densely defined operator its adjoint is defined by
Since is dense in the functional extends to the whole space via the Hahn–Banach theorem. Thus, one can find a unique such that
for all
Finally, let completing the construction of [10] and it is
for all
Remark exists if and only if is densely defined.
The other equivalent definition of the adjoint can be obtained by noticing a general fact: define a linear operator
by .[11] (Since is an isometric surjection, it is unitary.)
We then have: is the graph of some operator if and only if is densely defined.[12] A simple calculation shows that this "some" satisfies
for every
Thus, is the adjoint of
The definition of the adjoint can be given in terms of a transpose as follow:
For any Hilbert space and its continuous dual space there is the anti-linearisomorphism
given by where for and
Through this isomorphism, the transpose relates to the adjoint in the following way:
By definition, the domain of could be anything; it could be trivial (i.e., contains only zero)[14] It may happen that the domain of is a closed hyperplane and vanishes everywhere on the domain.[15][16] Thus, boundedness of on its domain does not imply boundedness of . On the other hand, if is defined on the whole space then is bounded on its domain and therefore can be extended by continuity to a bounded operator on the whole space.[17] If the domain of is dense, then it has its adjoint [11]
is closable if and only if is densely defined. In this case and [11][18]
If densely defined, then
is bounded if and only if is bounded.[19] In this case
If densely defined and , then . Further if are densely defined, then and [20]
In contrast to the bounded case, it is not necessary that we have: since, for example, it is even possible that doesn't exist.[citation needed] This is, however, the case if, for example, is bounded.[21]
Some well-known properties for bounded operators generalize to closed densely defined operators.
Remark The last condition does not cover non-densely defined closed operators. Non-densely defined symmetric operators can be defined directly or via graphs, but not via adjoint operators.
The two subspaces and are orthogonal and their sum is the whole space [11] where is an unitary operator on defined by
closed, symmetric and satisfies the condition: both operators are surjective, that is, map the domain of onto the whole space In other words: for every there exist such that and [35]
Remarks
For a bounded operator the terms symmetric and self-adjoint are equivalent.
The distinction between closed symmetric operators and self-adjoint operators is important, since only for self-adjoint operators the spectral theorem holds.
A densely defined, closed operator is called normal if it satisfies the following equivalent properties :[36]
and for every
There exist self-adjoint operators such that and for every
Remarks
Every self-adjoint operator is normal.
The spectral theorem applies to self-adjoint operators [37] and moreover, to normal operators,[38][39] but not to densely defined, closed operators in general, since in this case the spectrum can be empty.[34][40] In particulary, the spectral-theorem does not hold for closed symmetric operators.
Let a symmetric operator on a Hilbert space . ProblemWhen does have self-adjoint extensions?
The Cayley transform of a symmetric operator is defined by . is an isometry between and and the range is dense in
Theorem is self-adjoint if and only if is unitary.
In particular: has self-adjoint extensions if and only if has unitary extensions.
Friedrichs extension theorem Every symmetric operator which is bounded from below has at least one self-adjoint extension with the same lower bound.[41]
These operators always have a canonically defined self-adjoint extension which is called Friedrichs extension.
Remark An everywhere defined extension exists for every operator, which is a purely algebraic fact explained at General existence theorem and based on the axiom of choice. If the given operator is not bounded then the extension is a discontinuous linear map. It is of little use since it cannot preserve important properties of the given operator, and usually is highly non-unique
A symmetric operator is called essentially self-adjoint if has one and only one self-adjoint extension.[33] Or equivalent, if its closure is self-adjoint.[27].
Note, that an operator may have more than one self-adjoint extension, and even a continuum of them.[9]
Remark The importance of essentially self-adjointness is that one is often given a non-closed symmetric operator If this operator is essential self-adjoint, then there is uniquely associated to a self-adjoint operator
The class of self-adjoint operators is especially important in mathematical physics. Every self-adjoint operator is densely defined, closed and symmetric. The converse holds for bounded operators but fails in general. Self-adjointness is substantially more restricting than these three properties. The famous spectral theorem holds for self-adjoint operators. In combination with Stone's theorem on one-parameter unitary groups it shows that self-adjoint operators are precisely the infinitesimal generators of strongly continuous one-parameter unitary groups, see Self-adjoint operator#Self adjoint extensions in quantum mechanics. Such unitary groups are especially important for describing time evolution in classical and quantum mechanics.
^Stone, M. (1932), "Linear transformations in Hilbert spaces and their applications to analysis", Amer. Math. Soc. Colloq. Publ., 15, New York
^von Neumann (1936), "Über Adjungierte Funktionaloperatoren", Ann. Math. (2), 33 (2): 294–310, doi:10.2307/1968331, JSTOR1968331{{citation}}: More than one of |author1= and |last= specified (help)
^Suppose fj is a sequence in the domain of T that converges to g ∈ X. Since T is uniformly continuous on its domain, Tfj is Cauchy in Y. Thus, (fj, Tfj) is Cauchy and so converges to some (f, Tf) since the graph of T is closed. Hence, f = g, and the domain of T is closed.
^Proof: being closed, the everywhere defined T* is bounded, which implies boundedness of T**, the latter being the closure of T. See also (Pedersen 1989, 2.3.11) for the case of everywhere defined
^Proof: If T is closed densely defined, then T* exists and is densely defined. Thus, T** exists. The graph of T is dense in the graph of T**; hence, T = T**. Conversely, since the existence of T** implies that that of T*, which in turn implies T is densely defined. Since T** is closed, T is densely defined and closed.
^If T is surjective, then has bounded inverse, which we denote by S. The estimate then follows since
Conversely, suppose the estimate holds. Since has closed range then, we have: . Since is dense, it suffices to show that has closed range. If is convergent, then is convergent by the estimate since
Say, . Since is self-adjoint; thus, closed, (von Neumann's theorem), .
Pedersen, Gert K. (1989), Analysis now, Springer (see Chapter 5 "Unbounded operators").
Reed, Michael; Simon, Barry (1980), Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, vol. 1: Functional Analysis (revised and enlarged ed.), Academic Press (see Chapter 8 "Unbounded operators").
Berezansky, Y.M.; Sheftel, Z.G.; Us, G.F. (1996), Functional analysis, vol. II, Birkhäuser (see Chapter 12 "General theory of unbounded operators in Hilbert spaces").