An introduction to Hilbert space and quantum logic
β Scribed by David W. Cohen
- Book ID
- 127455094
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Series
- Problem Books in Mathematics
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
- ISBN-13
- 9780387968704
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Historically, nonclassical physics developed in three stages. First came a collection of ad hoc assumptions and then a cookbook of equations known as "quantum mechanics". The equations and their philosophical underpinnings were then collected into a model based on the mathematics of Hilbert space. From the Hilbert space model came the abstaction of "quantum logics". This book explores all three stages, but not in historical order. Instead, in an effort to illustrate how physics and abstract mathematics influence each other we hop back and forth between a purely mathematical development of Hilbert space, and a physically motivated definition of a logic, partially linking the two throughout, and then bringing them together at the deepest level in the last two chapters. This book should be accessible to undergraduate and beginning graduate students in both mathematics and physics. The only strict prerequisites are calculus and linear algebra, but the level of mathematical sophistication assumes at least one or two intermediate courses, for example in mathematical analysis or advanced calculus. No background in physics is assumed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Our starting point is the observation that with a given Hilbert space H we may, in a way to be made precise, associate a class of non-monotonic consequence relations in such a way that there exists a one-to-one correspondence between the rays of H and these consequence relations. The projectors in H