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watch5826c

watch5826c

Answered question

2022-06-16

e i t H notation
recently I saw the notation e i t H , and just wondering how should I interpret it?
In my understanding, u ( t , x ) = e i t H u 0 is, for example, a solution to Schrodinger-type equation i t u = H u with the initial data u 0 . In case H = Δ, the solution to Schrodinger equation is known to involve the Schrodinger kernel in the integrand. In such case, does e i t H is a short-hand notation for the operator involving the Schrodinger kernel?
Or should I interpret e i t H as the Taylor series with H k terms involved? In this case, does the (operator) series converge once applied to the element in the domain of H?
Also, I would be very glad to get a reference to read more on this type of operators. Thank you very much!

Answer & Explanation

robegarj

robegarj

Beginner2022-06-17Added 24 answers

Let X be a real or complex Banach space, and let L ( X ) denote the bounded linear operators on C 0 semigroup on X is a function
T : [ 0 , ) L ( X )
such that
( i ) T ( 0 ) = I , ( i i ) T ( t ) T ( t ) = T ( t + t ) , ( i i i ) lim t 0 T ( t ) x = x , x X .
For any such operator, let D ( A ) denote the set of all X for which the following limit exists
lim h 0 1 h ( T ( h ) x x ) ,
and let Ax denote this limit. Then H : D ( A ) X X is a densely-defined linear operator, and we write T ( t ) = e t A to summarize these properties.
If T(t) is unitary for all t>0, then A = i H, where H is self-adjoint. Then it is customary to write T ( t ) = e i t H . This is typical of the time-invariant Schrodinger equation, for example. For such an operator, there is the Borel functional calculus, where f(H)= is defined for any Borel measurable function on R. Using this, e i t H = f ( H ) where f ( s ) = e i t s .
Reginald Delacruz

Reginald Delacruz

Beginner2022-06-18Added 7 answers

The underlying Hilbert space has an orthonormal basis consisting of eigenfunctions u λ of H with eigenvalue λ. Then e i t H u λ := e i t λ u λ .
Forcing e i t H to be linear and continuous then determines e i t H u in general.

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