Hilbert–Schmidt operator

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Template:Short description

In mathematics, a Hilbert–Schmidt operator, named after David Hilbert and Erhard Schmidt, is a bounded operator A:HH that acts on a Hilbert space H and has finite Hilbert–Schmidt norm

AHS2 =def iIAeiH2,

where {ei:iI} is an orthonormal basis.[1][2] The index set I need not be countable. However, the sum on the right must contain at most countably many non-zero terms, to have meaning.Template:Sfn This definition is independent of the choice of the orthonormal basis. In finite-dimensional Euclidean space, the Hilbert–Schmidt norm HS is identical to the Frobenius norm.

‖·‖HS is well defined

The Hilbert–Schmidt norm does not depend on the choice of orthonormal basis. Indeed, if {ei}iI and {fj}jI are such bases, then iAei2=i,j|Aei,fj|2=i,j|ei,A*fj|2=jA*fj2. If ei=fi, then iAei2=iA*ei2. As for any bounded operator, A=A**. Replacing A with A* in the first formula, obtain iA*ei2=jAfj2. The independence follows.

Examples

An important class of examples is provided by Hilbert–Schmidt integral operators. Every bounded operator with a finite-dimensional range (these are called operators of finite rank) is a Hilbert–Schmidt operator. The identity operator on a Hilbert space is a Hilbert–Schmidt operator if and only if the Hilbert space is finite-dimensional. Given any x and y in H, define xy:HH by (xy)(z)=z,yx, which is a continuous linear operator of rank 1 and thus a Hilbert–Schmidt operator; moreover, for any bounded linear operator A on H (and into H), Tr(A(xy))=Ax,y.Template:Sfn

If T:HH is a bounded compact operator with eigenvalues 1,2, of |T|:=T*T, where each eigenvalue is repeated as often as its multiplicity, then T is Hilbert–Schmidt if and only if i=1i2<, in which case the Hilbert–Schmidt norm of T is THS=i=1i2.Template:Sfn

If kL2(μ×μ), where (X,Ω,μ) is a measure space, then the integral operator K:L2(μ)L2(μ) with kernel k is a Hilbert–Schmidt operator and KHS=k2.Template:Sfn

Space of Hilbert–Schmidt operators

The product of two Hilbert–Schmidt operators has finite trace-class norm; therefore, if A and B are two Hilbert–Schmidt operators, the Hilbert–Schmidt inner product can be defined as

A,BHS=Tr(B*A)=iAei,Bei.

The Hilbert–Schmidt operators form a two-sided *-ideal in the Banach algebra of bounded operators on Template:Math. They also form a Hilbert space, denoted by Template:Math or Template:Math, which can be shown to be naturally isometrically isomorphic to the tensor product of Hilbert spaces

H*H,

where Template:Math is the dual space of Template:Math. The norm induced by this inner product is the Hilbert–Schmidt norm under which the space of Hilbert–Schmidt operators is complete (thus making it into a Hilbert space).Template:Sfn The space of all bounded linear operators of finite rank (i.e. that have a finite-dimensional range) is a dense subset of the space of Hilbert–Schmidt operators (with the Hilbert–Schmidt norm).Template:Sfn

The set of Hilbert–Schmidt operators is closed in the norm topology if, and only if, Template:Math is finite-dimensional.

Properties

See also

References

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