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02:29
I am confused about how Sakurai introduces time-independent nondegenerate perturbation theory
sakurai's approach is to invert the operator $O$ on the LHS. okay. as a linear transformation, $O$ is singular on $\lvert n_0 \rangle$. okay. let's restrict the domain and codomain of $O$ to be $\mathcal{H} \backslash \{\lvert n_0 \rangle \}$. this is what I would think to do
instead, sakurai defines a complement projector to allow $O$ to be defined over the whole $\mathcal{H}$ while also not having to ever act on $\lvert n_0 \rangle$.
I don't understand why sakurai's approach (which later on allows you to simplify the first order correction of perturbed eigenstate) should be inequivalent to my approach
especially when $\lvert n \rangle$ is proved to not have a component in $\lvert n_0 \rangle$. hence, we should be able to simply restrict Hilbert space for the purpose of this calculation instead of inserting projections
the above is what I wish to do
oh whoops ignore the "sakurai's approach" in my first sentence above
this is the particular step in which sakurai's method succeeds and my approach fails
because we get an expression in which $O^{-1}$ is acting on a vector that is not contained in its domain or codomain
perhaps an argument can be made that because $\lvert n \rangle$ actually has no component in $\lvert n_0 \rangle$, we can safely assume that any term which contains $\lvert n_0 \rangle$ is cancelled at some point in the expansion
wait disregard everything i said lol
 
1 hour later…
04:06
@SillyGoose This proof is actually rather remarkable. Most treatments would have failed to point this out.
Also, you have multiple computation errors
$\left|n_1\right>=O^{-1}(H_1-\Delta_1)\left|n_0\right>$
oh yes is forgot to drop the $\epsilon$ on the RHS and include a $\Delta_n$ in the term that gets destroyed for one reasno or anothehr
$\forall k\in\mathbb Z^+\ :\qquad \left<n_0|n_k\right>=0$
@naturallyInconsistent okay so this is what justifies ignoring the second $\lvert n_0 \rangle$ term then?
Because I would like to restrict the (co)domain of $O$ instead of using a complement projector like Sakurai
what is the difference between the operators in heisenberg vs interaction picture?
@SillyGoose He proved it. There is no ignoring? It is rigorously arrived at, no ignoring anything at all.
@SillyGoose I think these are the same thing in different statements, but I am worried of your tiny mistakes
but the math does not work out that way unless you do what sakurai does (or other)
@SillyGoose keep calm and HONK
04:17
or unless you enforce it as a condition, which is what I mean by just throwing it away
In Heisenberg picture, the wavefunction is purely independent of time. In the interaction picture, the wavefunction changes only via the interaction.

In the Heisenberg picture, the operators change in time due to the full Hamiltonian. In the Interaction picture, the operators change in time due only to the free Hamiltonian.
@SillyGoose I am quite sure that the maths would have worked out if you do it correctly.
@naturallyInconsistent if this is in the context of time dep potentials, is the free ham the time ind one and the interaction is the time dep potential?
@Relativisticcucumber we will almost always pick it to be so, but there is no reason why we cannot have a time dependent free Hamiltonian. Whatever is exactly solvable and close enough to the problem we want solved, we can use it as the free Hamiltonian
@naturallyInconsistent okay and i feel i am missing the point of the interaction picture. do you have insights into why this approach/split is useful?
hm well i fixed the two errors i saw but are you saying i made other mistakes in this
oh the $\Delta_n$ should be a $\Delta_1$ in the last line
04:25
also, wait, in the above picture, the time evolution operator only has $H_0$ in it, so how can the entities (states and operators) be impacted by the interaction if it doesn't appear?
Well, I am actually working on Sakurai in precisely that chapter, so should we start over and get this sorted out?
sounds good
@Relativisticcucumber Under what context are you looking at this? We often only use these things in QFT, so are you learning QFT?
in sak ch 5 as well XD
i am learning qft but rn im doing time dep perturbation theory/interaction picture intro in quantum (sak)
so in the context of qm
In the context of QM, you should not need to leave Schrödinger picture. You gain not much from even interaction picture.
It is in QFT that you gain a lot.
04:28
this is the conclusion that i am at atm
@SillyGoose There are mistakes in this, which I have to comb through. Please wait a little.
@Relativisticcucumber In QFT, we want to be able to say that, for free particles that are travelling inwards or outwards of the interaction zone for infinitely far away and infinite time to do so, those states are approximately time-independent. That is where the separation of the Hamiltonian into the free part and the interacting part is useful, because we can just focus upon the interesting interacting part, ignoring the infinite phase factors from the free part just free-time-evolution
@naturallyInconsistent oh i see
@SillyGoose, let us start with Sakurai Equation (5.19) $$\tag{5.19}(H_0+\lambda H_1)\left|n\right>{}_{exact}=E_n{}^{exact}\left|n\right>{}_{exact}$$ which I have chosen to match your notation
sounds good
To be particularly clear, we should insert a few steps to clarify what Sakurai did to get Equation (5.21). Namely, he did $$(\lambda H_1-E_n^{\text{exact}}+E_n)\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}=(E_n-H_0)\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}$$
04:39
right
He had annoyingly defined $$\tag{5.20}\Delta_n\equiv E_n^{\text{exact}}-E_n$$ which hides the fact that this is really proportional to $\lambda$. So I am going to define $$\Delta_n=\lambda D_n$$ for convenience, so that my Equation (5.21) is going to be $$\tag{5.21 modified}(E_n-H_0)\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}=\lambda(H_1-D_n)\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}$$
The $\left|n_0\right>$ argument is this: apply $\left<n_0\right|$ on the left on Equation (5.21)$$\begin{align}\left<n_0\right|E_n-H_0\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}&=\lambda\left<n_0\right|H_1-D_n\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}\\
0&=\lambda\left<n_0\right|H_1-D_n\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}\end {align}$$
This is our version of Equation (5.22). The important thing to note here is that this is an identity that holds for all $\lambda$ within some unspecified region of convergence (that we hope isn't zero, and might well fail in this hope).
Now, $\left<n_0\right|$ and $H_1$ are independent of $\lambda$, but $D_n$ and $\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}$ are secretly functions of $\lambda$. This means that there is no way for higher orders of $\lambda$ in their expansions to cancel any dependence. i.e. the only way for Equation (5.22) to hold, is that all corrections to the wavefunctions to be orthogonal to $|n_0\rangle$
okay that i believe now
hm well then im not sure where my calculation goes wrong
04:57
Our version of Equation (5.34) reads as $$\tag{5.34 modified}\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}=\left|n_0\right>+\lambda O^{-1}(H_1-D_n)\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}$$ and $$\tag{5.35 modified}D_n=\left<n_0\right|H_1\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}$$
Now we do the wretched computation Equation (5.38) to obtain Equation (5.39)$$\begin{align}\left|n_0\right>+\lambda\left|n_1\right>+\cdots&=\left|n_0\right>+\lambda O^{-1}(H_1-D_n^0-\cdots)(\left|n_0\right>+\cdots)\\\left|n_1\right>&=O^{-1}(H_1-D_n^0)\left|n_0\right>\\&=O^{-1}H_1\left|n_0\right>\end {align}$$
And I am sure it is this last step that you had not internalised. Sakurai was being annoying for omitting such a crucial clarifying statement here.
@SillyGoose That is what you wrote as "justify vanishing" earlier
is $D_n^0 = 0$, i..e the 0th order change in energy?
@SillyGoose ooops, maybe I should have called it $D_n^1$ instead.
oh i see okay
yes this last step i am unsure of
$$\left|n\right>_{\text{exact}}=\sum_{k=0}^\infty\lambda^k\left|n_k\right>$$ $$D_n=\sum_{r=1}^\infty\lambda^{r-1}D_n^r$$
@SillyGoose It is trivial. As you yourself wrote, $D_n^1$ is a pure number, so it commutes with $O^{-1}$ as you noted, and then $O^{-1}$ acts on $|n_0\rangle$, which it is explicitly orthogonal to.
05:13
but the argument i want to make is to start with $O: \mathcal{H} \rightarrow \mathcal{H}$, restrict its domain and codomain so that $O: \mathcal{H} \backslash \{\lvert n_0 \rangle \} \rightarrow \mathcal{H} \backslash \{\lvert n_0 \rangle \}$, which removes the singularity and allows us to actually define an inverse of $O$. But if I make this restriction, then it does not make sense to write $O^{-1}\lvert n_0 \rangle$. because $\lvert n_0 \rangle$ is not in the domain of $O^{-1}$
however, it is doubly confusing because we can prove that $\lvert n_1 \rangle$ has no components in $\lvert n_0 \rangle$ with a proof that is totally independent of whatever we want to do with $O$
@SillyGoose So, maybe you can just abandon your restricted domain and codomain thingy and just accept that Sakurai is correct?
It is, after all, the simplest way to proceed.
hm but it seems like an uncomfortably arbitrary choice
to choose one of 1) restrict domain and codomain, 2) redefine the operator by assigning (essentially a constant value) to the singularity
@SillyGoose u hate arb choices
and the second option (which sakurai does) seems really arbitrary
@Relativisticcucumber they nasty
You ought to note that in Equations (5.41), (5.44) and (5.48), Sakurai explicitly shows that there are more and more terms appearing from the $D_n$ term. It is only vanishing in the first step. I kinda think this is coming from the normalisation choice, but without explicit computation I cannot be sure.
05:19
H O N K
@SillyGoose No, it is not at all arbitrary. Sakurai showed above that the exact answer would never have any contributions in the $|n_0\rangle$ part, so it is perfectly legitimate to handle the singularity by defining the projection to discard them as zero.
@SillyGoose H O N K
but if we proved that there shouldn't be any $\lvert n_0 \rangle$ anywhere, then there shouldn't be. but we just showed that there is and we have to ourselves actually redefine an operator to agree with this fact.
@SillyGoose no, we showed that there is not; whatever terms that appear to seem like it will produce a $|n_0\rangle$ term, has to be fake. They must be discarded.
Note that in Equation (5.24) it is explicitly defined that this reciprocal operator has no $|n_0\rangle$ term.
It is literally well-defined.
I agree that $\phi_nO^{-1}$ is well defined
We did not "redefine" any operator. It is well-defined from the beginning, because Sakurai was careful enough to analyse that particular singularity from the beginning.
05:27
but the operator is $O^{-1}$ not $\phi_n O^{-1}$ unless I am misunderstanding
Well, Sakurai only ever had $\frac{\phi_n}{E_n-H_0}$ operator, so, if your desired alternative route is actually going into a dead end, there is no good reason to be avoiding Sakurai's well-defined route.
well maybe my experience is biased
if I have an equation $x = x^2$, then I can divide both sides by $x$ given that I restrict the values that $x$ can take on--nothing more nothing less--so $1 = x$ for $x \neq 0$ is valid.
@SillyGoose It is actually more supposed to be $x-x^2=0=x(1-x)$ so that either $x=0$ or $x=1$ (and in this case there is no way to have both).
well for this particular case yes there is a nice way to solve it avoiding all problems and introductions of additional structure, but i was trying to do the dividing way so as to evoke a situation closer to what seems problematic to me and how i would handle such a problematic situation in a less complicated setting
I think what Sakurai is doing here is pretty standard. You will see it again in degenerate perturbation theory. You should have seen it before in classical mechanics when defining normal modes. Quite a lot of singularity handling is handled by defining things so that the numerator goes to zero faster than the denominator.
Things like Cramer's rule for normal modes, critically depends upon such shenanigans.
05:37
cripes to the shenanigans
i.e. even if you are purely in maths land, you might well have to face these shenanigans too.
I am actually very happy with how Sakurai even bothered to treat the singularity here. Most textbooks would have just glossed over such headaches.
hmm, now that I am looking at this again, I am annoyed that we are defining terms this way. We are almost always interested in finding the energy eigenfunctions from ground state upwards, so we should try to arrange things so that as many things are positive as possible, with finite numbers of negatives. We should have $H_0 - E_n$ rather than $E_n-H_0$, so $D_n-H_1$
 
3 hours later…
08:38
Finally found one example of the material culture of mathematics in ancient greece
Apparently to draw figures it was common to use a platter with sand on it to draw the figure on
That is probably what the anecdote about Archimedes was about
08:51
does this formula hold up if we have noninfinite bounds? say i have some period boundary conditions imposed from $[0,2\pi]$
09:34
@naturallyInconsistent i havent come to the part about entropy and such, so i cant speak on that. its just that no book really justifies the quasistatic approximation (atleast as far as ive reached). I have though, seen in a lot of places in EnM where the quasi-magnetostatic, or quasi-electrostatic approximation gets applied, and ive seen certain calculations there where it is pretty accurate.
10:25
@Relativisticcucumber no
With PBC momenta would also be discrete
10:39
@nickbros123 But quasistatic is not an approximation. It is a definition. It is exact.
@Relativisticcucumber Mr Feynman is exactly correct. For the purposes of physics, Fourier transformation should be taught from the finite-finite case, so that you can take various limits and show the transition from Kronecker delta to Dirac delta in all ways
11:33
bah so then am i missing smth about this calculation? i thought the integral is done by that transform, but then i was unsure due to the bounds @Mr.Feynman @naturallyInconsistent
are you into Harry Potter?
@Relativisticcucumber There is not supposed to have $\vartheta$ appear. It is abundantly clear that those should be $\varphi$. $$\int_0^{2\pi}e^{i(m-n\mp1)\varphi}\mathrm d\varphi=2\pi\delta_{m,n\pm1}$$ because if $m=n\pm1$ then you are integrating the constant unity over the length $2\pi$, whereas if not, the result is zero because the numerator in $\frac{e^{2\pi i(m-n\mp1)}-1}{i(m-n\mp1)}$ is zero
@Relativisticcucumber And so no, this integral is not done by the Fourier transform.
oh, i didnt even notice the theta. i indeed thought they were all phis
@naturallyInconsistent but if not by transform, how do you get that this is delta here ?
11:47
@Relativisticcucumber by explicit integration...
which I wrote out the reasoning beneath it...
> "His thrust, however, was somewhat feeble, owing to the inflammation in his hand, and so he did not at once dispatch himself, but in his death struggle fell from the couch and made a loud noise by overturning a geometrical abacusb that stood near.
@naturallyInconsistent sorry im still trying to understand the second part
Looks like Archimedes wasn't the only one to die near such a math board
> Nor do I want a man who thinks it funny to laugh at figures on a blackboard, or cones traced in the sand, and is ready to scream with joy if some saucy wench plucks a Cynic by the beard.
@Relativisticcucumber $$\forall k\in\mathbb Z/\{0\}\qquad\int_0^\vartheta e^{ik\varphi}\mathrm d\varphi=\frac{e^{ik\vartheta}-1}{ik}$$
Also this reference involves a saucy wench
Doing geometry was a much more glamorous affair back then
11:53
@naturallyInconsistent oh my
now substitute $\vartheta=2\pi$ and check that the numerator disappears
i see. i was unaware of this integral i think.
@Relativisticcucumber it is the integral of exponential...
the exponential i know is just its own derivative/integral with chain rule applied. for complex i know fourier
but idk maybe i have seen this before and im just not registering it
generally i do not know how to do complex integration sadly
@Relativisticcucumber $$\begin{align}\frac{\mathrm d\ }{\mathrm dz}e^z=e^z\qquad\implies\qquad\frac{\mathrm d\ }{\mathrm dx}\frac{e^{ikx}}{ik}&=e^{ikx}\\\therefore\qquad\left[\frac{e^{ikx}}{ik}\right]_a^b&=\int_a^be^{ikx}\mathrm dx\end {align}$$
12:01
ooh
i thought derivatives of complex numbers is a different procedure ? i remember something like cauchy differentiation rules? im not sure if thats what they are called
bleb
@Relativisticcucumber You could also do $$\int_a^be^{ikx}\mathrm dx=\frac1{ik}\int_{ika}^{ikb}e^{ikx}\mathrm d(ikx)=\frac1{ik}\int_{ika}^{ikb}e^z\mathrm dz=\frac{e^{ikb}-e^{ika}}{ik}$$
@Relativisticcucumber Cauchy Riemann equations define what it means for a complex function to be differentiable. After you learn those properly, you will realise that quite a lot of those stuff are defined in such a way that real-valued differentiation trickery directly translate into complex valued ones.
i see. i will look back over that material. thanks!
y r Euler angles still used even tho we hav the axis-angle stuff from Lie algebra?
lie algebra accomodates both euler angles and axis-angle
12:31
a few months ago, we had discussions on y levi civita shows up in the so(3) algebra
im trying to recollect it. so(n) algebra consistens of 2-forms in n dimensions.
in 3 dimensions. these can b mapped to 1 forms
and becuz of hodge dual mapping, levi civita shows up.... i guess
some people define the cross product to be the lie algebra. some other people define it to be the hodge dual wedge product
the first definition may generalise to the 7d cross product, as the first definition is a binary operator in all dimensions
the second definition is an operator on n-1 arguments. so it depends on the number of dimensions
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven-dimensional_cross_product apparently, the 7d cross product is related to a sub-group of SO(7)
makes sense becuz 2-forms in 7D cant be mapped to 1 forms either
 
4 hours later…
16:31
something that has been bugging me for a long time is the following: what is the correct definition of a ket? I will just take 1d quantum mechanics as an example here. In the mathematics letterature often a bra and a ket are just considered a fancy way to write the inner product of $L^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$. On the other hand in physics it has somewhat of a different meaning as "abstract vector", i.e. before choosing a particular representation for it
for example a ket $\left | \psi \right \rangle$ can when muliplied by the bra $\left\langle x \right|$ gives the value of the wavefunction in the position representation of the Heisenberg algebra at the point $x$. While when multiplied by the bra $\left\langle p \right|$ gives the value of the wavefunction in the momentum representation of the Heisenberg algebra at the point $p$ (which are related by a Fourier transform)
So it seems a ket is not really just a wavefunction of $L^2$ but rather a wavefunction modulo the representation chosen
What space do kets really live mathematically?
I dont know what I did with the first message and why it is monospace
Kets are linear maps from Hilbert vectors to $\mathbb{C}$
This turns out to be isomorphic to the Hilbert space itself via the Riesz representation theorem :
The Riesz representation theorem, sometimes called the Riesz–Fréchet representation theorem after Frigyes Riesz and Maurice René Fréchet, establishes an important connection between a Hilbert space and its continuous dual space. If the underlying field is the real numbers, the two are isometrically isomorphic; if the underlying field is the complex numbers, the two are isometrically anti-isomorphic. The (anti-) isomorphism is a particular natural isomorphism. == Preliminaries and notation == Let H {\displaystyle H} be a Hilbert space over a field...
@Slereah yeah i am aware of that theorem (which actually in the case of $\left \langle x \right |$ does not apply as it is not a continuous functional no? Here there would be the need of Gelfand triples which I am yet not very comfortable with so I am happy if we ignore this issue). However it should be bras that are in the dual (whether the topological or algebraic), so should kets be seen really in the double dual?
Oh yeah switch what I said
Bras are linear functionals and kets are the vectors
Although it is also true that you can treat them the other way around, since the double dual is the identity
@Slereah but are they really the vectors my question? A wavefunction is a vector of $L^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$ but when you pick such a function you have to tell me which representation of the Heisenberg algebra we're in
as in whether is the position space or momentum space wavefunction
while if you tell a ket you dont need to say which representation you're in, it is just the ket
16:46
If you want to use specifically the $L^2$ representation, a dual vector in there will be something of the form $$\langle \psi | = \int (\psi^*) (-) d^nx $$
It's a "function" that accepts an $L^2$ function to replace $(-)$
yes yes i agree
in QM, a ket is an element of $L^2(R)$
@ekardnam_ this is consistent with a ket being a function on $L^2 (R)$. $\langle p|\psi\rangle$ is just the inner product with $e^{-ipx}$. $|p\rangle$ is this ket
but my point is the following when giving a wavefunction $\psi(x)$ I need to say that it is a function of the position $x$ and thus pick a representation for the Heisenberg algebra $\hat{x} \psi(x) = x \psi(x)$ and $\hat{p}\psi(x) = i \frac{d\psi(x)}{dx}$. If I pick a ket instead $\left | \psi \right \rangle$ the choice of representation is not important anymore in particular $\left|\psi\right\rangle = \int dx \ \psi(x) \left| x \right\rangle = \int d p \tilde{\psi}(p) \left| p \right\rangle$
right. sometimes, it's nice to think of a ket as part of the abstract vector space, which is $L^2(R)$ modulo choice of basis
@RyderRude yeah this is my point
but its been bugging me that I never saw a mathematical formalization of this
16:54
but u cant really right down this vector space. it's very platonic. still, i mostly think about vectors like this
in another viewpoint, the abstract vector space is also $L^2(R)$. note that this is before any choice of basis
in this viewpoint, the abstracr object X means x and P means $-i\frac{d}{dx}$. we havent chosen a basis yet. this is the abstract space
and the x-basis representation is just identical to this
i have an analogy. remember how the 3x3 matrices are both the definition of SO(3) and also a representation of SO(3)?
sometimes we take the abstract thing to refer to a concrete thing
yeah i get what you mean
ive been speaking about 1d QM and writing $L^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$ all the time, im tired i guess
what i find bewildering is, in defining SO(3), we can just use the Lie manifold, we need not pick-out any matrices as the "preferred" definition of SO(3)
in this viewpoint, SO(3) would be very abstract and platonic and any matrix representation wud b a representation rather than the definition
but we dont take that route. we define SO(3) to be the 3x3 matrices
i guess it's more convenient this way to be able to identify the abstract object with a concrete object
same goes for QM. there is no reason to pick out the momentum or the position space to define the abstract vector space
but we do it anyway
i think you could define $SO(3)$ as the orthogonal maps of $\mathbb{R}^3$. Then they are equivalent to matrices when you pick a basis
yeah, but that definition is not very abstract. we can instead define it as points on the Lie manifold of SO(3)
then the R^3 stuff would just be a representation of this group
ofc the manifold alone isnt sufficient. u wud also hav to write the group composition law
so it's much more convenient to define it to be what's just a representation of SO(3)
in this viewpoint, the abstract thing is identical to one of its reps
in Lie groups, we at least have the option to talk about a manifold. in QM, there's no way to write down a vector space modulo choice of basis
however, one can talk about C* algebras if one wants completely abstract objects in QM
or at least I've also never heard of a mathematical formalism which can manipulate abstracr vectors without a choice of basis @ekardnam_
the $|\psi \rangle$, $|\phi\rangle$ formalism sort of does that. u can prove the uncertainty principle without a basis
but i think this formalism must have limitations. abstract things often have limitations. u always have to choose co ordinates to do something of use
 
1 hour later…
18:18
People discussing Lie groups and reps and ACM not taking no part?
-2
It is saturday
He's probably at the club
@Slereah You're oddly specific
What's the club?
And I'd forgot it's Saturday. Been writing all day
you know
The Discotheque
19:13
@Mr.Feynman that's a W as the kids like to say
In a heuristic way to calculate $dS$ space entropy, we use the Euclidean quantum gravity path integral and use the saddle point approximation. The note pg 16 says that the dominant saddle comes from $S^4$ out of all compact geometries. Why is that true?
@nickbros123 Is it, though?
19:59
@ekardnam_ If you want to use bras/kets like $\lvert x\rangle$, these do not actually live inside the Hilbert space, but in the rigged Hilbert space or Gel'fand triple
@Slereah no, I spent the day helping my (now ex-)flatmate move :P
@ACuriousMind And me thinking you were HARDCORE
nah, I don't want to be that kind of animal anymore
I already own several hideous ties that talk to me, bratan
20:19
So it turns out the most detailed description of the device used by ancient geometer to draw geometrical figure is described as using "green powder"
What the hell is it
Not even sure what to search for to try to figure it out
Just look at all the minerals used in Ancient Greece???
Well, Roman in this case
Might be a mistranslation tho
the greenish powder is "hyalini pulveris"
hyalini can mean "glassy" or "glassy green"
@ACuriousMind weird way to say you kicked them out
@ACuriousMind oh, you're a tie guy?
Damn why do I never catch references in time
Well, I am a tie guy :P
I've gone full 50s with the looks lately
Though I should get a proper Fedora
Damn, I killed the chat :(
21:23
@ACuriousMind I'm aware of this even though I still have to understand Gelfand triples better
22:18
let $O(t)$ be a self-adjoint operator that is an analytic function of $t \in \mathbb{R}$ in open domain $U$. Does anyone know where to find a proof that the eigenvalues/vectors of $O(t)$ are also analytic in $U$?
I have seen this theorem stated in www2.math.upenn.edu/~kazdan/504/eigenv.pdf. I also looked at the references cited in making the statement, but did not find a proof.
Or perhaps the theorem is at a level where one can prove it themselves; perhaps i should attempt
22:31
@SillyGoose Chapter VII, §3 of Kato looks exactly like what you want to me
you'll have to "trace back" through the cited prior sections of the book to construct a standalone proof, but this is far from not finding a proof at all
in particular theorem VII-3.9 is the specific statement that all the eigenvalues of a self-adjoint analytic operator family are themselves analytic functions
oh mayn my bad
do you find textbook presentations of perturbation theory clear (e.g. in Sakurai)? @ACuriousMind
I've not spent a lot of time agonizing over them, so I guess so?
What do you think about Sean Carroll's opinions about consciousness? Especially detailed here m.youtube.com/…
I have no consciousness and therefore have no opinion
spoken like a true p-zombie
22:46
It's a living
@SillyGoose if you want the mathematically rigorous presentation of perturbation (~scattering) theory, you'll have to read Reed & Simon III
2
i shall check it out :0
@Relativisticcucumber hi
really, essentially all of rigorous QM operator theory is in Reed and Simon, and the size of these books explains why we usually don't bother with it in physics :P
i want a presentation of perturbation theory that treats degenerate and nondegenerate time-independent together and starts with $H(\epsilon)$ is hermitian analytic in $\epsilon$. Then, simply plug in the expanded eigenvalues/states into the TISE and deal with issues appropriately as they come up.
but sakurai, merzbacher, ballentine are all problematic for one or another reason given the above want
(that is to say it is not even rigor i am after per se)
23:06
@Slereah then may as well stay silent
Hey people without consciousness have feelings too :(
That was the point
You are just saying it !
Anyways, there is a paper on QM introducing consciousness
By Chalmers and another guy.
23:49
@SillyGoose I think Sakurai does that later
Or rather, when they explain the problem of choosing "good states" (as Griffiths calls them, I don't remember Sakurai's words), you understand the relation between degenerate and non-degenerate perturbation theory
Why physicists keep talking about consciousness? :P

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