Inequivalent Representations of Canonical Commutation and Anti-Commutation Relations von Asao Arai | Representation-theoretical Viewpoint for Quantum Phenomena | ISBN 9789811521829

Inequivalent Representations of Canonical Commutation and Anti-Commutation Relations

Representation-theoretical Viewpoint for Quantum Phenomena

von Asao Arai
Buchcover Inequivalent Representations of Canonical Commutation and Anti-Commutation Relations | Asao Arai | EAN 9789811521829 | ISBN 981-15-2182-4 | ISBN 978-981-15-2182-9

“The monograph under review gives a perspective on the various realizations of the canonical commutation/anti-commutation relations with finitely or infinitely many degrees of freedom. This is a welcome addition to the literature in this research area, which emphasizes the applications to quantum physics.” (Daniel Beltiţă, Mathematical Reviews, October, 2022)

Inequivalent Representations of Canonical Commutation and Anti-Commutation Relations

Representation-theoretical Viewpoint for Quantum Phenomena

von Asao Arai
Canonical commutation relations (CCR) and canonical anti-commutation relations (CAR) are basic principles in quantum physics including both quantum mechanics with finite degrees of freedom and quantum field theory. From a structural viewpoint, quantum physics can be primarily understood as Hilbert space representations of CCR or CAR. There are many interesting physical phenomena which can be more clearly understood from a representation–theoretical viewpoint with CCR or CAR. This book provides an introduction to representation theories of CCR and CAR in view of quantum physics. Particular emphases are put on the importance of inequivalent representations of CCR or CAR, which may be related to characteristic physical phenomena. The topics presented include general theories of representations of CCR and CAR with finite and infinite degrees of freedom, the Aharonov–Bohm effect, time operators, quantum field theories based on Fock spaces, Bogoliubov transformations, and relations of infinite renormalizations with inequivalent representations of CCR. This book can be used as a text for an advanced topics course in mathematical physics or mathematics.