Double operator integral

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Template:Short description In functional analysis, double operator integrals (DOI) are integrals of the form

Qφ:=NMφ(x,y)dE(x)TdF(y),

where T:GH is a bounded linear operator between two separable Hilbert spaces,

E:(N,𝒜)P(H),
F:(M,)P(G),

are two spectral measures, where P(H) stands for the set of orthogonal projections over H, and φ is a scalar-valued measurable function called the symbol of the DOI. The integrals are to be understood in the form of Stieltjes integrals.

Double operator integrals can be used to estimate the differences of two operators and have application in perturbation theory. The theory was mainly developed by Mikhail Shlyomovich Birman and Mikhail Zakharovich Solomyak in the late 1960s and 1970s, however they appeared earlier first in a paper by Daletskii and Krein.[1]

Double operator integrals

The map

JφE,F:TQφ

is called a transformer. We simply write Jφ:=JφE,F, when it's clear which spectral measures we are looking at.

Originally Birman and Solomyak considered a Hilbert–Schmidt operator T and defined a spectral measure by

(Λ×Δ)T:=E(Λ)TF(Δ),T𝒮2,

for measurable sets Λ×ΔN×M, then the double operator integral Qφ can be defined as

Qφ:=(N×Mφ(λ,μ)d(λ,μ))T

for bounded and measurable functions φ. However one can look at more general operators T as long as Qφ stays bounded.

Examples

Perturbation theory

Consider the case where H=G is a Hilbert space and let A and B be two bounded self-adjoint operators on H. Let T:=BA and f be a function on a set S, such that the spectra σ(A) and σ(B) are in S. As usual, I is the identity operator. Then by the spectral theorem JλI=A and JμI=B and JμλI=T, hence

f(B)f(A)=Jf(μ)f(λ)I=Jf(μ)f(λ)μλJμλI=Jf(μ)f(λ)μλT=Qφ

and so[2][3]

f(B)f(A)=σ(A)σ(B)f(μ)f(λ)μλ(μλ)dEA(λ)dFB(μ)=σ(A)σ(B)f(μ)f(λ)μλdEA(λ)TdFB(μ),

where EA() and FB() denote the corresponding spectral measures of A and B.

Literature

References