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Title: Quantum Theory for Mathematicians
Other Titles: Graduate Texts in Mathematics
Authors: Hall, Brian C.
Keywords: Mathematics
Quantum Theory
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Springer
Abstract: Ideas from quantum physics play important roles in many parts of modern mathematics. Many parts of representation theory, for example, are moti- vated by quantum mechanics, including the Wigner–Mackey theory of in- duced representations, the Kirillov–Kostant orbit method, and, of course, quantum groups. The Jones polynomial in knot theory, the Gromov–Witten invariants in topology, and mirror symmetry in algebraic topology are other notable examples. The awarding of the 1990 Fields Medal to Ed Witten, a physicist, gives an idea of the scope of the influence of quantum theory in mathematics. Despite the importance of quantum mechanics to mathematics, there is no easy way for mathematicians to learn the subject. Quantum mechan- ics books in the physics literature are generally not easily understood by most mathematicians. There is, of course, a lower level of mathematical precision in such books than mathematicians are accustomed to. In addi- tion, physics books on quantum mechanics assume knowledge of classical mechanics that mathematicians often do not have. And, finally, there is a subtle difference in “culture”—differences in terminology and notation— that can make reading the physics literature like reading a foreign language for the mathematician. There are few books that attempt to translate quan- tum theory into terms that mathematicians can understand
Description: This book is intended as an introduction to quantum mechanics for math- ematicians with little prior exposure to physics. The twin goals of the book are (1) to explain the physical ideas of quantum mechanics in language mathematicians will be comfortable with, and (2) to develop the neces- sary mathematical tools to treat those ideas in a rigorous fashion. I have attempted to give a reasonably comprehensive treatment of nonrelativistic quantum mechanics, including topics found in typical physics texts (e.g., the harmonic oscillator, the hydrogen atom, and the WKB approximation) as well as more mathematical topics (e.g., quantization schemes, the Stone– von Neumann theorem, and geometric quantization). I have also attempted to minimize the mathematical prerequisites. I do not assume, for example, any prior knowledge of spectral theory or unbounded operators, but pro- vide a full treatment of those topics in Chaps. 6 through 10 of the text. Similarly, I do not assume familiarity with the theory of Lie groups and Lie algebras, but provide a detailed account of those topics in Chap. 16. Whenever possible, I provide full proofs of the stated results. Most of the text will be accessible to graduate students in mathematics who have had a first course in real analysis, covering the basics of L 2 spaces and Hilbert spaces. Appendix A reviews some of the results that are used in the main body of the text. In Chaps. 21 and 23, however, I assume knowl- edge of the theory of manifolds. I have attempted to provide motivation for many of the definitions and proofs in the text, with the result that there is a fair amount of discussion interspersed with the standard definition- theorem-proof style of mathematical exposition. There are exercises at the end of each chapter, making the book suitable for graduate courses as well as for independent study.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/124
ISBN: 978-1-4614-7116-5
Appears in Collections:ARTS & SCIENCE

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