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For unitarity in physics, see unitarity (physics). In functional analysis, a branch of mathematics, a unitary operator is a bounded linear operator U : H → H on a Hilbert space H satisfying
where U∗ is the adjoint of U, and I : H → H is the identity operator. This property is equivalent to the following:
To see this, notice that U preserves the inner product implies U is an isometry (thus, a bounded linear operator). The fact that U has dense range ensures it has a bounded inverse U−1. It is clear that U−1 = U∗. Thus, unitary operators are just automorphisms of Hilbert spaces, i.e., they preserve the structure (in this case, the linear space structure, the inner product, and hence the topology) of the space on which they act. The group of all unitary operators from a given Hilbert space H to itself is sometimes referred to as the Hilbert group of H, denoted Hilb(H). The weaker condition U∗U = I defines an isometry. Another condition, U U∗ = I, defines a coisometry.[1] A unitary element is a generalization of a unitary operator. In a unital *-algebra, an element U of the algebra is called a unitary element if
where I is the identity element.[2]:55
[edit] Examples
[edit] LinearityThe linearity requirement in the definition of a unitary operator can be dropped without changing the meaning because it can be derived from linearity and positive-definiteness of the scalar product:
[edit] Properties
[edit] See also[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
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