symmetric operator - definição. O que é symmetric operator. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é symmetric operator - definição

DENSELY DEFINED OPERATOR ON A HILBERT SPACE WHOSE DOMAIN COINCIDES WITH THAT OF ITS ADJOINT AND WHICH EQUALS ITS ADJOINT; SYMMETRIC OPERATOR WHOSE ADJOINT'S DOMAIN EQUALS ITS OWN DOMAIN
Hermitian operator; Selfadjoint operator; Self adjoint operator; Essentially self-adjoint; Hermitian operators; Hermiticity; Symmetric operator; Self-adjoint operators; Essentially self-adjoint operator; Hahn-Hellinger theorem

Self-adjoint operator         
In mathematics, a self-adjoint operator on an infinite-dimensional complex vector space V with inner product \langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle (equivalently, a Hermitian operator in the finite-dimensional case) is a linear map A (from V to itself) that is its own adjoint. If V is finite-dimensional with a given orthonormal basis, this is equivalent to the condition that the matrix of A is a Hermitian matrix, i.
Elementary symmetric polynomial         
HOMOGENEOUS SYMMETRIC POLYNOMIAL IN WHICH EACH POSSIBLE MONOMIAL OCCURS EXACTLY ONCE WITH COEFFICIENT 1
Elementary symmetric function; Elementary symmetric polynomials; Fundamental theorem of symmetric polynomials; Fundamental Theorem of Symmetric Polynomials
In mathematics, specifically in commutative algebra, the elementary symmetric polynomials are one type of basic building block for symmetric polynomials, in the sense that any symmetric polynomial can be expressed as a polynomial in elementary symmetric polynomials. That is, any symmetric polynomial is given by an expression involving only additions and multiplication of constants and elementary symmetric polynomials.
Symmetric-key algorithm         
ALGORITHM
Symmetric Algorithms; Symmetric key; Symmetric encryption; Symmetric key cryptography; Symmetric cypher; Shared key; Symmetric cipher; Symmetric-key cipher; Symmetric key algorithms; Symmetric cryptography; Private-key cryptography; Symmetric key encryption; Symmetric key algorithm; Reciprocal cipher; Reciprocal encipherment; Private key cryptography; Symmetric-key encryption algorithm; Symmetric-key cryptography; Private-key; Symmetric algorithm; Private-key encryption; Symmetrical encryption
Symmetric-key algorithms are algorithms for cryptography that use the same cryptographic keys for both the encryption of plaintext and the decryption of ciphertext. The keys may be identical, or there may be a simple transformation to go between the two keys.

Wikipédia

Self-adjoint operator

In mathematics, a self-adjoint operator on an infinite-dimensional complex vector space V with inner product , {\displaystyle \langle \cdot ,\cdot \rangle } (equivalently, a Hermitian operator in the finite-dimensional case) is a linear map A (from V to itself) that is its own adjoint. If V is finite-dimensional with a given orthonormal basis, this is equivalent to the condition that the matrix of A is a Hermitian matrix, i.e., equal to its conjugate transpose A. By the finite-dimensional spectral theorem, V has an orthonormal basis such that the matrix of A relative to this basis is a diagonal matrix with entries in the real numbers. In this article, we consider generalizations of this concept to operators on Hilbert spaces of arbitrary dimension.

Self-adjoint operators are used in functional analysis and quantum mechanics. In quantum mechanics their importance lies in the Dirac–von Neumann formulation of quantum mechanics, in which physical observables such as position, momentum, angular momentum and spin are represented by self-adjoint operators on a Hilbert space. Of particular significance is the Hamiltonian operator H ^ {\displaystyle {\hat {H}}} defined by

H ^ ψ = 2 2 m 2 ψ + V ψ , {\displaystyle {\hat {H}}\psi =-{\frac {\hbar ^{2}}{2m}}\nabla ^{2}\psi +V\psi ,}

which as an observable corresponds to the total energy of a particle of mass m in a real potential field V. Differential operators are an important class of unbounded operators.

The structure of self-adjoint operators on infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces essentially resembles the finite-dimensional case. That is to say, operators are self-adjoint if and only if they are unitarily equivalent to real-valued multiplication operators. With suitable modifications, this result can be extended to possibly unbounded operators on infinite-dimensional spaces. Since an everywhere-defined self-adjoint operator is necessarily bounded, one needs be more attentive to the domain issue in the unbounded case. This is explained below in more detail.