Mathematical Tools for Physics

(coco) #1
7—Operators and Matrices 194

and I pulled the standard trick of changing the last dummy label of summation fromitojso that I can compare
the components more easily.



i

Sjivi′=vj or in matrix notation (S)(v′) = (v), =⇒ (v′) = (S)−^1 (v)

Similarity Transformations
Now use the definition of the components of an operator to get the components in the new basis.


f

(


~e′i

)


= =



j

fji′~e′j

f

(∑


j

Sji~ej

)


=



j

Sjif

(


~ej

)


=



j

Sji


k

fkj~ek=


j

fji′


k

Skj~ek

The final equation comes from the preceding line. The coefficients of~ek must agree on the two sides of the
equation. ∑


j

Sjifkj=


j

fji′Skj

Now rearrange this in order to place the indices in their conventionalrow,columnorder.



j

Skjfji′ =


j

fkjSji

(
S 11 S 12
S 21 S 22

)(


f 11 ′ f 12 ′
f 21 ′ f 22 ′

)


=


(


f 11 f 12
f 21 f 22

)(


S 11 S 12


S 21 S 22


) (33)


In turn, this matrix equation is usually written in terms of the inverse matrix ofS,


(S)(f′) = (f)(S) is (f′) = (S)−^1 (f)(S)

and this is called a similarity transformation. For the example Eq. ( 31 ) this is


~e′ 1 = 2ˆx+ 0. 5 ˆy=S 11 ~e 1 +S 21 ~e 2
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