Noncommutative Lévy processes for generalized (particularly anyon) statistics (Q443968): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Importer (talk | contribs)
Created a new Item
 
Importer (talk | contribs)
Changed an Item
Property / review text
 
Let \(T\) be a locally compact Polish space, \(\sigma\) a nonatomic measure on \(T\), \(D \subset T ^2\) the diagonal, \(A \supset D\) be measurable, \((\sigma\otimes\sigma) (A)=0\) and symmetric, \(T ^{(2)}=T^2 \backslash A\), \(Q:T^{(2)} \rightarrow S^1=\{| \cdot|=1\}\) be measurable, \(Q(t,s)=\overline{Q(s,t)}\), \((\Psi f) (s,t)=Q(s,t)f(t,s)\), \(T^{(n)}=\bigcap _{i \neq j}pr_{i,j}^{-1}(A) \subset T^n\), for \(f:T^{(n)} \rightarrow \mathbb C\), \(( \Psi_jf) (t_1,\dots,t _n)=Q(t_j,t_{j+1})f(t_1,\dots,t_{j+1},t_{j},\dots,t_n)\), \(P_n=n!^{-1} \sum_{\pi \in S _n}\Psi _\pi\) where \(\pi \rightarrow \Psi _\pi\) is the homomorphism extending \((j,j+1) \rightarrow \Psi _j\), \(H _\mathbb C=L _\mathbb C^2 (\sigma )\), \(H_\mathbb C^\odot n=P_n (H_\mathbb C^\otimes n)\), \(\mathcal F^Q(H)=\bigoplus _{n \geq 0} H _\mathbb C^{\bigodot n} n !\) (the \(Q\)-Fock space, \(\| \bigoplus _{n \geq 0 } u _{n } \| ^{2 } = \sum _{n \geq 0 } n ! \| u _{n } \| ^{2 }\)), \(\Omega = 1 \oplus 0 \oplus \dots \), \(a ^{+ } ( h ) = h\odot \cdot\), \(a ^{-} ( h ) = ( a ^{+ } ( h ) )^{ \ast }\) for \(h \in H _{{\mathbb C}}\) and, for a bounded \(h\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n } ) = (h(t_{1})+\dots+h(t_{n}))f(t_{1},\dots,t_{n})\), all three on \({\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {f i n} }^{Q } ( H )\) (topological direct sum of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{\odot n } n !\)). Fix \(\lambda \in {\mathbb R}\) and let \(( h,\omega ) = a^{+ } ( h ) + \lambda a^{0 } ( h ) + a^{-} ( h )\), \({\mathcal P}\) be the \( \ast \)-algebra generated by all \(( h , \omega )\) and \(1\), \(\tau ( p ) = \langle p \Omega , \Omega \rangle \) for \(p \in {\mathcal P}\): \(p \rightarrow p \Omega\) follows a unitary \(L ^{2 } ( \tau ) \longleftrightarrow {\mathcal F}^{Q} ( H )\). The authors introduce the notations \(\partial _{t }\), \(\partial _{t }^{+ }\) and give a sense to \(a^{+ } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{-} ( h ) = \int \overline {h ( t )} \partial _{t} d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } d \sigma ( t )\), denote \(\omega ( t ) = \partial _{t }^{+ } + \lambda \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } + \partial _{t }\) and define a Wick ordering \(: \cdot : _{W }\) which consists in replacing, in the product, each \(\partial _{s} \partial _{t }^{+}\) by \(Q ( s , t ) \partial _{t }^{+} \partial _{s }\) until all \(a^{+ }\) are to the left of all \(a^{-}\). In this symbolism, they introduce also \(\delta ( t _{1 } , \dots, t _{n })\) as \(\int f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) \delta ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) d \sigma ( t _{1 }) \cdots d \sigma ( t _{n }) = \int f ( t , \dots, t) d \sigma ( t )\). The first result appearing as a theorem is Theorem 4.5: If \(Q ( t , s ) \in \{ \pm 1 \} \) and \(\lambda = 0\) then \({:} \cdot {:} _{W }\) is the usual \({:} \cdot{:}\). The second (4.7) is \(\omega (t _1) \cdots \omega (t _n) = \sum _\mathcal V Q ({\mathcal V}, t _{1 }, \dots , t _n) {:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega (t_n){:}_\mathcal V\) over all partitions \({\mathcal V}\) of \( \{ 1, \dots , n \} \), each element of \({\mathcal V}\) being marked \(+ 1\) or \(-1\), all singletons in \({\mathcal V}\) by \(+1\), \({:}\omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _n){:}_{{\mathcal V}}\) being obtained from \({:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _{n }) {:}\) by removing all \(\omega ( t _{i })\) with \(i\) not in a singleton of \({\mathcal V}\) and multiplying, for every \(B = \{ t_{i _{1}},\dots,t_{i _{k}} \} \in {\mathcal V}\), \(k \geq 2\), by \(\delta ( t _{1 _{1 }}, \dots , t _{i _{k }})\) and also by \(\lambda ^{k - 1 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(+ 1\) and by \(\lambda ^{k - 2 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(-1\), while \(Q ( {\mathcal V} , t _{1 } , \dots , t _{n } )\) is the product of all \(Q ( t _{\min B _{2 }}, t _{\max B _{1 }} )\), for all pairs \(B _{1 } , B _{2 } \in {\mathcal V}\), for which \(B _{2 }\) is marked \(-1\) and either \(B _{1 }\) is marked with \(-1\) and \({\min B _{1 }} < {\min B _{2 }} < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\) or \(B _{1 }\) is marked \(+ 1\) and \(\min B _{2 } < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\). The independence is defined in a more general setup, namely having a linear subspace \({\mathcal D}\) of a separable complex Hilbert space \({\mathcal F}\) and an injective linear map \(f \rightarrow ( f, \xi )\) from the bounded measurable \(f\) to symmetric operators on \({\mathcal D}\), a \(\Psi \in {\mathcal D}\), \(\| \Psi \| = 1\) and complex measures \(m _{n }\) on \(T ^{n }\) such that \(\langle \Pi _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } , \xi ) \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \int \prod _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d m _{n }\). The cumulants \(C _{n } ( ( f _{1 }, \xi ), \dots , ( f _{n } , \xi ) )\) are defined as \(\int \prod _{i = 1 } ^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d c _{n }\) where \(c _{n }\) are complex measures defined recursively by \(c _{1 } = m _{1 }\), \(m _{n } = \sum _{{\mathcal V} } Q ( {\mathcal V}, \cdot ) d c _{{\mathcal V} }\), \(c _{{\mathcal V} }\) being the product of \(c _{B }\), \(B \in {\mathcal V}\), where, for \(B = \{ i _{1 }, \dots, i _{k } \} \), \(c _{B }\) is \(c _{k }\) on \(T ^{k } = \prod _{j = 1 } ^{k } T _{i _{j}}\) etc. \(( f _{i } , \xi )\), \(i = 1 , \dots, n\), are said to be independent if \(C _{k } ( ( f _{i _{1 }} , \xi ), \dots , ( f _{i _{k }} , \xi ) ) = 0\) for all \(k \geq 2\) and the indices \(i _{j }\) not all equal. The \(( f, \omega )\), \(f\) bounded measurable, introduced before, are independent. The family of all \(( f, \xi )\) is said to be a \(Q\)-Lévy process if \(( \chi _{\Delta _{i }} , \xi )\), \(i = 1, \dots, n\), are independent when the \(\Delta _{i }\) are disjoint and if \(\sigma ( \Delta _{1 } ) = \sigma ( \Delta _{2 } )\) implies \(\langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{1 }} , \xi )^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{2 }} , \xi ) ^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle \) for all \(k \in {\mathbb N}\). The following general example is considered. \(\nu\) is a probability on \({\mathbb R}\), \(\int e ^{\varepsilon | x | } d \nu ( x ) < + \infty\) for some \(\varepsilon > 0\), \(Q ( t _{1 }, x _{1 , t{2 }}, x _{2 }) = Q ( t _{1 }, t _{2 } )\), \(( t _{1 }, t _{2 } ) \in T ^{( 2 ) }\), \(( x _{1 }, x _{2 } ) \in {\mathbb R}^{2 }\), \({\mathcal G} = L^{2 } ( \sigma \otimes \nu )\), \({\mathcal D} \subset {\mathcal F}^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\) being the set of all \(F \in {\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {fin}} ^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\), with the component \(k\) in \(P _{k } ( H _{{\mathbb C}}^{\otimes k } \otimes ' p _{k } )\), \(p _{k }\) being the space of polynomials in \(k\) variables \(x _{1 } , \dots, x _{n }\). Set \(( f , \xi ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes 1 ) + a ^{0 } ( f \otimes x ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes 1 )\), \(f\) bounded measurable on \(T\), \(x\) interpreted as the polynomial. These constitute a \(Q\)-Lévy process. Defining \(X _{k } ( f ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } ) + a^{0 } ( f \otimes x^{k } ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } )\), \(k \in {\mathbb N}\), and \(Y _{k }\) as the result of orthogonalizing this sequence, the paper finishes with an orthogonal representation of \(L ^{2 } ( \tau )\), the terms being indexed by finite sequences \(\alpha = ( \alpha _{0 },\dots , \alpha _{k } )\) of positive integers, the \(\alpha\)-term being an integral of functions in tensor products of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{^{\odot \alpha } i }\) with respect to a product of \(\alpha _{0 }\) factors \(d Y _0\), \(\alpha_1\) factors \(d Y_1,\dots\), \(\alpha_k\) factors \(d Y_k\). The paper contains a lot of propositions necessary for working with the introduced concepts. It starts with three pages of history and motivations. The (anyon) case when \(T\) has a total ordering for pairs in \(T^{( 2 ) }\) and \(Q ( s , t ) = q\) for \(s < t\), \(\overline {q}\) for \(s > t\), is mentioned as having importance in physics.
Property / review text: Let \(T\) be a locally compact Polish space, \(\sigma\) a nonatomic measure on \(T\), \(D \subset T ^2\) the diagonal, \(A \supset D\) be measurable, \((\sigma\otimes\sigma) (A)=0\) and symmetric, \(T ^{(2)}=T^2 \backslash A\), \(Q:T^{(2)} \rightarrow S^1=\{| \cdot|=1\}\) be measurable, \(Q(t,s)=\overline{Q(s,t)}\), \((\Psi f) (s,t)=Q(s,t)f(t,s)\), \(T^{(n)}=\bigcap _{i \neq j}pr_{i,j}^{-1}(A) \subset T^n\), for \(f:T^{(n)} \rightarrow \mathbb C\), \(( \Psi_jf) (t_1,\dots,t _n)=Q(t_j,t_{j+1})f(t_1,\dots,t_{j+1},t_{j},\dots,t_n)\), \(P_n=n!^{-1} \sum_{\pi \in S _n}\Psi _\pi\) where \(\pi \rightarrow \Psi _\pi\) is the homomorphism extending \((j,j+1) \rightarrow \Psi _j\), \(H _\mathbb C=L _\mathbb C^2 (\sigma )\), \(H_\mathbb C^\odot n=P_n (H_\mathbb C^\otimes n)\), \(\mathcal F^Q(H)=\bigoplus _{n \geq 0} H _\mathbb C^{\bigodot n} n !\) (the \(Q\)-Fock space, \(\| \bigoplus _{n \geq 0 } u _{n } \| ^{2 } = \sum _{n \geq 0 } n ! \| u _{n } \| ^{2 }\)), \(\Omega = 1 \oplus 0 \oplus \dots \), \(a ^{+ } ( h ) = h\odot \cdot\), \(a ^{-} ( h ) = ( a ^{+ } ( h ) )^{ \ast }\) for \(h \in H _{{\mathbb C}}\) and, for a bounded \(h\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n } ) = (h(t_{1})+\dots+h(t_{n}))f(t_{1},\dots,t_{n})\), all three on \({\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {f i n} }^{Q } ( H )\) (topological direct sum of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{\odot n } n !\)). Fix \(\lambda \in {\mathbb R}\) and let \(( h,\omega ) = a^{+ } ( h ) + \lambda a^{0 } ( h ) + a^{-} ( h )\), \({\mathcal P}\) be the \( \ast \)-algebra generated by all \(( h , \omega )\) and \(1\), \(\tau ( p ) = \langle p \Omega , \Omega \rangle \) for \(p \in {\mathcal P}\): \(p \rightarrow p \Omega\) follows a unitary \(L ^{2 } ( \tau ) \longleftrightarrow {\mathcal F}^{Q} ( H )\). The authors introduce the notations \(\partial _{t }\), \(\partial _{t }^{+ }\) and give a sense to \(a^{+ } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{-} ( h ) = \int \overline {h ( t )} \partial _{t} d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } d \sigma ( t )\), denote \(\omega ( t ) = \partial _{t }^{+ } + \lambda \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } + \partial _{t }\) and define a Wick ordering \(: \cdot : _{W }\) which consists in replacing, in the product, each \(\partial _{s} \partial _{t }^{+}\) by \(Q ( s , t ) \partial _{t }^{+} \partial _{s }\) until all \(a^{+ }\) are to the left of all \(a^{-}\). In this symbolism, they introduce also \(\delta ( t _{1 } , \dots, t _{n })\) as \(\int f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) \delta ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) d \sigma ( t _{1 }) \cdots d \sigma ( t _{n }) = \int f ( t , \dots, t) d \sigma ( t )\). The first result appearing as a theorem is Theorem 4.5: If \(Q ( t , s ) \in \{ \pm 1 \} \) and \(\lambda = 0\) then \({:} \cdot {:} _{W }\) is the usual \({:} \cdot{:}\). The second (4.7) is \(\omega (t _1) \cdots \omega (t _n) = \sum _\mathcal V Q ({\mathcal V}, t _{1 }, \dots , t _n) {:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega (t_n){:}_\mathcal V\) over all partitions \({\mathcal V}\) of \( \{ 1, \dots , n \} \), each element of \({\mathcal V}\) being marked \(+ 1\) or \(-1\), all singletons in \({\mathcal V}\) by \(+1\), \({:}\omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _n){:}_{{\mathcal V}}\) being obtained from \({:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _{n }) {:}\) by removing all \(\omega ( t _{i })\) with \(i\) not in a singleton of \({\mathcal V}\) and multiplying, for every \(B = \{ t_{i _{1}},\dots,t_{i _{k}} \} \in {\mathcal V}\), \(k \geq 2\), by \(\delta ( t _{1 _{1 }}, \dots , t _{i _{k }})\) and also by \(\lambda ^{k - 1 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(+ 1\) and by \(\lambda ^{k - 2 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(-1\), while \(Q ( {\mathcal V} , t _{1 } , \dots , t _{n } )\) is the product of all \(Q ( t _{\min B _{2 }}, t _{\max B _{1 }} )\), for all pairs \(B _{1 } , B _{2 } \in {\mathcal V}\), for which \(B _{2 }\) is marked \(-1\) and either \(B _{1 }\) is marked with \(-1\) and \({\min B _{1 }} < {\min B _{2 }} < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\) or \(B _{1 }\) is marked \(+ 1\) and \(\min B _{2 } < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\). The independence is defined in a more general setup, namely having a linear subspace \({\mathcal D}\) of a separable complex Hilbert space \({\mathcal F}\) and an injective linear map \(f \rightarrow ( f, \xi )\) from the bounded measurable \(f\) to symmetric operators on \({\mathcal D}\), a \(\Psi \in {\mathcal D}\), \(\| \Psi \| = 1\) and complex measures \(m _{n }\) on \(T ^{n }\) such that \(\langle \Pi _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } , \xi ) \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \int \prod _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d m _{n }\). The cumulants \(C _{n } ( ( f _{1 }, \xi ), \dots , ( f _{n } , \xi ) )\) are defined as \(\int \prod _{i = 1 } ^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d c _{n }\) where \(c _{n }\) are complex measures defined recursively by \(c _{1 } = m _{1 }\), \(m _{n } = \sum _{{\mathcal V} } Q ( {\mathcal V}, \cdot ) d c _{{\mathcal V} }\), \(c _{{\mathcal V} }\) being the product of \(c _{B }\), \(B \in {\mathcal V}\), where, for \(B = \{ i _{1 }, \dots, i _{k } \} \), \(c _{B }\) is \(c _{k }\) on \(T ^{k } = \prod _{j = 1 } ^{k } T _{i _{j}}\) etc. \(( f _{i } , \xi )\), \(i = 1 , \dots, n\), are said to be independent if \(C _{k } ( ( f _{i _{1 }} , \xi ), \dots , ( f _{i _{k }} , \xi ) ) = 0\) for all \(k \geq 2\) and the indices \(i _{j }\) not all equal. The \(( f, \omega )\), \(f\) bounded measurable, introduced before, are independent. The family of all \(( f, \xi )\) is said to be a \(Q\)-Lévy process if \(( \chi _{\Delta _{i }} , \xi )\), \(i = 1, \dots, n\), are independent when the \(\Delta _{i }\) are disjoint and if \(\sigma ( \Delta _{1 } ) = \sigma ( \Delta _{2 } )\) implies \(\langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{1 }} , \xi )^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{2 }} , \xi ) ^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle \) for all \(k \in {\mathbb N}\). The following general example is considered. \(\nu\) is a probability on \({\mathbb R}\), \(\int e ^{\varepsilon | x | } d \nu ( x ) < + \infty\) for some \(\varepsilon > 0\), \(Q ( t _{1 }, x _{1 , t{2 }}, x _{2 }) = Q ( t _{1 }, t _{2 } )\), \(( t _{1 }, t _{2 } ) \in T ^{( 2 ) }\), \(( x _{1 }, x _{2 } ) \in {\mathbb R}^{2 }\), \({\mathcal G} = L^{2 } ( \sigma \otimes \nu )\), \({\mathcal D} \subset {\mathcal F}^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\) being the set of all \(F \in {\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {fin}} ^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\), with the component \(k\) in \(P _{k } ( H _{{\mathbb C}}^{\otimes k } \otimes ' p _{k } )\), \(p _{k }\) being the space of polynomials in \(k\) variables \(x _{1 } , \dots, x _{n }\). Set \(( f , \xi ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes 1 ) + a ^{0 } ( f \otimes x ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes 1 )\), \(f\) bounded measurable on \(T\), \(x\) interpreted as the polynomial. These constitute a \(Q\)-Lévy process. Defining \(X _{k } ( f ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } ) + a^{0 } ( f \otimes x^{k } ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } )\), \(k \in {\mathbb N}\), and \(Y _{k }\) as the result of orthogonalizing this sequence, the paper finishes with an orthogonal representation of \(L ^{2 } ( \tau )\), the terms being indexed by finite sequences \(\alpha = ( \alpha _{0 },\dots , \alpha _{k } )\) of positive integers, the \(\alpha\)-term being an integral of functions in tensor products of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{^{\odot \alpha } i }\) with respect to a product of \(\alpha _{0 }\) factors \(d Y _0\), \(\alpha_1\) factors \(d Y_1,\dots\), \(\alpha_k\) factors \(d Y_k\). The paper contains a lot of propositions necessary for working with the introduced concepts. It starts with three pages of history and motivations. The (anyon) case when \(T\) has a total ordering for pairs in \(T^{( 2 ) }\) and \(Q ( s , t ) = q\) for \(s < t\), \(\overline {q}\) for \(s > t\), is mentioned as having importance in physics. / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Ioan Cuculescu / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 46L53 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81S99 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81V70 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6065250 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
cumulants
Property / zbMATH Keywords: cumulants / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Q-Lévy process
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Q-Lévy process / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
vacuum state
Property / zbMATH Keywords: vacuum state / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
generalized Fock space
Property / zbMATH Keywords: generalized Fock space / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
orthogonal representation
Property / zbMATH Keywords: orthogonal representation / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
commutation relations
Property / zbMATH Keywords: commutation relations / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Wick product
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Wick product / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 02:42, 30 June 2023

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Noncommutative Lévy processes for generalized (particularly anyon) statistics
scientific article

    Statements

    Noncommutative Lévy processes for generalized (particularly anyon) statistics (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    13 August 2012
    0 references
    Let \(T\) be a locally compact Polish space, \(\sigma\) a nonatomic measure on \(T\), \(D \subset T ^2\) the diagonal, \(A \supset D\) be measurable, \((\sigma\otimes\sigma) (A)=0\) and symmetric, \(T ^{(2)}=T^2 \backslash A\), \(Q:T^{(2)} \rightarrow S^1=\{| \cdot|=1\}\) be measurable, \(Q(t,s)=\overline{Q(s,t)}\), \((\Psi f) (s,t)=Q(s,t)f(t,s)\), \(T^{(n)}=\bigcap _{i \neq j}pr_{i,j}^{-1}(A) \subset T^n\), for \(f:T^{(n)} \rightarrow \mathbb C\), \(( \Psi_jf) (t_1,\dots,t _n)=Q(t_j,t_{j+1})f(t_1,\dots,t_{j+1},t_{j},\dots,t_n)\), \(P_n=n!^{-1} \sum_{\pi \in S _n}\Psi _\pi\) where \(\pi \rightarrow \Psi _\pi\) is the homomorphism extending \((j,j+1) \rightarrow \Psi _j\), \(H _\mathbb C=L _\mathbb C^2 (\sigma )\), \(H_\mathbb C^\odot n=P_n (H_\mathbb C^\otimes n)\), \(\mathcal F^Q(H)=\bigoplus _{n \geq 0} H _\mathbb C^{\bigodot n} n !\) (the \(Q\)-Fock space, \(\| \bigoplus _{n \geq 0 } u _{n } \| ^{2 } = \sum _{n \geq 0 } n ! \| u _{n } \| ^{2 }\)), \(\Omega = 1 \oplus 0 \oplus \dots \), \(a ^{+ } ( h ) = h\odot \cdot\), \(a ^{-} ( h ) = ( a ^{+ } ( h ) )^{ \ast }\) for \(h \in H _{{\mathbb C}}\) and, for a bounded \(h\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n } ) = (h(t_{1})+\dots+h(t_{n}))f(t_{1},\dots,t_{n})\), all three on \({\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {f i n} }^{Q } ( H )\) (topological direct sum of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{\odot n } n !\)). Fix \(\lambda \in {\mathbb R}\) and let \(( h,\omega ) = a^{+ } ( h ) + \lambda a^{0 } ( h ) + a^{-} ( h )\), \({\mathcal P}\) be the \( \ast \)-algebra generated by all \(( h , \omega )\) and \(1\), \(\tau ( p ) = \langle p \Omega , \Omega \rangle \) for \(p \in {\mathcal P}\): \(p \rightarrow p \Omega\) follows a unitary \(L ^{2 } ( \tau ) \longleftrightarrow {\mathcal F}^{Q} ( H )\). The authors introduce the notations \(\partial _{t }\), \(\partial _{t }^{+ }\) and give a sense to \(a^{+ } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{-} ( h ) = \int \overline {h ( t )} \partial _{t} d \sigma ( t )\), \(a^{0 } ( h ) = \int h ( t ) \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } d \sigma ( t )\), denote \(\omega ( t ) = \partial _{t }^{+ } + \lambda \partial _{t }^{+ } \partial _{t } + \partial _{t }\) and define a Wick ordering \(: \cdot : _{W }\) which consists in replacing, in the product, each \(\partial _{s} \partial _{t }^{+}\) by \(Q ( s , t ) \partial _{t }^{+} \partial _{s }\) until all \(a^{+ }\) are to the left of all \(a^{-}\). In this symbolism, they introduce also \(\delta ( t _{1 } , \dots, t _{n })\) as \(\int f ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) \delta ( t _{1 }, \dots , t _{n }) d \sigma ( t _{1 }) \cdots d \sigma ( t _{n }) = \int f ( t , \dots, t) d \sigma ( t )\). The first result appearing as a theorem is Theorem 4.5: If \(Q ( t , s ) \in \{ \pm 1 \} \) and \(\lambda = 0\) then \({:} \cdot {:} _{W }\) is the usual \({:} \cdot{:}\). The second (4.7) is \(\omega (t _1) \cdots \omega (t _n) = \sum _\mathcal V Q ({\mathcal V}, t _{1 }, \dots , t _n) {:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega (t_n){:}_\mathcal V\) over all partitions \({\mathcal V}\) of \( \{ 1, \dots , n \} \), each element of \({\mathcal V}\) being marked \(+ 1\) or \(-1\), all singletons in \({\mathcal V}\) by \(+1\), \({:}\omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _n){:}_{{\mathcal V}}\) being obtained from \({:} \omega ( t _{1 }) \cdots \omega ( t _{n }) {:}\) by removing all \(\omega ( t _{i })\) with \(i\) not in a singleton of \({\mathcal V}\) and multiplying, for every \(B = \{ t_{i _{1}},\dots,t_{i _{k}} \} \in {\mathcal V}\), \(k \geq 2\), by \(\delta ( t _{1 _{1 }}, \dots , t _{i _{k }})\) and also by \(\lambda ^{k - 1 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(+ 1\) and by \(\lambda ^{k - 2 }\) if \(B\) is marked by \(-1\), while \(Q ( {\mathcal V} , t _{1 } , \dots , t _{n } )\) is the product of all \(Q ( t _{\min B _{2 }}, t _{\max B _{1 }} )\), for all pairs \(B _{1 } , B _{2 } \in {\mathcal V}\), for which \(B _{2 }\) is marked \(-1\) and either \(B _{1 }\) is marked with \(-1\) and \({\min B _{1 }} < {\min B _{2 }} < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\) or \(B _{1 }\) is marked \(+ 1\) and \(\min B _{2 } < \max B _{1 } < \max B _{2 }\). The independence is defined in a more general setup, namely having a linear subspace \({\mathcal D}\) of a separable complex Hilbert space \({\mathcal F}\) and an injective linear map \(f \rightarrow ( f, \xi )\) from the bounded measurable \(f\) to symmetric operators on \({\mathcal D}\), a \(\Psi \in {\mathcal D}\), \(\| \Psi \| = 1\) and complex measures \(m _{n }\) on \(T ^{n }\) such that \(\langle \Pi _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } , \xi ) \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \int \prod _{i = 1 }^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d m _{n }\). The cumulants \(C _{n } ( ( f _{1 }, \xi ), \dots , ( f _{n } , \xi ) )\) are defined as \(\int \prod _{i = 1 } ^{n } ( f _{i } \circ p r _{i } ) d c _{n }\) where \(c _{n }\) are complex measures defined recursively by \(c _{1 } = m _{1 }\), \(m _{n } = \sum _{{\mathcal V} } Q ( {\mathcal V}, \cdot ) d c _{{\mathcal V} }\), \(c _{{\mathcal V} }\) being the product of \(c _{B }\), \(B \in {\mathcal V}\), where, for \(B = \{ i _{1 }, \dots, i _{k } \} \), \(c _{B }\) is \(c _{k }\) on \(T ^{k } = \prod _{j = 1 } ^{k } T _{i _{j}}\) etc. \(( f _{i } , \xi )\), \(i = 1 , \dots, n\), are said to be independent if \(C _{k } ( ( f _{i _{1 }} , \xi ), \dots , ( f _{i _{k }} , \xi ) ) = 0\) for all \(k \geq 2\) and the indices \(i _{j }\) not all equal. The \(( f, \omega )\), \(f\) bounded measurable, introduced before, are independent. The family of all \(( f, \xi )\) is said to be a \(Q\)-Lévy process if \(( \chi _{\Delta _{i }} , \xi )\), \(i = 1, \dots, n\), are independent when the \(\Delta _{i }\) are disjoint and if \(\sigma ( \Delta _{1 } ) = \sigma ( \Delta _{2 } )\) implies \(\langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{1 }} , \xi )^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle = \langle ( \chi _{\Delta _{2 }} , \xi ) ^{k } \Psi , \Psi \rangle \) for all \(k \in {\mathbb N}\). The following general example is considered. \(\nu\) is a probability on \({\mathbb R}\), \(\int e ^{\varepsilon | x | } d \nu ( x ) < + \infty\) for some \(\varepsilon > 0\), \(Q ( t _{1 }, x _{1 , t{2 }}, x _{2 }) = Q ( t _{1 }, t _{2 } )\), \(( t _{1 }, t _{2 } ) \in T ^{( 2 ) }\), \(( x _{1 }, x _{2 } ) \in {\mathbb R}^{2 }\), \({\mathcal G} = L^{2 } ( \sigma \otimes \nu )\), \({\mathcal D} \subset {\mathcal F}^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\) being the set of all \(F \in {\mathcal F} _{\mathrm {fin}} ^{Q } ( {\mathcal G} )\), with the component \(k\) in \(P _{k } ( H _{{\mathbb C}}^{\otimes k } \otimes ' p _{k } )\), \(p _{k }\) being the space of polynomials in \(k\) variables \(x _{1 } , \dots, x _{n }\). Set \(( f , \xi ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes 1 ) + a ^{0 } ( f \otimes x ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes 1 )\), \(f\) bounded measurable on \(T\), \(x\) interpreted as the polynomial. These constitute a \(Q\)-Lévy process. Defining \(X _{k } ( f ) = a^{+ } ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } ) + a^{0 } ( f \otimes x^{k } ) + a^{-} ( f \otimes x^{k - 1 } )\), \(k \in {\mathbb N}\), and \(Y _{k }\) as the result of orthogonalizing this sequence, the paper finishes with an orthogonal representation of \(L ^{2 } ( \tau )\), the terms being indexed by finite sequences \(\alpha = ( \alpha _{0 },\dots , \alpha _{k } )\) of positive integers, the \(\alpha\)-term being an integral of functions in tensor products of \(H _{{\mathbb C}} ^{^{\odot \alpha } i }\) with respect to a product of \(\alpha _{0 }\) factors \(d Y _0\), \(\alpha_1\) factors \(d Y_1,\dots\), \(\alpha_k\) factors \(d Y_k\). The paper contains a lot of propositions necessary for working with the introduced concepts. It starts with three pages of history and motivations. The (anyon) case when \(T\) has a total ordering for pairs in \(T^{( 2 ) }\) and \(Q ( s , t ) = q\) for \(s < t\), \(\overline {q}\) for \(s > t\), is mentioned as having importance in physics.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    cumulants
    0 references
    Q-Lévy process
    0 references
    vacuum state
    0 references
    generalized Fock space
    0 references
    orthogonal representation
    0 references
    commutation relations
    0 references
    Wick product
    0 references