CCR and CAR algebras

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In mathematics and physics CCR algebras (after canonical commutation relations) and CAR algebras (after canonical anticommutation relations) arise from the quantum mechanical study of bosons and fermions respectively. They play a prominent role in quantum statistical mechanics[1] and quantum field theory.

CCR and CAR as *-algebras

Let be a real vector space equipped with a nonsingular real antisymmetric bilinear form (i.e. a

unital *-algebra
generated by elements of subject to the relations

for any in is called the canonical commutation relations (CCR) algebra. The uniqueness of the representations of this algebra when is

.

If is equipped with a nonsingular real symmetric bilinear form instead, the unital *-algebra generated by the elements of subject to the relations

for any in is called the canonical anticommutation relations (CAR) algebra.

The C*-algebra of CCR

There is a distinct, but closely related meaning of CCR algebra, called the CCR C*-algebra. Let be a real symplectic vector space with nonsingular symplectic form . In the theory of operator algebras, the CCR algebra over is the unital C*-algebra generated by elements subject to

These are called the Weyl form of the canonical commutation relations and, in particular, they imply that each is unitary and . It is well known that the CCR algebra is a simple (unless the sympletic form is degenerate) non-separable algebra and is unique up to isomorphism.[2]

When is a complex Hilbert space and is given by the imaginary part of the inner-product, the CCR algebra is faithfully represented on the symmetric Fock space over by setting

for any . The field operators are defined for each as the generator of the one-parameter unitary group on the symmetric Fock space. These are self-adjoint unbounded operators, however they formally satisfy

As the assignment is real-linear, so the operators define a CCR algebra over in the sense of Section 1.

The C*-algebra of CAR

Let be a Hilbert space. In the theory of operator algebras the CAR algebra is the unique C*-completion of the complex unital *-algebra generated by elements subject to the relations

for any , . When is separable the CAR algebra is an

AF algebra
and in the special case is infinite dimensional it is often written as .[3]

Let be the antisymmetric Fock space over and let be the orthogonal projection onto antisymmetric vectors:

The CAR algebra is faithfully represented on by setting

for all and . The fact that these form a C*-algebra is due to the fact that creation and annihilation operators on antisymmetric Fock space are bona-fide bounded operators. Moreover, the field operators satisfy

giving the relationship with Section 1.

Superalgebra generalization

Let be a real -graded vector space equipped with a nonsingular antisymmetric bilinear superform (i.e. ) such that is real if either or is an even element and imaginary if both of them are odd. The unital *-algebra generated by the elements of subject to the relations

for any two pure elements in is the obvious superalgebra generalization which unifies CCRs with CARs: if all pure elements are even, one obtains a CCR, while if all pure elements are odd, one obtains a CAR.

In mathematics, the abstract structure of the CCR and CAR algebras, over any field, not just the complex numbers, is studied by the name of

See also

References