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I am permanently confused about the distinction between Hermitian and self-adjoint operators in an infinite-dimensional space. The preceding statement may even be ill-defined. My confusion is due to consulting Wikipedia, upon which action I have the following notion.

Let $H$ be a pre-Hilbert space equipped with an inner product ${\langle}.,.{\rangle}$ and $T:D(T){\subset}H{\longmapsto}H$ a linear operator. Then

  1. If ${\langle}Tx,y{\rangle}$=${\langle}x,Ty{\rangle}$ for all $x,y{\in}D(T)$ then $T$ is symmetric.

  2. If $T$ is symmetric and also bounded then it is Hermitian.

  3. If $T$ is symmetric and $D(T)=H$ then $T$ is self-adjoint.

As a corollary, if the above is true then a symmetric and self-adjoint operator must be Hermitian since a symmetric operator defined on all of $H$ must be bounded. On the other hand, a Hermitian operator need not be self-adjoint: it would not be if its domain were a strict subset of $H$.

Would people agree with this? I always see the second and third of these treated as equivalent, hence my confusion.

Josef K.
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    The terminology probably differs depending on whether you're talking to a physicist or a functional analyst. – Qiaochu Yuan May 11 '11 at 03:56
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    Thanks. I think I'd prefer to talk to a functional analyst. I guess the former would resent the apparent disjointness of the two groups, or perhaps that's just what I'm reading and you require at least one of the identities to hold true. – Josef K. May 11 '11 at 05:12
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    In the 1960s Friedrichs met Heisenberg and used the occasion to express to him the deep gratitude of mathematicians for having created quantum mechanics, which gave birth to the beautiful theory of operators on Hilbert space. Heisenberg allowed that this was so; Friedrichs then added that the mathematicians have, in some measure, returned the favor. Heisenberg looked noncommittal, so Friedrichs pointed out that it was a mathematician, von Neumann, who clarified the difference between a self-adjoint operator and one that is merely symmetric. "What's the difference," said Heisenberg. – leslie townes May 08 '12 at 08:17
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  • story from Peter Lax, Functional Analysis (slightly edited for length)
  • – leslie townes May 08 '12 at 08:17
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    @leslietownes thanks for the reference! ;) So it was Friedrichs who met Heisenberg, not von Neumann himself, and this story is not an anecdote. – Wildcat Jun 03 '13 at 11:20
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    Related Phys.SE question: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/68826/2451 – Qmechanic Jun 22 '13 at 18:15