Dirac–von Neumann axioms
In mathematical physics, the Dirac–von Neumann axioms give a mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics in terms of operators on a Hilbert space. They were introduced by Paul Dirac in 1930 and John von Neumann in 1932.
Hilbert space formulation
The space is a fixed complex Hilbert space of countably infinite dimension.- The observables of a quantum system are defined to be the self-adjoint operators on.
- A state of the quantum system is a unit vector of, up to scalar multiples; or equivalently, a ray of the Hilbert space.
- The expectation value of an observable A for a system in a state is given by the inner product.
Operator algebra formulation
The Dirac–von Neumann axioms can be formulated in terms of a C*-algebra as follows.- The bounded observables of the quantum mechanical system are defined to be the self-adjoint elements of the C*-algebra.
- The states of the quantum mechanical system are defined to be the states of the C*-algebra.
- The value of a state on an element is the expectation value of the observable if the quantum system is in the state.