spectral gap in nLab
Context
Operator algebra
algebraic quantum field theory (perturbative, on curved spacetimes, homotopical)
Concepts
quantum mechanical system, quantum probability
interacting field quantization
Theorems
States and observables
Operator algebra
Local QFT
Perturbative QFT
Quantum systems
-
quantum algorithms:
Contents
Idea
Generally
Generally, given a (complex) linear operator on a separable Hilbert space with real operator spectrum, then a spectral gap is any interval I⊂ℝI \subset \mathbb{R} not intersecting the spectrum.
In quantum physics
In quantum physics this is often considered for the Hamiltonian operator of a quantum system, whence one also speaks of an “energy gap”.
Moreover, often the term is by default understood as referring to a gap above the ground state, hence such that the only energy eigenvalue smaller than all E∈IE \in I is that of the ground state (typically taken to be zero).
While spectral gaps are ubiquituous in single-atom quantum systems (cf. the famous discrete energy levels of the hydrogen atom) they tend to disappear in the thermodynamic limit when many atoms are brought close together, whereby their energy levels fuse into continuous energy bands.
For this reason, in condensed matter theory “gapped Hamiltonians” are the remarkable exception, not the rule (cf. also topological phases of matter).
References
- Toby Cubitt, David Perez-Garcia, Michael M. Wolf: Undecidability of the Spectral Gap, Forum of Mathematics, Pi 10 (2022) e14 [doi:10.1017/fmp.2021.15]
See also:
- Wikipedia: Spectral gap (physics)
Last revised on December 12, 2024 at 11:26:01. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.