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Golden–Thompson inequality

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In physics and mathematics, the Golden–Thompson inequality is a trace inequality between exponentials of symmetric and Hermitian matrices proved independently by Golden (1965) and Thompson (1965). It has been developed in the context of statistical mechanics, where it has come to have a particular significance.

Statement

The Golden–Thompson inequality states that for (real) symmetric or (complex) Hermitian matrices A and B, the following trace inequality holds:

This inequality is well defined, since the quantities on either side are real numbers. For the expression on the right hand side of the inequality, this can be seen by rewriting it as using the cyclic property of the trace.

Motivation

The Golden–Thompson inequality can be viewed as a generalization of a stronger statement for real numbers. If a and b are two real numbers, then the exponential of a+b is the product of the exponential of a with the exponential of b:

If we replace a and b with commuting matrices A and B, then the same inequality holds.

This relationship is not true if A and B do not commute. In fact, Petz (1994) proved that if A and B are two Hermitian matrices for which the Golden–Thompson inequality is verified as an equality, then the two matrices commute. The Golden–Thompson inequality shows that, even though and are not equal, they are still related by an inequality.

Generalizations

The Golden–Thompson inequality generalizes to any unitarily invariant norm. If A and B are Hermitian matrices and is a unitarily invariant norm, then

The standard Golden–Thompson inequality is a special case of the above inequality, where the norm is the Schatten norm with . Since and are both positive semidefinite matrices, and .

The inequality has been generalized to three matrices by Lieb (1973) and furthermore to any arbitrary number of Hermitian matrices by Sutter, Berta & Tomamichel (2016). A naive attempt at generalization does not work: the inequality

is false. For three matrices, the correct generalization takes the following form:

where the operator is the derivative of the matrix logarithm given by . Note that, if and commute, then , and the inequality for three matrices reduces to the original from Golden and Thompson.

Bertram Kostant (1973) used the Kostant convexity theorem to generalize the Golden–Thompson inequality to all compact Lie groups.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 9 February 2024, at 11:31
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