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  2. Positive operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_operator

    The operator is said to be positive-definite, and written >, if , >, for all ⁡ {}. [ 1 ] Many authors define a positive operator A {\displaystyle A} to be a self-adjoint (or at least symmetric) non-negative operator.

  3. Definite matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definite_matrix

    In mathematics, a symmetric matrix with real entries is positive-definite if the real number is positive for every nonzero real column vector, where is the row vector transpose of . [1] More generally, a Hermitian matrix (that is, a complex matrix equal to its conjugate transpose) is positive-definite if the real number is positive for every nonzero complex column vector , where denotes the ...

  4. Hilbert space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert_space

    If A is Hermitian and Ax, x ≥ 0 for every x, then A is called 'nonnegative', written A ≥ 0; if equality holds only when x = 0, then A is called 'positive'. The set of self adjoint operators admits a partial order, in which A ≥ B if A − B ≥ 0. If A has the form B*B for some B, then A is nonnegative; if B is invertible, then A is positive.

  5. Choi's theorem on completely positive maps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choi's_theorem_on...

    This is not true in general for Kraus operators obtained from square root factorizations. (Positive semidefinite matrices do not generally have a unique square-root factorizations.) If two sets of Kraus operators {A i} 1 nm and {B i} 1 nm represent the same completely positive map Φ, then there exists a unitary operator matrix

  6. Normal operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_operator

    Normal operators are important because the spectral theorem holds for them. The class of normal operators is well understood. Examples of normal operators are unitary operators: N* = N −1; Hermitian operators (i.e., self-adjoint operators): N* = N; skew-Hermitian operators: N* = −N; positive operators: N = MM* for some M (so N is self-adjoint).

  7. Completely positive map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completely_positive_map

    Positive maps are monotone, i.e. () for all self-adjoint elements ,. Since ‖ ‖ ‖ ‖ for all self-adjoint elements , every positive map is automatically continuous with respect to the C*-norms and its operator norm equals ‖ ‖.

  8. Gram matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gram_matrix

    The Gram matrix is symmetric in the case the inner product is real-valued; it is Hermitian in the general, complex case by definition of an inner product. The Gram matrix is positive semidefinite, and every positive semidefinite matrix is the Gramian matrix for some set of vectors. The fact that the Gramian matrix is positive-semidefinite can ...

  9. Positive form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_form

    A form is called strongly positive if it is a linear combination of products of semi-positive forms, with positive real coefficients. A real (p, p) -form η {\displaystyle \eta } on an n -dimensional complex manifold M is called weakly positive if for all strongly positive (n-p, n-p) -forms ζ with compact support, we have ∫ M η ∧ ζ ≥ 0 ...