Antilinear maps occur in quantum mechanics in the study of time reversal and in spinor calculus, where it is customary to replace the bars over the basis vectors and the components of geometric objects by dots put above the indices.
Definitions and characterizations
A function is called antilinear or conjugate linear if it is additive and conjugate homogeneous.
A function is called additive if
while it is called conjugate homogeneous if
In contrast, a linear map is a function that is additive and homogeneous, where is called homogeneous if
Given a complex vector space of rank 1, we can construct an anti-linear dual map which is an anti-linear map
sending an element for to
for some fixed real numbers . We can extend this to any finite dimensional complex vector space, where if we write out the standard basis and each standard basis element as
then an anti-linear complex map to will be of the form
for .
Isomorphism of Anti-linear dual with real dual
The anti-linear dual[1]pg 36 of a complex vector space
is a special example because it is isomorphic to the real dual of the underlying real vector space of , . This is given by the map sending an anti-linear map
to
In the other direction, there is the inverse map sending a real dual vector
The vector space of all antilinear forms on a vector space is called the algebraic anti-dual space of If is a topological vector space, then the vector space of all continuous antilinear functionals on denoted by is called the continuous anti-dual space or simply the anti-dual space of [2] if no confusion can arise.
When is a normed space then the canonical norm on the (continuous) anti-dual space denoted by is defined by using this same equation:[2]
The complex conjugate of a functional is defined by sending to It satisfies
for every and every
This says exactly that the canonical antilinear bijection defined by
as well as its inverse are antilinear isometries and consequently also homeomorphisms.
If then and this canonical map reduces down to the identity map.
Inner product spaces
If is an inner product space then both the canonical norm on and on satisfies the parallelogram law, which means that the polarization identity can be used to define a canonical inner product on and also on which this article will denote by the notations
where this inner product makes and into Hilbert spaces.
The inner products and are antilinear in their second arguments. Moreover, the canonical norm induced by this inner product (that is, the norm defined by ) is consistent with the dual norm (that is, as defined above by the supremum over the unit ball); explicitly, this means that the following holds for every
If is an inner product space then the inner products on the dual space and the anti-dual space denoted respectively by and are related by
and