- #36
DarMM
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I wouldn't so much see the "reality" of the measured output as being the reason for requiring Hermiticity. Of course if I take an observable [tex]A[/tex] and an observable [tex]B[/tex], I can measure [tex]A + iB[/tex] by just getting their values and put them into a complex number. Rather it has more to do with Unitarity. If an observable is not Hermitian then the transformation associated with it is not Unitary and it does not represent a good quantum number or even allow sensible quantum evolution. For example if [tex]H[/tex], the Hamiltonian wasn't Hermitian then time evolution wouldn't be Unitary, which would make the theory collapse. Similarly for momentum, linear and angular, rotations and translations wouldn't be unitary.Hurkyl said:This goes back to my earlier gripe -- there's nothing physically stopping me from making a measuring device that outputs complex numbers. Singling out those elements whose anti-Hermetian part is zero as being more "real" is just an extension of the old bias that the complex numbers with zero imaginary part are somehow more real than the rest of them.
Hence Hermitian operators represent our observables, because only they represent good quantum numbers. For example only then will we be sure that when we obtain [tex]A = a[/tex] that we are in a specific state by the spectral theorem.
Another example would be that measuring [tex]A + iB[/tex] only really makes sense if [tex]A[/tex] and [tex]B[/tex] are compatible observables. So if the Hamiltonian, Linear Momentum and Angular Momentum have to be Hermitian, functions of them essentially exhaust all operators.
There are other reasons for Hermiticity, which I can go into if you want.