Subspaces of Vector Spaces, Invariant Subspaces
The idea is to create a RESTRICTED space within the given vector space.
E.g. Within R3
:
we can define a space that is far more limited:
:
This would be a subspace of R3 (it is an R2 space).
An Invariant Subspace
is one that retains the entire subspace under a transformation. In theory, when going from V to V (under T), there is no guarantee where a particular element of W (subset of V) will end up. It could end up anywhere within V. However, if it ends up exactly inside the same subset W, then we say that W is an invariant subspace of V.
An example of an Invariant Transformation Subspace
Consider R3 and consider the transformation of rotating around the z-axis (by an angle theta).
Any point on the X-Y plane will END UP again on the X-Y plane under such a rotation.
We say that the X-Y plane (z=0) is invariant under the angle rotation transformation.
The connection with Quantum Mechanics?