Let H be a Hilbert space. A compact operator K on H is symmetrizable if there is a bounded self-adjoint operator S on H such that S is positive with trivial kernel, i.e. (Sx,x) > 0 for all non-zero x, and SK is self-adjoint:
In many applications S is also compact. The operator S defines a new inner product on H
Let HS be the Hilbert space completion of H with respect to this inner product.
The operator K defines a formally self-adjoint operator on the dense subspace H of HS. As Krein (1947) and Reid (1951) noted, the operator has the same operator norm as K. In fact[1] the self-adjointness condition implies
It follows by induction that, if (x,x)S = 1, then
Hence
If K is only compact, Krein gave an argument, invoking Fredholm theory, to show that K defines a compact operator on HS. A shorter argument is available if K belongs to a Schatten class.
When K is a Hilbert–Schmidt operator, the argument proceeds as follows. Let R be the unique positive square root of S and for ε > 0 define[2]
These are self-adjoint Hilbert–Schmidt operator on H which are uniformly bounded in the Hilbert–Schmidt norm:
Since the Hilbert–Schmidt operators form a Hilbert space, there is a subsequence converging weakly to s self-adjoint Hilbert–Schmidt operator A. Since AεR tends to RK in Hilbert–Schmidt norm, it follows that
Thus if U is the unitary induced by R between HS and H, then the operator KS induced by the restriction of K corresponds to A on H:
The operators K − λI and K* − λI are Fredholm operators of index 0 for λ ≠ 0, so any spectral value of K or K* is an eigenvalue and the corresponding eigenspaces are finite-dimensional. On the other hand, by the special theorem for compact operators, H is the orthogonal direct sum of the eigenspaces of A, all finite-dimensional except possibly for the 0 eigenspace. Since RA = K* R, the image under R of the λ eigenspace of A lies in the λ eigenspace of K*.
Similarly R carries the λ eigenspace of K into the λ eigenspace of A. It follows that the eigenvalues of K and K* are all real. Since R is injective and has dense range it induces isomorphisms between the λ eigenspaces of A, K and K*. The same is true for generalized eigenvalues since powers of K − λI and K* − λI are also Fredholm of index 0. Since any generalized λ eigenvector of A is already an eigenvector, the same is true for K and K*. For λ = 0, this argument shows that Kmx = 0 implies Kx = 0.
Finally the eigenspaces of K* span a dense subspace of H, since it contains the image under R of the corresponding space for A. The above arguments also imply that the eigenvectors for non-zero eigenvalues of KS in HS all lie in the subspace H.
Hilbert–Schmidt operators K with non-zero real eigenvalues λn satisfy the following identities proved by Carleman (1921):
Here tr is the trace on trace-class operators and det is the Fredholm determinant. For symmetrizable Hilbert–Schmidt operators the result states that the trace or determinant for K or K* is equal to the trace or determinant for A.
For symmetrizable operators, the identities for K* can be proved by taking H0 to be the kernel of K* and Hm the finite dimensional eigenspaces for the non-zero eigenvalues λm. Let PN be the orthogonal projection onto the direct sum of Hm with 0 ≤ m ≤ N. This subspace is left invariant by K*.
Although the sum is not orthogonal the restriction PNK*PN of K* is similar by a bounded operator with bounded inverse to the diagonal operator on the orthogonal direct sum with the same eigenvalues. Thus
Since PNK*PN tends to K* in Hilbert–Schmidt norm, the identities for K* follow by passing to the limit as N tends to infinity.
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Reid, William T. (1951), "Symmetrizable completely continuous linear transformations in Hilbert space", Duke Math. J., 18: 41–56, doi:10.1215/s0012-7094-51-01805-4
Zaanen, Adriaan Cornelis (1953), Linear analysis; Measure and integral, Banach and Hilbert space, linear integral equations, Interscience