I had not seen this, I'll check it out now!
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Replying to @3blue1brown
It's a really fun exercise in realizing how many ways there are to think about a mathematical object!
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Replying to @michael_nielsen @3blue1brown
A beautiful little result about exponentiation that should be much better known is this result of Thompson's; it says exponentiation of Hermitian matrices almost commutes.pic.twitter.com/LotR9av0cf
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Rather than framing this as something which should be better known, might it be better to say the spectral theorem and its implications should be deeper in peoples bones?
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Replying to @3blue1brown
Ofc I love the spectral theorem - it's coincidentally the result I've proven most often in public writing - but this result of Thompson's is very different (and seems to be much harder).
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Hmm, okay, I'm clearly taking too quick a glace then. Just to check myself, am I right in thinking U and V are the change of basis matrices which diagonalize H and K? So e^(iUHU*) will be diagonal with e^{i lambda} entries on the diagonal?
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Replying to @3blue1brown @michael_nielsen
Hmm, I guess not, actually. If that were the case, UHU* + VKV* would be diagonal, with eigenvalues lambda_i + mu_i, if lambda_i are the eigenvalues of H and mu_i are the eigenvalues of K. So the rhs above should be diagonal with e^{i(lambda_i + mu_i)} entries on the diagonal.
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Replying to @3blue1brown
That's right. When H and K don't share a common basis there's no obvious reason to expect there to be any relationship between the spectrum of exp(iH) exp(iK) and H and K. Thompson tells you there's a really strong relationship.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Interesting. Is there a short answer to what U and V are in this case?
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Replying to @3blue1brown
Not as far as I know. In fact, I'm not even certain there's a constructive proof known - unless the situation has changed, Thompson's result depends on the proof of Horn's Conjecture by Allen Knutson, Terry Tao, and Alexander Klyachko, and I've never mastered that.
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Horn's conjecture is a set of inequalities characterizing the relationship between the spectra of Hermitian matrices H, K and their sum H+K. There's a lovely survey by Knutson and Tao here: https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0009048 … I believe Thompson's theorem can be proved rather more simply.
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