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In functional analysis, the multiple operator integral is a multilinear map informally written as
an expression which can be made precise in several different ways.
Multiple operator integrals are of use in various situations where functional calculus appears alongside noncommuting operators (e.g., matrices), for instance in perturbation theory, harmonic analysis, index theory, noncommutative geometry, and operator theory in general. As noncommuting operators, functional calculus, and perturbation theory are central to quantum theory, multiple operator integrals are also frequently applied there. Closely related concepts are Schur multiplication and the Feynman operational calculus. Multiple operator integrals were introduced by Peller as multilinear generalizations of double operator integrals, developed by Daletski, Krein, Birman, and Solomyak.
A conceptually clean definition of the multiple operator integral is given as follows (it is a special case of both [1] and [2]). Let , let be a separable Hilbert space, and denote the space of bounded operators by . Let be possibly unbounded self-adjoint operators in .
For any function (called the symbol) which admits a decomposition
for a certain finite measure space and bounded measurable functions , the multiple operator integral is the -multilinear operator
defined by
for all . One can show that the integrand is Bochner integrable, and (using Banach-Steinhaus) that is a bounded multilinear map. Moreover, only depends on and through , as the notation suggests.
One may similarly define on the product of Schatten classes and end up with a mapping
where . The restriction of the domain allows the multiple operator integral to be defined for a larger class of symbols .
Because one can (and often needs to) trade of assumptions on , , and , there are several definitions of the multiple operator integral which are not generalizations of one another, but typically agree in the cases where both are defined.
The multiple operator integral can be defined on the product of noncommutative L^p-spaces as
for a von Neumann algebra admitting a semifinite trace . One then additionally assumes that are affiliated to .
The most often used symbol of a multiple operator integral is the divided difference of an times continuously differentiable function , defined recursively as
In particular, , and
The multiple operator integral is known to exist in the case that in a suitable Besov space, for example, when , and the multiple operator integral for H\"older conjugate (as above), is known to exist when with bounded.
The double operator integral has the following properties:
Using the fact that the multiple operator integral of zero order is simply functional calculus:
one recognizes that 1. and 2. are identities relating multiple operator integrals of 0 order (single operator integrals) to multiple operator integrals of 1st order (double operator integrals). The properties 1. and 2. can be generalized as follows
In combination with the operator trace (or any other tracial function) the multiple operator integral satisfies the following cyclicity property:
Under suitable conditions, the above identities follow from elementary properties of the divided difference, combined with the fact that is independent of the integral representation of .