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Q-Gaussian process

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q-Gaussian distributions are deformations of the usual Gaussian distribution. There are several different versions of this; here we treat a multivariate deformation, also addressed as q-Gaussian process, arising from free probability theory and corresponding to deformations of the canonical commutation relations. For other deformations of Gaussian distributions, see Q-Gaussian_distribution and Gaussian_q-distribution.

History

The q-Gaussian process was formally introduced in a paper by Frisch and Bourret [1] under the name of parastochastics, and also later by Greenberg [2] as an example of infinite statistics. It was mathematically established and investigated in papers by Bozejko and Speicher [3] and by Bozejko, Kümmerer, and Speicher [4] in the context of non-commutative probability.

It is given as the distribution of sums of creation and annihilation operators in a q-deformed Fock space. The calculation of moments of those operators is given by a q-deformed version of a Wick formula or Isserlis formula. The specification of a special covariance in the underlying Hilbert space leads to the q-Brownian motion [4], a special non-commutative version of classical Brownian motion.

q-Fock space

In the following is fixed. Consider a Hilbert space . On the algebraic full Fock space

where with a norm one vector , called vacuum, we define a q-deformed inner product as follows:

where is the number of inversions of .

The q-Fock space [5] is then defined as the completion of the algebraic full Fock space with respect to this inner product

For the q-inner product is strictly positive [3] [6]. For and it is positive, but has a kernel, which leads in these cases to the symmetric and anti-symmetric Fock spaces, respectively.

For we define the q-creation operator , given by

Its adjoint (with respect to the q-inner product), the q-annihilation operator , is given by

q-commutation relations

Those operators satisfy the q-commutation relations [7]

For , , and this reduces to the CCR-relations, the Cuntz relations, and the CAR-relations, respectively. With the exception of the case the operators are bounded.

q-Gaussian elements and definition of multivariate q-Gaussian distribution (q-Gaussian process)

Operators of the form for are called q-Gaussian [5] (or q-semicircular [8]) elements.

On we consider the vacuum expectation state , for .

The (multivariate) q-Gaussian distribution or q-Gaussian process [4] [9] is defined as the non commutative distribution of a collection of q-Gaussians with respect to the vacuum expectation state. For the joint distribution of with respect to can be described in the following way[1] [3], : for any we have

where denotes the number of crossings of the pair-partition . This is a q-deformed version of the Wick/Isserlis formula.

q-Gaussian distribution in the one-dimensional case

For p=1, the q-Gaussian distribution is a probability measure on the interval , with analytic formulas for its density [10]. For the special cases , , and , this reduces to the classical Gaussian distribution, the Wigner semicircle distribution, and the symmetric Bernoulli distribution on . The determination of the density follows from old results [11] on corresponding orthogonal polynomials.

Operator algebraic questions

The von Neumann algebra generated by , for running through an orthonormal system of vectors in , reduces for to the famous free group factors . Understanding the structure of those von Neumann algebras for general q has been a source of many investigations [12]. It is now known, by work of Guionnet and Shlyakhtenko [13], that at least for finite I and for small values of q, the von Neumann algebra is isomorphic to the corresponding free group factor.

References

  1. ^ a b Frisch, U. and Bourret, R. "Parastochastics." J. Math. Phys. 11, 364–390 (1970), https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1665149
  2. ^ Greenberg, O. W. "Example of infinite statistics." Physical Review Letters 64.7 (1990): 705, https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.64.705
  3. ^ a b c Bożejko, M. and Speicher, R. "An example of a generalized Brownian motion." Commun.Math. Phys. (1991) 137: 519. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02100275
  4. ^ a b c Bożejko, M., Kümmerer, B. and Speicher, R. "q-Gaussian Processes: Non-commutative and Classical Aspects." Comm Math Phys (1997) 185: 129. https://doi.org/10.1007/s002200050084
  5. ^ a b Effros, E. and Popa, M. "Feynman diagrams and Wick products associated with q-Fock space." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100.15 (2003): 8629-8633, https://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/100/15/8629
  6. ^ Zagier, D. "Realizability of a model in infinite statistics." Communications in mathematical physics 147.1 (1992): 199-210, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02099535
  7. ^ Kennedy, M. and Nica, A. "Exactness of the Fock Space Representation of the q-Commutation Relations." Commun. Math. Phys. (2011) 308: 115. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00220-011-1323-9
  8. ^ Josuat-Vergès, M. "Cumulants of the q-semicircular Law, Tutte Polynomials, and Heaps." Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 65(4) (2013), 863-878, https://doi.org/10.4153/CJM-2012-042-9
  9. ^ Bryc W. and Wang Y. "The local structure of q-Gaussian processes." Probab. Math. Stat. 36 (2016) pp. 335-352, https://www.math.uni.wroc.pl/~pms/files/36.2/Article/36.2.9.pdf
  10. ^ Leeuwen, H. and Maassen, H. "A q deformation of the Gauss distribution."Journal of Mathematical Physics 36, 4743 (1995); https://doi.org/10.1063/1.530917
  11. ^ Szego, G. "Ein Beitrag zur Theorie der Thetafunktionen." Sitz. Preuss. Akad. Wiss. Phys. Math. Ll 19, 242–252 (1926)
  12. ^ Wasilewski M. "Simple proof of the complete metric approximation property for q-Gaussian algebras.", https://arxiv.org/abs/1907.00730
  13. ^ Guionnet, A. and Shlyakhtenko D. "Free monotone transport." Inventiones mathematicae 197.3 (2014): 613-661, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00222-013-0493-9