Abstract

How ideas of -symmetric quantum mechanics can be applied to quantum graphs is analyzed, in particular to the star graph. The class of rotationally symmetric vertex conditions is analyzed. It is shown that all such conditions can effectively be described by circulant matrices: real in the case of odd number of edges and complex having particular block structure in the even case. Spectral properties of the corresponding operators are discussed.

1. Introduction

Writing this paper we got inspiration from two rapidly developing areas of modern mathematical physics: -symmetric quantum mechanics and quantum graphs. Both areas attract interest of both mathematicians and physicists for the last two decades with numerous conferences organized and articles published. The first area grew up from the simple observation that a quantum mechanical Hamiltonian “often” has real spectrum even if it possesses combined parity and time-reversal symmetry instead of self-adjointness [16]. Considering such operators increases the set of physical phenomena that could be modeled and raises up new interesting mathematical questions [710]. It appears that spectral theory of such -symmetric operators (see precise definition below) can be well-understood using framework of self-adjoint operators in Krein spaces [11].

The theory of quantum graphs—differential operators on metric graphs—can be used to model quantum or acoustic systems where motion is confined to a neighborhood of a set of (one-dimensional) intervals [1214]. Until now quantum graphs were mostly studied in the context of self-adjoint or dissipative operators. Our key idea is to look at differential operators on metric graphs under more general symmetry assumptions reminding those in -symmetric theory. Surprisingly spectral properties of operators on graphs with symmetries have not been paid much attention. We mention here just two papers [15, 16], where symmetries of graphs were used to construct counterexamples showing that inverse problems are not necessarily uniquely solvable.

In quantum graphs motion along the edges is described by ordinary differential equations, which are coupled together by certain vertex conditions connecting together values of the functions at the end points of the intervals building the underlined metric graph. The role of vertex conditions is twofold: to describe how the waves are penetrating through the vertices and to make the differential operator self-adjoint. If the requirement of self-adjointness is waved then such conditions should instead ensure that the resolvent set is not empty; that is, the resolvent for the corresponding differential operator exists for some . The later condition is not very precise and one of the goals of the current paper is to understand it in the case of the simplest merit graph with symmetries—the star graph. It can be considered as a building block to define differential operators on arbitrary metric graphs. To avoid discussing properties of the differential operator we limit our studies to the Laplace operator. Moreover the graph formed by semi-infinite edges is considered in order to avoid influence from the peripheral vertices. We just mention here that star graphs formed by finite edges but with standard conditions (see (2)) at the central vertex were considered recently in the framework of -symmetry [1719]. Our focus will be precisely on the vertex conditions at the central vertex. We are not interested in generalizing formalism of quantum graphs for the sake of generalization, but we look for new spectral phenomena that can be observed.

Current paper grew up from the Master Thesis of Maria Astudillo written in 2008 [20] and already attracted attention of mathematical physics community (see references in [21]). The current paper is just the first step to understand spectral structure of differential operators on graphs with nonstandard symmetries.

The paper is organized as follows: in the first two sections we introduce basic notations and discuss how to generalize the notion of -symmetry for the case of star graph. The main difficulty is that the notion of -symmetry may be generalized in two different ways and we decided to follow the definition giving new spectral structure (Section 3). We call corresponding operators -symmetric. All possible Robin conditions leading to -symmetric Laplacians are described in Section 4. It appears that the structure of matrices in the Robin condition depends on whether the number of edges is odd or even. In the first case the matrices are real circulant, while in the second case they may be complex but are block-circulant. Possibility to obtain non-self-adjoint operators with real eigenvalues is studied in the last section.

2. Notations and Elementary Properties

Our goal is to generalize ideas that originated from -symmetry for the case of the star graph. More precisely we will confine our studies to the case of the Laplace operator with the domain given by generalized Robin conditions at the central vertex. Consider the star graph formed by semi-infinite edges joined together at one central vertex. The corresponding Hilbert space can be identified with the space of vector valued functions on with the values in :

Definition 1. The operator is defined on the set of functions from the Sobolev space satisfying generalized Robin conditions:where is a certain matrix.

The operator can be seen as a certain point perturbation of the self-adjoint standard Laplace operator defined on the domain of functions from the same Sobolev space satisfying standard vertex conditions:In fact all such point perturbations are defined by vertex conditions of a more general form (8), but Theorem 2 implies that only conditions of form (1) are important for our goal.

The operator adjoint to is again the Laplace operator but is defined by vertex conditions (1) with the matrix substituted by the matrix that is the operator :This can be proven by integration by parts for , : where we used the fact that satisfies (1). This formula defines a bounded functional with respect to if and only if and .

It follows that the operator is self-adjoint if and only if is a Hermitian matrix . In this paper we are not interested in the case where is self-adjoint.

The spectrum of the operator may contain up to isolated eigenvalues. The corresponding eigenfunction is a solution to the differential equationsatisfying Robin conditions (1). Any square integrable solution to the differential equation is given bywith . This function satisfies Robin condition if and only ifThe last equation has at most distinct solutions (in the correct half-plane). Observe that not all solutions lead to eigenfunctions, since one needs to meet the condition .

As the theory of -symmetric operators indicates the most interesting case is when the spectrum of the operator is pure real, the operator itself is not self-adjoint. We are going to look closer at such operators. If the operator has real eigenvalues, then the matrix has negative eigenvalues, but it does not imply that it is Hermitian.

Note that possible vertex conditions are not limited to those described by (1). More generally one may consider the Laplace operator defined on the domain of functions from satisfying the following vertex conditions:where , are certain matrices, such that . Here we follow ideas from [22]. The following theorem shows that a Laplace operator described by the vertex conditions of the form (8) has real eigenvalues if either the vertex conditions are of the form (1) or the spectrum covers the whole complex plane.

Theorem 2. Consider the operator defined by vertex condition (8). If has real eigenvalues (counting multiplicities), then either is invertible or the spectrum of is the whole complex plane.

Proof. A function is an eigenfunction of if and only if it satisfies the differential equation (5), which has solution (6). Substituting in (8), we get that for a certain Conversely, if this holds for some with then is an eigenvalue of .
The last equation has nontrivial solution if and only ifLet us now consider two invertible matrices and . If (10) is satisfied then alsoLet us take and such thatLet us introduce the following function: . Because of (12), is a polynomial in of degree at most . If , then any with gives an eigenvalue and as a result the spectrum is the whole complex plane. Otherwise has at most zeros. Suppose now that each eigenvalue has multiplicity 1, then if , the operator will have less than eigenvalues. Therefore we must have the fact that is invertible. To complete the proof, the case of multiple eigenvalues has to be considered. Let us assume that is an eigenvalue of multiplicity . To see that must be invertible if has eigenvalues, it is enough to prove that has a zero of order at least at . To prove this, we consider the eigenfunctions . Here, all constant vectors , are linearly independent. Let us then choose vectors such that has determinant equal to 1. It then follows thathas a zero of order at least at .

Our method to obtain nontrivial operators with nonstandard symmetries is a certain generalization of the method of point interactions originally developed in the framework of self-adjoint Hamiltonians [23, 24]. The phenomenon described in Theorem 2 in connection with -symmetric point interaction was first observed in [25], following [26].

This theorem implies that the class of operators defined by Robin vertex conditions (1) is rather wide; therefore in what follows we focus our attention on this class only.

3. Pseudo-Hermitian and Pseudoreal Operators

Our studies are inspired by recent papers devoted to investigation of the so-called -symmetric operators in one dimension. An operator is called -symmetric if it satisfies the following relation:where is the spacial symmetry operator (parity symmetry),and is the antilinear operator of complex conjugation (time-reversal symmetry),-symmetry (like usual operator symmetry) is not enough to guarantee that the corresponding operator is physically relevant: it might happen that its spectrum is empty (take, e.g., the second derivative operator on the interval with both Dirichlet and Neumann conditions imposed on both end points of the interval). In conventional quantum theory the notion of a self-adjoint operator substitutes simple symmetry property (of course any self-adjoint operator is symmetric, but not the other way around). Therefore it appears natural to substitute relation (14) with the following one:where we use the fact that is unitary . In the case of conventional -symmetric theory the operator is not only unitary, but also self-adjoint . It follows that the operator satisfying (17) is pseudo-self-adjoint; that is, it is self-adjoint not in the original Hilbert space but in the Krein space with the sesquilinear form defined by as Gram operator: where denotes the standard scalar product in .

The goal of the current paper is to generalize -symmetry for the case of operators on metric graphs, more precisely for the star graph . Operator on such a star graph can be considered as a building block to define operators on arbitrary graphs. We are going to substitute the operator of spacial symmetry with the rotation operator defined as follows:We are not going to distinguish the rotation operators in and in the space of vector-valued functions hoping that this will not lead to any misunderstanding. Observe that the operator is unitary but not self-adjoint (of course provided ).

We would like to understand whether ideas from -symmetric theory may lead to an interesting new class of operators , which are not self-adjoint and not -symmetric with a suitably defined self-adjoint spacial symmetry operator . For example, if is even then such a spacial symmetry operator can be defined as Using we may introduce -symmetric operators on , but this would be just a vector version of conventional one-dimensional theory (see Lemma 4 below).

Formulas (14) and (17) suggest that we look closer at the following two possible generalizations of the notion of -symmetry:(i) pseudoreal operatorsand(ii) pseudo-Hermitian operatorsWe are going to reserve the term pseudo-self-adjoint for operators which are pseudo-Hermitian with respect to a self-adjoint operator as in (17).

Surprisingly pseudo-Hermitian operators do not define any new interesting class as follows from the two lemmas below.

Lemma 3. Let be an odd number; then the operator is -pseudo-Hermitian only if it is self-adjoint; that is, .

Proof. Iterating formula (22) one gets the following set of equations:Taking into account that is the identity operator we arrive at the following relation for any odd :proving our statement.

Lemma 4. Let be an even number.(i)If in addition is an odd number, then the operator is -pseudo-Hermitian only if it is pseudo-self-adjoint with respect to .(ii)If in addition is an even number, then the operator is -pseudo-Hermitian only if it commutes with the self-adjoint rotation and therefore is unitarily equivalent to an orthogonal sum of Laplace operators on with Robin conditions at the central vertices.

Proof. We just apply formula (23) to get In the first case the operator is pseudo-self-adjoint with respect to .
In the second case (, ) the operator commutes with the self-adjoint operator . Since is the identity operator, its spectrum is . The corresponding subspaces coincide with the sets of functions satisfying . Each of the eigensubspaces can be identified with the Hilbert space . Since commutes with it can be written as an orthogonal sum of two Laplace operators , each acting in simply because implies that . The operators are then defined by Robin conditions of form , where . Finally, the operators can be seen as Laplace operators on start graphs with edges with Robin conditions at the central vertices.

The operators appearing in the previous Lemma satisfy symmetry properties similar to (22), but with the “rotation” operators of lower size ( instead of ). If is the standard rotation operator in the space , the operator is a certain modified rotation operator: It might be interesting to understand the symmetry of in more detail, but we may conclude already now that in most cases the operator is pseudo-Hermitian only if it is also pseudo-self-adjoint (with respect to another symmetry operator). Therefore in what follows we focus on the studies of pseudo-real realisations of the Laplace operator on the star graph . Therefore we are going to use the following definition.

Definition 5. An operator in is called -symmetric if and only if it satisfies the following relation:where is the antilinear operator of complex conjugation.

This definition guarantees that the spectrum of the operator is symmetric with respect to the real axis. Really if is an eigenfunction corresponding to the eigenvalue , then is also an eigenfunction but corresponding to the eigenvalue , provided (27) holds:Hence with Definition 5 we always have spectrum which is symmetric with respect to the real axis as in the classical -symmetric theory.

4. -Symmetry of Point Interactions

In the current section we are going to describe the structure of -symmetric operators. It appears that the corresponding matrices belong to the class of circulant matrices which we describe now. A circulant matrix is a special case of a Toeplitz matrix.

Definition 6. An matrix is called circulant if the value of the entry depends only on the difference ; that is,

Definition 7. An matrix is called block circulant if , where , , are block matrices of the same size , .

The following theorem describes matrices leading to -symmetric operators on .

Theorem 8. Consider the operator determined by Definition 1.
If is odd, then the operator is -symmetric if and only if is a real circulant matrix; that is,If is even, then the operator is -symmetric if and only if is a complex block circulant matrix formed by the following blocks:

Proof. Let us consider the operators as defined in Definition 1. Suppose that the function and therefore satisfies the boundary condition (1). The boundary condition for the function is given byThis condition should be identical with (1) leading towhere we used the fact that the rotation matrix has real entries.
Let us denote the entries of the matrix by ; then the last equality impliesThe structure of the matrix is as follows: every next row in the matrix is equal to the previous one shifted to the right one step and conjugated. It is clear then that is determined by complex numbers, for example, those building the first row. If there would be no complex conjugation or the entries would be real, then would be circulant.
Now, we consider the cases when is odd and even separately.
Is Odd. We get the following chain of equalities:implying thatThereforeand we see that the matrix is a real circulant matrix. It is determined by real parameters: Is Even. We again consider (34) to obtain the following:We do not obtain any restriction on and hence the entries of the first row can be chosen arbitrarily among complex numbers. But we still have the following property, which reminds us of circulant matrices:provided and , .
Let us denote the first row in by , ; then each row of the matrix is the conjugation of the previous row shifted to the right; that is,as claimed. We see that is a block circulant matrix. The blocks forming are not chosen arbitrarily but depend on complex parameters.

5. On the Spectrum of the -Symmetric Operators

We can now look at the discrete spectra of the constructed -symmetric operators on the star graph . We have already observed that, as in the case of all -symmetric operators, the nonreal eigenvalues of a -symmetric operator always appear in conjugate pairs (28). That is, if is an eigenvalue of a -symmetric operator , then is also an eigenvalue of the operator . We noted that the operator may have at most distinct eigenvalues (counting multiplicities). The most interesting case is when the spectrum of the operator is real; also the operator itself is not self-adjoint.

The eigenvalues of are given by solutions of (7) with . Negative eigenvalues correspond to on the upper part of the imaginary axis. In what follows we study the case where the operator has precisely (negative) real eigenvalues. Since the structures of the matrices are different in the cases when the number of edges is even or odd, these cases will be studied separately.

5.1. An Odd Number of Edges

Before we study the discrete spectrum of the operator , we recall some known results about the eigenvalues of a circulant matrix which can be nicely calculated as follows [27].

Proposition 9. Let be a circulant matrix; then its eigenvalues are given by

Proof. The key idea is to write arbitrary circulant matrix as a sum of powers of the rotation matrix . The rotation matrix can be seen as an elementary circulant matrix: We have, similarly, Hence any circulant possesses the representationThe eigenvalues of the rotation matrix are , , with the eigenvectorsIt follows that (42) holds.

Theorem 10. Assume that is odd; then any -symmetric operator on the star-graph has real eigenvalues only if it is self-adjoint.

Proof. First, we note that is an eigenvalue of if and only if is an eigenvalue of the matrix . If is odd, then in accordance with Theorem 8   is a circulant matrix with real entries. Then its eigenvalues are nothing else other than a discrete Fourier transform of :It follows that , indeedwhere we used that are all real. Taking into account that is circulant we conclude that it is Hermitian; hence the operator is self-adjoint.

Of course, if the number of real eigenvalues is less than the operator does not need to be self-adjoint. The proof of the later theorem may give an impression that whether the size of is even or odd does not play any essential role. The next subsection shows that the difference is tremendous.

5.2. An Even Number of Edges

We recall from Theorem 8 that in case the star graph has even number of edges the operator is -symmetric if and only if , where , and

A vector is an eigenvector of with eigenvalue if and only ifFollowing the ideas in [28], we will look for eigenvectors of of the following form (this is a natural suggestion given the structure of the eigenvectors for the case when is odd):where is a nonzero two-dimensional vector and is a fixed th root of the unity; that is,One may prove that all eigenvectors of are of this form, since is commuting with .

Extending (50) with , as explained above, the following set of equations is obtained:Dividing the th equation by , , it reduces to the first one. Hence we have just one equation. Let us now rewrite it as an eigenvector equation:where the square matrix is

Each eigenvector of will generate an eigenvector of with the same eigenvalue. If for every the matrix has two negative eigenvalues, then the matrix has precisely negative eigenvalues and so the operator .

The following theorem is a counterpart of Theorem 10 for the case when is even.

Theorem 11. Let the number of edges of the star-graph be even. Then among -symmetric operators (given by Definition 1) there are some with real eigenvalues that are not self-adjoint.

Proof. To prove the theorem it is enough to present an example of such a matrix for arbitrary even . It is enough to find such that all have two negative eigenvalues. As by Theorem 8 if is even then is -symmetric if and only if is block circulant. Consider such block circulant matrix given byEquivalently the matrix can be presented asUsing entries in (56) the corresponding matrices , which appeared first in (55), are given byHere we just used the fact thatEach of the matrices given by (58) has two negative eigenvalues implying that the corresponding as well as has negative eigenvalues.

The theorem implies that the class of -symmetric operators is much richer in the case of even .

6. Conclusions

The main result of this paper is the description of all -symmetric Laplace operators on a star graph with the most general coupling condition at the central vertex. Essentially the same result holds if the edges forming the graph are compact and Dirichlet, Neumann, or any other identical Hermitian conditions are introduced at the remote vertices. It might be interesting to extend our studies assuming different (not necessarily Hermitian) conditions at the remote vertices.

Our results on the discrete spectrum can be extended in two ways:(i)describing in the case is even the whole family of -symmetric operators leading to real eigenvalues (not only providing a counterexample as is done here);(ii)studying the case of compact star graphs (defined as above).

The current paper opens a new direction in the studies of quantum graphs, namely, investigation of differential operators on metric graphs possessing generalised symmetries, not necessarily self-adjoint ones.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank A. Holst for fruitful discussions and improvements of several statements. The authors would also like to thank the anonymous referee for a detailed report leading to an improvement of the paper. The work of Pavel Kurasov was partially supported by the Swedish Research Council (Grant D0497301) and ZiF-Zentrum für Interdisziplinäre Forschung, Bielefeld (Cooperation Group Discrete and continuous models in the theory of networks).