As mentioned in the previous article, a vector space is a set of objects that follows certain rules of addition and multiplication. This implies that a set of functions that follows the same rules, forms a vector space of functions. The properties of a vector space of functions are:
1) Commutative and associative addition for all functions of the closed set .
2) Associativity and distributivity of scalar multiplication for all functions of the closed set.
where and are scalars.
3) Scalar multiplication identity.
4) Additive inverse.
5) Existence of null vector , such that
where in this case is a zero function that returns zero for any inputs.
Similarly, a set of linearly independent functions forms a set of basis functions. We have a complete set of basis functions if any well-behaved function in the domain can be written as a linear combination of these basis functions, i.e.
In quantum chemistry, physical states of a system are expressed as functions called wavefunctions.