So I'm currently reading chapter 5 of Wald's book on QFT in curved spacetime and I'm terribly confused with the notation in the last steps of his Unruh effect derivation.
Context:
In eq. 5.1.26, he expresses a two particle state as (using index notation): $$ \varepsilon^{ab} = \prod_i\exp(-\pi\omega_i/a)2(\psi_{iI})^{(a}(\psi_{iII})^{b)}, $$ where $\{\psi_{iI}\}$ and $\{\psi_{iII}\}$ are orthonormal basis for the one-particle-Hilbert spaces,$\mathcal{H}_I$ and $\mathcal{H}_{II}$, obtained from the quantization in the right and left Rindler wedges, respectively. This two particle state comes from a discussion in section 4.4 in which he computes the action of a unitary transformation $U:\mathcal{F}(\mathcal{H}_1)\rightarrow\mathcal{F}(\mathcal{H}_2)$ (more precisely, a Bogoliubov transformation) on the vacuum state of $\mathcal{F}(\mathcal{H}_1)$ (the symmetric Fock space of $\mathcal{H}_1$). Assuming $|0\rangle_1$ is the vacuum state of $\mathcal{F}(\mathcal{H}_1$), he gets (eq 4.4.23) $$ U|0\rangle_1=(1,0,\varepsilon^{ab}/\sqrt{2},0,\varepsilon^{(ab}\varepsilon^{cd)}\sqrt{3/8},...), $$ In his Unruh effect derivation,$\mathcal{H}_2=\mathcal{H}_I\otimes\mathcal{H}_{II}$ and $\mathcal{H}_1$ is the one-particle-Hilbert space obtained from quantization in Minkowski space.
Short question: Why $\varepsilon^{ab}$ has that form written above? How would it look like in Dirac notation?
Elaboration: Since $\varepsilon^{ab}$ can be seen as a map from $\bar{\mathcal{H_2}}\times\bar{\mathcal{H_2}}$ to $\mathbb{C}$, it is an element of $\mathcal{H_2} \otimes \mathcal{H_2}$ and I thought that it should be written as a linear combination of those bases mentioned above (like with a Schauder basis). Instead, there is a product symbol of which I don't know from where it came. I'm not even sure if the product symbol implies tensor product or something else.
I really appreciate if anyone can explain these things and hope my question is clearly put.