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Angular Momentum
Angular Momentum
In quantum mechanics,
mechanics, angular momentum is a vector operator of which the three components have well-defined commutation
relations.. This operator is the quantum analogue of the classical angular momentum vector.
relations
Angular momentum entered quantum mechanics in one of the very first—and most important—papers on the "new" quantum
mechanics, the Dreimännerarbeit (three men's work) of Born, Heisenberg and Jordan (1926).[1] In this paper the orbital angular
momentum and its eigenstates are already fully covered by the algebraic techniques of commutation relations and step up/down
operators that will be treated in the present article. In 1927, Wolfgang Pauli introduced spin angular momentum,[2] which is a
form of angular momentum without a classical counterpart.
Angular momentum theory—together with its connection to group theory— brought order to a bewildering number of
spectroscopic observations in atomic spectroscopy, see, for instance, Wigner's seminal work.[3] When in 1926 electron spin was
discovered and Pauli proved less than a year later that spin was a form of angular momentum, its importance rose even further. To
date the theory of angular momentum is of great importance in quantum mechanics
mechanics. It is an indispensable discipline for the
working physicist, irrespective of his field of specialization, be it solid state physics, molecular-, atomic,- nuclear,- or even
hadronic-structure physics.[4]
Contents
1 Qualitative description
2 Orbital angular momentum
3 Spin angular momentum
4 Abstract angular momentum operators
5 Angular momentum states
5.1 Proof of properties of eigenstates
6 References
7 See also
Qualitative description
In classical mechanics the angular momentum of a body is a vector
that can have any length and any direction. Think of a spinning
bicycle wheel. The length of its angular momentum is proportional to
its angular velocity (number of revolutions per unit time) and the
direction of its angular momentum is along its axle. The angular
velocity of the wheel and the direction of the axle are both
continuously changeable—in arbitrarily small steps. In quantum
theory this is different.
and no other values. Hence the endpoint of the angular momentum j (the blue arrow in the figure) lies on the surface of a sphere
of radius . In the second place, its projection on an axis in space (the quantization axis, usually taken as the z-axis) is
quantized, it can only take the values
where j is the quantum number that determines the length of j. The endpoint of the blue arrow does not cover the full surface of
the sphere, but can only lie on the intersection of the sphere and certain quantized cones, because the projection m of j on the z-
axis is quantized. The discrete quantum number m is integral or half-integral, depending on whether j is integral or half-integral.
The position of the blue arrow on the surface of a cone characterized by certain j and m is completely undetermined, it is equally
probable everywhere. This is an illustration of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle.
where r is the position and p the (linear) momentum of the point mass.
The simplest and oldest example of an angular momentum
operator is obtained by applying the quantization rule:
where is Planck's constant (divided by 2π) and ∇ is the gradient operator. This rule applied to the classical angular momentum
vector gives a vector operator with the following three components,
The square brackets indicate the commutator of two operators, defined for two arbitrary operators A and B as
For instance,
mutually cancel. Since the three components of L do not commute, they do not have a common set of eigenfunctions.
Note, parenthetically, that eigenfunctions of L2 have been known since the nineteenth century, long before quantum mechanics
was born. They are spherical harmonic functions.
Indeed, in terms of spherical polar coordinates the operator is,
These Hermitian matrices represent Hermitian operators on a two-dimensional linear space over the field of complex numbers:
spin space. Spin angular momentum operators
are defined by
The commutation relations of these operators follow by matrix multiplication, for instance,
which may be compared with the commutation relations of the orbital angular momenta given earlier.
We also define raising j+ and lowering j− operators (also known as step up/down operators),
It can be shown from the above definitions that j2 commutes with jx, jy, and jz
with
From these properties alone the eigenstates can be constructed. The steps in the construction are:
Since a Hermitian operator squared has only real, nonnegative, expectation values, , and since an
eigenvalue is a special kind of expectation value—namely one with respect to an eigenvector—it follows that j2 has only
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non-negative real eigenvalues. Therefore we write its eigenvalue as the squared number a2.
and
Hence the step up operator yields an eigenvector of j2 with the same eigenvalue and an eigenvector of jz with eigenvalue
b + 1, so that
The left hand side is nonnegative, while k is unlimited. Thus, if we let k increase, there comes a point that the norm on the
left hand side would have to be negative or zero, while the norm on the right hand side would still be positive. A negative
norm is in contradiction with the fact that the ket belongs to a Hilbert space. Since no power of the step up operator maps a
ket outside Hilbert space, there must exist a maximum value kmax of the integer k, such that the ket , while
exactly . For that value of k it follows that a2 = (b + kmax)(b + kmax + 1).
Similarly l + 1 times application of j− gives a zero ket with and a2 = (b − lmax)(b − lmax − 1).
From the fact that a2 = (b + kmax)(b + kmax + 1) = ( b − lmax)( b − lmax − 1) follows by solving the equation: 2b = lmax −
kmax, so that b is integral or half-integral. The quantum number b + k is traditionally designated by m. Also m is either
integral or half-integal. The maximum value of m for which the ket will be designated by j = b + kmax. The number
j is integral when m is integral and half-integral when m is half integral. Note that a2 = j (j + 1).
Change now the notation, and assume that the normalization factor N is chosen such that |j, m> is normalized to unity,
The requirement that all kets involved are normalized, while fixing phases, gives the formula to be proved. The
normalization is simple:
References
1. ↑ M. Born, W. Heisenberg, and P. Jordan, Zur Quantenmechanik II, Zeitschrift f. Physik. vol. 35, pp. 557-615 (1926)
2. ↑ W. Pauli jr., Zur Quantenmechanik des magnetischen Elektrons, Zeitschrift f. Physik. vol. 43, pp. 601-623 (1927)
3. ↑ E. P. Wigner, Gruppentheorie und ihre Anwendungen auf die Quantenmechanik der Atomspektren, Vieweg Verlag,
Braunschweig (1931). Translated into English: J. J. Griffin, Group Theory and its Application to the Quantum Mechanics of
Atomic Spectra Academic Press, New York (1959).
4. ↑ L. C. Biedenharn, J. D. Louck, Angular Momentum in Quantum Physics, Addison-Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts
(1981)
See also
Angular momentum coupling
Russell-Saunders coupling
Clebsch-Gordan coefficients