I Adding types of angular momenta

Jezza
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There are two types of angular momentum: orbital and spin. If we define their operators as pseudo-vectors \vec{L} and \vec{S}, then we can also define the total angular momentum operator \vec{J} = \vec{L}+\vec{S}.

Standard commutation relations will show that we can have simultaneous well defined values for J^2 and J_z and etc. for \vec{L} & \vec{S}. i.e. We can have well defined total angular momentum and one component of it (usually z) for each type. The eigenvalues of these operators are then \hbar^2 j(j+1) and \hbar m_j respectively when we consider a simultaneous eigenstate |j,m_j> of J^2 and J_z only, and etc. for l and s

My question is really about how these different types combine.

Using these standard commutation relations:
<br /> [J_i, J_j] = i \sum_k \epsilon_{ijk} J_k \hspace{10mm} [J_i, L_j] = i \sum_k \epsilon_{ijk} L_k \hspace{10mm} [J_i, S_j] = i \sum_k \epsilon_{ijk} S_k <br />
It's very easy to show that we can have a simultaneous eigenstate |m_j,m_l,m_s&gt; of J_z, L_z, S_z respectively, and thus the relation between the eigenvalues is
m_j=m_l+m_s
We also have the commutation relations:
<br /> [J^2, L^2] = 0 \hspace{10mm} [J^2, S^2] = 0 \hspace{10mm} [L^2, S^2] = 0<br />
So we can have a simultaneous eigenstate |jls&gt; of J^2, L^2, S^2. My question is then what is the relationship between j, l and s? So far as I can see, it is not straightforwards because:
<br /> J^2 = L^2+S^2+2\vec{L}\cdot\vec{S} = L^2+S^2+2\sum_iL_iS_i \\<br /> j(j+1) = l(l+1) + s(s+1) + \frac{2}{\hbar^2} \sum_i &lt;jls|L_iS_i|jls&gt;<br />

Which presents a problem, since [L_i, J^2], [S_i,J^2] \neq 0 so the state |jls&gt; cannot be an eigenstate of any of S_i, L_i and so the relationship between the 3 numbers is not well defined.How can we have a state in which j,l,s are well defined and yet their relationship is not well defined?
 
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Jezza said:
It's very easy to show that we can have a simultaneous eigenstate |mj,ml,ms>|m_j,m_l,m_s> of Jz,Lz,SzJ_z, L_z, S_z respectively,
Depends on the Hamiltonian, if it doesn't contain a coupling term between orbital and spin angular momenta then yes you can form a simultaneous eigenstates of ##J_z##, ##L_z##, and ##S_z##.
Jezza said:
My question is then what is the relationship between j,lj, l and ss?
It is a well-known relationship that if ##\vec J= \vec L + \vec S## then ##j = |l+s|, |l+s|-1, \ldots, |l-s|+1, |l-s|##. There is a way to prove it unfortunately I forgot it already now.
 
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Jezza said:
the state ##|jls>## cannot be an eigenstate of any of ##S_i, L_i## and so the relationship between the 3 numbers is not well defined

I don't see how that follows. The bracket ##<jls|L_i S_i|jls>## is well-defined for any state, whether it's an eigenstate or not.
 
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In non-relativistic QT, where spin and orbital angular momentum are well-defined observables you have the commutation relations
$$[S_i,S_j]=\mathrm{i} \epsilon_{ijk} S_k, \quad [L_i,L_j]=\mathrm{i} \epsilon_{ijk} L_k, \quad [S_i,L_j]=0$$
from which you also find
$$[\vec{L}^2,L_j]=[\vec{S}^2,S_j]=[\vec{S}^2,L_j]=[\vec{L}^2,S_j]=0.$$
So you can define common eigenvectors of ##\vec{L}^2##, ##\vec{S}^2##, ##L_3##, and ##S_3##.

Of course you can also define common eigenvectors of ##\vec{J}^2##, ##\vec{L}^2##, ##\vec{S}^2##, and ##J_3## and express everything in the one or the other basis. The corresponding coefficients are known as Clebsch-Gordan coefficients,
$$C_{L,S,m,\sigma}^{L,S,J,M}=\langle L,s,m,\sigma|L,S,J,M \rangle.$$
As stated in #2 for given ##L## and ##S##, the coefficients are different from zero only for
$$J \in \{|L-S|,|L-S|+1,\ldots,L+S \}, \quad M=m+\sigma.$$

If you want in addition that you have also an eigenstate of the Hamiltonian, ##H##, it of course depends on the Hamiltonian, which angular-momentum parts are commuting with it. For a closed system ##H## must commute with ##\vec{J}## (the total angular momentum), because of rotational symmetry of Galileo space-time, i.e., the total angular momentum is conserved (Noether's theorem for rotations). In general systems neither ##\vec{L}## nor ##\vec{S}## are conserved for themselves but only ##\vec{J}=\vec{L}+\vec{S}##.
 
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PeterDonis said:
I don't see how that follows. The bracket ##<jls|L_i S_i|jls>## is well-defined for any state, whether it's an eigenstate or not.

I suppose what I meant by this is one cannot deduce it's value merely from its being in an eigenstate of J^2, L^2, S^2. Is that fair to say?

But thank you everyone I think this makes a lot more sense now. I think, then, the short answer is |l-s| \leq j \leq l+s.
 
Jezza said:
But thank you everyone I think this makes a lot more sense now. I think, then, the short answer is |L−S|≤J≤L+S|L−S|≤J≤L+S|L-S| \leq J \leq L+S.
Just be careful the the allowed values of ##J## within that interval hop by one unit, not continuous.
 
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vanhees71 said:
Of course you can also define common eigenvectors of \vec{J}^2, \vec{L}^2, \vec{S}^2, and J_3 and express everything in the one or the other basis. The corresponding coefficients are known as Clebsch-Gordan coefficients,
<div style="text-align: center">C^{L,S,J,M}_{L,S,m,\sigma}=⟨L,s,m,\sigma|L,S,J,M⟩.&#8203;</div>

I've never understood Clebsch-Gordan coefficients, but I've never thought of them as simply the coefficients in a basis transformation, so thanks for this. I'll go away and read about them again and hopefully they'll make much more sense to me!
 
It's not an easy topic. It takes some time to understand how to evaluate the CG coefficients. I pretty clear explanation is given in

J. J. Sakurai et al, Modern Quantum Mechanics
 
Thanks for the recommendation, our library has it so I'll go and have a look.
 
  • #10
The book does indeed have a very clear explanation. Thank you very much :)
 
  • #11
Jezza said:
I suppose what I meant by this is one cannot deduce it's value merely from its being in an eigenstate of ##J^2, L^2, S^2##. Is that fair to say?

No. The term ##\Sigma_i <jls|L_i S_i|jls>## is just the expectation value of the operator ##\vec{L} \cdot \vec{S}## for the state ##|jls>##. You can always compute an expectation value of an operator for any state.
 
  • #12
[...] You can always compute an expectation value of an operator for any state.
The last part is not true, for there are states (vectors as pure state representatives) which don't belong to the maximal domain of an operator, hence the expectation value is undefined. Which leads me to the question: what does ##|jls\rangle## stand for?
 
  • #13
dextercioby said:
there are states (vectors as pure state representatives) which don't belong to the maximal domain of an operator

Can you give an example?

dextercioby said:
what does ##|jls\rangle## stand for?

As I understand it from the OP, it's a state which is a simultaneous eigenstate of ##J^2##, ##L^2##, and ##S^2##.
 
  • #14
For a Galilean particle moving freely in R from -infinity to +infinity, the maximal domain for the coordinate x is

## D_x = \{\psi (x) \in \mathbb{L^2 (R)} | \int_R x^2 \psi^2 (x) {} dx < \infty \} ##

For ##\phi \in \mathbb{L^2 (R)} \setminus D_x##, ##x\phi ## is undefined, hence the expectation value as well.
 
  • #15
PeterDonis said:
[...]
As I understand it from the OP, it's a state which is a simultaneous eigenstate of ##J^2##, ##L^2##, and ##S^2##.

Perhaps, I am not seeing it, but if L and S "live" in separate Hilbert spaces, how do their squares share eigenstates? If one then switches to the tensor product space, how's ##|jls\rangle ## defined in a tensor product space of two spaces?
 
  • #16
dextercioby said:
if L and S "live" in separate Hilbert spaces, how do their squares share eigenstates? If one then switches to the tensor product space, how's ##|jls\rangle## defined in a tensor product space of two spaces?

Can you pose this question in the context of post #4? That post by @vanhees71 looks to me to be the best presentation in the thread of the applicable underlying theory.
 
  • #17
Well, in post# 4, there is no supposition about the underlying Hilbert space(s), but if L is orbital angular momentum ("living" in L^2 (R^3)), and S is spin angular momentum ("living" in C^{k}, k in N), then, it's clear that their sum is ill-defined, unless one uses tensor products of spaces.
 
  • #18
dextercioby said:
Well, in post# 4, there is no supposition about the underlying Hilbert space(s), but if L is orbital angular momentum ("living" in L^2 (R^3)), and S is spin angular momentum ("living" in C^{k}, k in N), then, it's clear that their sum is ill-defined, unless one uses tensor products of spaces.
Yes, the two operators are actually defined in a tensor product space. When both spin and orbital angular momenta are considered, physicists like to use ##L^2## and ##S^2## as shorthand notations for ##L^2 \otimes I_S## and ##I_L \otimes S^2## respectively, where ##I_L## and ##I_S## are identity operators in orbital and spin space. The same also applies to the components of ##\vec L## and ##\vec S##. The notation ##|jls\rangle ## is actually not a complete specification of the states, usually one more is required which is ##m_j##.
 
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  • #19
Of course in non-relativistic physics, where there is a unique split of total angular momentum into orbital and spin angular momentum and all spin components commute with all orbitarl-angular-momentum components the Hilbert space representing ##\vec{L}## and ##\vec{S}## is the tensor product ##\mathcal{H}_L \otimes \mathcal{H}_S##. The common eigenvectors of ##\vec{L}^2##, ##L_z##, ##\vec{S}^2##, and ##S_z## are given by the product basis
$$|l,m,s,\sigma \rangle=|l,m \rangle \otimes |s,\sigma \rangle.$$
 
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