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7. Angular Momentum

7. Angular Momentum. 7A. Angular Momentum Commutation. Why it doesn’t commute. The order in which you rotate things makes a difference,  1  2   2  1 We can use this to work out commutation relations for the L ’s It can be done more easily directly Recall: Also recall:

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7. Angular Momentum

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  1. 7. Angular Momentum 7A. Angular Momentum Commutation Why it doesn’t commute • The order in which you rotate things makes a difference, 12 21 • We can use this to work out commutation relations for the L’s • It can be done more easily directly • Recall: • Also recall: • We will calculate the following to second order in : • If rotations commuted, both sides would be the identity relation

  2. Calculating the Left Side • To second order in : • Second half is same thing with  –

  3. Calculating the Right Side • To second order in : • Second half is same thing with  –

  4. Matching the Two Sides • To second order in : • Now match the two sides:

  5. Levi-Civita Symbol • Generalizing, we have • Define the Levi-Civita symbol • Then we write: • We will call any three Hermitian operators Jthat work this way generalized angular momentum

  6. 7B. Generalized Angular Momentum J2 and the raising/lowering operators • What can we conclude just from the commutation relations? • If J commutes with the Hamiltonian, than we cansimultaneously diagonalize H and one component of J • Normally pick Jz • Define some new operators: • Reverse these if we want: • These satisfy the following properties • Proof by homework problem

  7. Eigenstates • Since J2 commutes with Jz, we can diagonalize them simultaneously • We will (arbitrarily for now) choose an odd way to write the eigenvalues • Note that j and m are dimensionless • Note that J2 has positive eigenvalues • We can choose j to be non-negative • We can let J act on any state |j,m to produce a new state J |j,m: • This new state must be proportional to:

  8. Eigenstates (2) • To find proportionality, consider • This expression must not be negative: • When it is positive, then we have • Choose the phase positive • Conclusion: given a state |j,m, we can produce a series of other states • Problem: if you raise or lower enough times, you eventually get |m| > j • Resolution: You must have:

  9. Summary • Eigenstates look like • The values of m are • There are 2j + 1 of them • Since 2j+1 is an integer: We can use these expressions to write out J’s as matrices of size (2j + 1)  (2j + 1): • First, pick an order for your eigenstates, traditionally • The matrix Jzis trivial to write down, and is diagonal • The matrix J+ is a little harder, and is just above the diagonal • You then get J- = J+† and can find Jx and Jy

  10. Sample Problem • Basis states • Jz is diagonal: • J+just above the diagonal: Write out the matrix form for J for j = 1

  11. Sample Problem (2) Write out the matrix form for J for j = 1 • Now work out Jxand Jy: • As a check, find J2

  12. Special Cases and Pauli Matrices • The matrices for j = 0 are really simple: • We sometimes call this the scalar representation The j = ½ is called the spinor representation, and is important • There are only two states • Often these states abbreviated • The corresponding 22 matrices are written in terms of the Pauli matrices • The Pauli matrices are given by: • Useful formulas:

  13. 7C. Spherically Symmetric Problems Spherical Coordinates • Consider this Hamiltonian: • All components of L commute with H, because they commute with R2 • It makes sense to choose eigenstates of H, L2 and Lz • It seems sensible to switch to spherical coordinates: • We write Schrödinger’s equation in spherical coordinates

  14. L in Spherical coordinates (1) • We need to write L in spherical coordinates • Start by writing angular derivatives out: • It’s not hard to get Lz from these equations:

  15. L in Spherical coordinates (2) • Now it’s time to get clever: consider • And we get clever once more:

  16. Other Operators in Spherical coordinates • It will help to get the raising and lowering operators: • And we need L2: • Compare to Schrödinger:

  17. Solving Spherically Symmetric Problems: • Rewrite Schrödinger’s equation: • Our eigenstates will be • The angular properties are governed by land m • This suggests factoring  into angular and radial parts: • Substitute into Schrodinger: • Cancel Y:

  18. The Problem Divided: • It remains to find and normalize R and Y • Note that Y problem is independent of the potential V • Note that the radial problem is a 1D problem • Easily solved numerically • Normalization: • Split this up how you want, but normally:

  19. 7D. The Spherical Harmonics Dependence on, and m restrictions • We will call our angular functions spherical harmonics and label them • We previously found: • For general angular momentum we know: • We can easily determine the  dependence of the spherical harmonics • Also, recall that  = 0 is the same as  = 2 • It follows that m (and therefore l) is an integer

  20. Finding one Spherical Harmonic: • We previously found: • For general angular momentum: • If we lower m = – l, we must get zero: • Normalize it:

  21. Finding All Spherical Harmonics: • To get the others, just raise this repeatedly: • Sane people, or those who wish to remain so, do not use this formula • Many sources list them • P. 124 for l = 0 to 4 • Computer programs can calculate them for you • Hydrogen on my website

  22. Properties of Spherical Harmonics: • They are eigenstates of L2 and Lz • They are orthonormal: • They are complete; any angular function can be written in terms of them: • This helps us write the completion relation

  23. More Properties of Spherical Harmonics: • Recall: parity commutes with L • It follows that • Hence when you let parity act, youmust be getting essentially the same state • Recall: L2 is real but Lz is pure imaginary • Take the complex conjugate of our relations above: • This implies • It works out to

  24. The Spherical Harmonics

  25. 7E. The Hydrogen Atom Changing Operators • Hamiltonian for hydrogen (SI units): • These operators have commutators: • Classically, what we do: • Total momentum is conserved • Center of mass moves uniformly • Work in terms of relative position • Quantum mechanically: Let’s try • Find commutation operators for these • Proof by homework problem • Find the new Hamiltonian • Proof by homework problem

  26. Reducing the problem: 6D to 3D • Note that for actual hydrogen,  is essentially the electron mass • Split the Hamiltonian into two pieces • These two pieces have nothing to do with each other • It is essentially two problems • Hcm is basically a free particle of mass M, • It is trivial to solve • The remaining problem is effectively a single particle of mass  in a spherically symmetric potential

  27. Reducing the problem: 3D to 1D • Because the problem is spherically symmetric, we will have states • These will have wave functions • The radial wave function will satisfy: • Note that m does not appear in this equation, so R won’t depend on it • We will focus on bound states E < 0

  28. The Radial Equation: For r Large and Small Let’s try to approximate behavior at r = 0 and r = : • Large r: keep dominant terms, ignore those with negative powers of r: • Define a such that: • Then we have • Want convergent • Now, guess that for small r we have • Substitute in, keeping smallest powers of r • Want it convergent

  29. The Radial Equation: Removing Asymptotic • Factor out the expected asymptotic behavior: • This is just a definition of f(r) • Substitute in, multiply by 2/2 • Define the Bohr radius:

  30. The Radial Equation: Taylor Expansion • Write f as a power series around the origin • Recall that at small r it goes like rl • Substitute in • Gather like powers of r: • On right side, replace i  i – 1 • On left side, first term vanishes • These must be identical expressions, so:

  31. Are We Done? • It looks like we have a solution for any E: • Pick fl to be anything • Deduce the rest by recursion • Now just normalize everything • Problem: No guarantee it is normalizable • Study the behavior at large i: • Only way to avoid this catastrophe is to make sure some f vanishes, say fn

  32. Summarizing Everything • Because the exponential beats the polynomial, these functions are now all normalizable • Arbitrarily pick fl > 0 • Online “Hydrogen” or p. 124 • Note that n > l, n is positive integer • Include the angular wave functions • Restrictions on the quantum numbers: • Another way of writing the energy: • For an electron orbiting a nucleus,  is almost exactly the electron mass, c2 = 511 keV

  33. Radial Wave Functions

  34. Sample Problem What is the expectation value for R for a hydrogen atom in the state |n,l,m = |4,2,-1? • The spherical harmonics are orthonormal over angles 1 > integrate(radial(4,2)^2*r^3,r=0..infinity);

  35. Degeneracy and Other Issues Note energy depends only on n, not l or m • Not on m because states related by rotation • Not on l is an accident – accidental degeneracy How many states with the same energy En? • 2l + 1 values of m • l runs from 0 to n – 1 • Later we will learn about spin, and realize there are actually twice as many states Are our results truly exact? • We did include nuclear recoil, the fact that the nucleus has finite mass • Relativistic effects • Small for hydrogen, can show v/c ~  ~ 1/137 • Finite nuclear size • Nucleus is 104 to 105 times smaller • Very small effect • Nuclear magnetic field interacting with the electron

  36. 7E. Hydrogen-Like Atoms Other Nuclei Can we apply our formulas to any other systems? • Other atoms if they have only one electron in them • The charge on the nucleus multiplies potential by Z: • Reduced mass essentially still the electron mass • Just replace e2 by e2Z • Atom gets smaller • But still much larger than the nucleus • Relativistic effects get bigger • Now v/c ~ Z

  37. Bizarre “atoms” We can replace the nucleus or the electron with other things Anti-muon plus electron • Anti-muon has same charge as proton, and much more mass than electron • Essentially identical with hydrogen Positronium = anti-electron (positron) plus electron • Same charge as proton • Positron’s mass = electron’s mass • Reduced mass and energy states reduced by half Nucleus plus muon • Muon 207 times heavier than electron • Atom is 207 times smaller • Even inside a complex atom, muon sees essentially bare nucleus • Atom small enough that for large Z, muon is partly inside nucleus Anti-hydrogen = anti-proton plus anti-electron • Identical to hydrogen

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