Angular momentum coupling: Difference between revisions
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Given eigenstates of '''l'''(1) and '''l'''(2), the construction of eigenstates of '''L''' from them is the ''coupling of the angular momenta of electron 1 and 2''. It is fairly easy to construct eigenstates of '''L''' by the use of the explicit form of [[Clebsch-Gordan coefficients]]. The coupled states are labeled by a non-negative integer ''L''. It can be shown that eigenstates labeled by different ''L'' do not mix under the total Hamiltonian ''H'' (the one including electron-electron interaction), which means that eigenvectors of ''H'' are completely contained in a space of a single definite ''L''. This fact is a great aid in obtaining the eigenvectors of ''H'', i.e., in the solution of the time-independent Schrödinger equation of the example two-electron atom. | Given eigenstates of '''l'''(1) and '''l'''(2), the construction of eigenstates of '''L''' from them is the ''coupling of the angular momenta of electron 1 and 2''. It is fairly easy to construct eigenstates of '''L''' by the use of the explicit form of [[Clebsch-Gordan coefficients]]. The coupled states are labeled by a non-negative integer ''L''. It can be shown that eigenstates labeled by different ''L'' do not mix under the total Hamiltonian ''H'' (the one including electron-electron interaction), which means that eigenvectors of ''H'' are completely contained in a space of a single definite ''L''. This fact is a great aid in obtaining the eigenvectors of ''H'', i.e., in the solution of the time-independent Schrödinger equation of the example two-electron atom. | ||
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Revision as of 04:14, 2 January 2008
In quantum mechanics, angular momentum coupling is the procedure of constructing eigenstates of a system's angular momentum out of angular momentum eigenstates of its subsystems. The historic example of a system to which angular momentum coupling is applied, is an atom with N > 1 electrons (the subsystems of the atom). Each electron has its own orbital angular momentum, i.e., is in an eigenstate of its own angular momentum operator. Angular momentum coupling is the construction of an N-electron eigenstate of the total atomic angular momentum operator out of the N individual electronic angular momentum eigenstates.
Other examples are the coupling of spin- and orbital-angular momentum of an electron (where we see the spin and the orbital motion as subsystems of a single electron) and the coupling of nucleonic spins in the shell model of the nucleus.
Application
The coupling of angular momenta of subsystems to total angular momentum is useful and applicable when two conditions are satisfied.
- In the absence of interactions between the subsystems the angular momenta of the subsystems are constants of the motion[1]. That is, if the interactions between the subsystems are switched off—or neglected—each individual angular momentum is a constant of the motion. Often this zeroth order approximation is the point of departure of a physical theory.
- When next the subsystems are assumed to be interacting (are exerting force on each other), in general the individual angular momenta cease to be constants of the motion. If their sum, the total angular momentum, is still a constant of the motion, even after the interaction has been swithced on, angular momentum coupling is useful.
These two conditions are surprisingly often fulfilled due to the fact that they almost always follow from rotational symmetry—the symmetry of spherical systems and isotropic interactions. The angular momentum is a constant of the motion, in either of two situations: (i) The system is spherical symmetric, or (ii) the system moves (in quantum mechanical sense) in isotropic space. It can be shown that in both cases the total angular momentum operator of the system commutes with its Hamiltonian. By Heisenberg's uncertainty relation this means that the angular momentum of the system can assume a sharp value simultaneously with the energy (eigenvalue of the Hamiltonian) of the system.
The standard example of a spherical symmetric system is an atom, while a (rigid) molecule moving in a field-free space is an example of the second kind of system. A rigid (non-vibrating) molecule can be seen as a rigid rotor, which moving in field-free space, has a conserved angular momentum. This observation lies at the basis of microwave spectroscopy.
Example: two-electron atom
As an example of angular momentum coupling in a spherical symmetric system, we consider a two-electron atom.
First, assume that there is no electron-electron interaction (or other interactions such as spin-orbit coupling), but that only the electron-nucleus Coulomb attraction is operative. In this simplified model the atomic Hamiltonian is a sum of kinetic energies of the two electrons and the spherical symmetric electron-nucleus interaction. The kinetic energy of the nucleus (or, more precisely of the center of mass of the atom), which is three to four orders of magnitude smaller than the kinetic energy of the electrons, is neglected.
The orbital angular momentum l(i) (a vector operator) of electron i (with i = 1 or 2) commutes with the total Hamiltonian. Both operators, l(1) and l(2), are constant of the motion. It can be shown that the commutation of l(i) with the simplified Hamiltonian has the consequence that electron i can be rotated around the nucleus independently of the other electron; upon rotation nothing happens to the energy of either electron (which is easy to understand because the electron-electron interaction is off and the nucleus is spherical symmetric).
Switching on the electron-electron interaction, which depends on the distance d(1,2) between the electrons, we get the more exact Hamiltonian H. Clearly, only a simultaneous and equal rotation of the two electrons will leave d(1,2) invariant. Independent rotation of only one electron will change the distance d(1,2) to the other electron and hence the electron-electron interaction energy.
It can be shown that this change in distance implies that neither l(1) nor l(2) commute separately with H, but their sum L = l(1) + l(2) still does. The operator L commutes with H if and only if a simultaneous rotation of the two electrons leaves H invariant.
Given eigenstates of l(1) and l(2), the construction of eigenstates of L from them is the coupling of the angular momenta of electron 1 and 2. It is fairly easy to construct eigenstates of L by the use of the explicit form of Clebsch-Gordan coefficients. The coupled states are labeled by a non-negative integer L. It can be shown that eigenstates labeled by different L do not mix under the total Hamiltonian H (the one including electron-electron interaction), which means that eigenvectors of H are completely contained in a space of a single definite L. This fact is a great aid in obtaining the eigenvectors of H, i.e., in the solution of the time-independent Schrödinger equation of the example two-electron atom.
Footnote
- ↑ A constant of the motion is also referred to as a conserved property. It is a time-independent observable that commutes with the Hamiltonian of the system.
Group theoretical background
A spherical system has symmetry group SO(3), the special orthogonal group in three dimensions. This group consists of orthogonal 3 × 3 matrices with unit determinant. The group is closely related to the spin rotation group SU(2) (special unitary group), which consists of unitary 2 × 2 matrices with unit determinant. Both groups are Lie groups and have isomorphic Lie algebras. The Lie algebras are 3-dimensional and are generated by the components of angular momentum through the commutation relations
To simplify the discussion we restrict the attention to SO(3), extension to SU(2) is easy. As is usual, one goes from the Lie algebra to the group by exponentiation:
where belongs to SO(3) and represents a rotation around the unit vector over an angle φ and l ≡ (lx, ly, lz). In the two-electron atom example, l is the angular momentum of one electron.
By expanding the exponential operator it follows that
This relation shows clearly the correspondence between rotational symmetry and angular momentum.
If the electron-electron interaction is switched off in the two-electron atom, the symmetry group is the outer product group SO(3) × SO(3). If the interaction is on, the symmetry group becomes the inner product group, which is isomorphic to SO(3) and is the subgroup of SO(3) × SO(3) consisting of simultaneous and equal rotations of the two electrons. The inner product group consists of the following elements
Writing
we find the correspondence between total L and the simultaneous rotation of the two electrons. Construction of eigenstates of L2 = Lx2 + Ly2 + Lz2 out of eigenstates of l(1)2 and l(2)2, i.e., angular momentum coupling, is equivalent to the group theoretical subduction
Subduction is in this case the reduction of a reducible tensor product representation to (a direct sum of) irreducible representions of SO(3).
Triangular conditions
If subsystem 1 has an angular momentum operator j(1) and subsystem 2 has an angular momentum operator j(2), the total system, consisting of these two subsystems, has an angular momentum operator J ≡ j(1) + j(2). The latter operator is often written as J ≡ j⊗1 + 1⊗j in mathematically oriented texts. If subsystem 1 is in an eigenstate of j2(1) with quantum number j1 and if subsystem 2 is in an eigenstate of j2(2) with quantum number j2 then the allowed eigenstates of J2 are those with quantum number J satisfying the triangular conditions
A slightly different formulation is the following. The statement that quantum system 1 is in an eigenstate of j(1) with quantum number j1 means that the state belongs to a 2j1 + 1 dimensional linear space , an eigenspace of j2(1) with eigenvalue j1(j1 + 1). (We assume .) Likewise the angular momentum eigenstate of quantum system 2 belongs to a 2j2 + 1 dimensional linear space , an eigenspace of j2(2) with eigenvalue j2(j2 + 1). The triangular conditions state that the tensor product space decomposes as the following orthogonal direct sum of eigenspaces of J2
Note the limits on the summation and note also that an eigenspace of certain quantum number J occurs only once (provided J is within the limits, otherwise it does not occur), in other words the multiplicity of J in the tensor product space with fixed j1 and j2 is zero or one. This non-trivial result is sometimes referred to as the Clebsch-Gordan theorem after the two German nineteenth century mathematicians who discovered it (in the context of invariant theory).
The result also has a group theoretical implication. The irreducible representations (irreps) of the special unitary group in two dimensions, SU(2), are labelled by j. The direct product of two irreps of SU(2), one labeled by j1 and one labeled by j2 decomposes into a direct sum of irreps labeled by J. The latter label satisfies the triangular conditions. Of course, this result is no coincidence, but a consequence of the fact the components of the angular momentum operator span the Lie algebra of SU(2).
Proof of the triangular conditions
Physicists are so familiar with the triangular conditions that many of them do not realize (or have forgotten) that the proof of the conditions is non-trivial, at least from the angular momentum (Lie algebra) point of view. From the point of view of the global group the result is proved in four lines by means of character theory, see Ref.[1] Because the latter, short proof requires some group theoretical knowledge, we now present the standard "bookkeeping" type of proof, that, although fairly complicated, requires no new knowledge.
References
- ↑ J. D. Talman, Special Functions, A Group Theoretic Approach, (based on lectures by E.P. Wigner), W. A. Benjamin, New York (1968).