Rotation operator
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This article concerns the rotation operator, as it appears in quantum mechanics.
[edit] The translation operator
The rotation operator , with the first argument indicating the rotation axis and the second the rotation angle, is based on the translation operator , which is acting on the state in the following manner:
We have:
Taylor development gives:
with
From that follows:
This is a differential equation with the solution .
Additionally, suppose a Hamiltonian is independent of the position. Because the translation operator can be written in terms of , and , we know that . This result means that linear momentum for the system is conserved.
[edit] In relation to the orbital angular momentum
Classically we have . This is the same in quantum mechanics considering and as operators. An infinitesimal rotation about the z-axis can be expressed by the following infinitesimal translations:
From that follows:
And consequently:
Using with and Taylor development we get:
To get a rotation for the angle , we construct the following differential equation using the condition R(z,0) = 1:
Similar to the translation operator, if we are given a Hamiltonian which rotationally symmetric about the z axis, implies . This result means that angular momentum is conserved.
For the spin angular momentum about the y-axis we just replace with and we get the spin rotation operator .
[edit] Effect upon the spin operator and upon states
Operators can be represented by matrices. From linear algebra one knows that a certain matrix can be represented in another base through the basis transformation
where is the transformation matrix. If and are perpendicular to the y-axis and the angle lies between them, the spin operator can be transformed into the spin operator Sc through the following transformation:
From standard quantum mechanics we have the known results and . So we have:
Comparison with
yields .
This can be generalized to arbitrary axes.