Angular Momentum in Quantum Physics
Angular Momentum in Quantum Physics
Angular Momentum
in Quantum Physics
Theory and Application
L. C. Biedenharn
Physics Department
Duke University
Durham, North Carolina
J. D. Louck
Los Alamos National Laboratory
University of California
Los Alamos, New Mexico
With a Foreword by
Peter A. Carruthers
Los Alamos National Laboratory
University of California
Los Alamos, New Mexico
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY PRESS
Contents
Contents of companion volume
The Racah-Wigner Algebra in Quantum Theory
by L. C. Biedenharn and J. D. Louck
(ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MATHEMATICS AND ITS
APPLICATIONS, Volume 9)
Editor's Statement
Section Editor's Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
xvii
xxiii
xxv
xxvii
xxxi
PARTI
Chapter 1 Introduction
Notes
References
1
4
5
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Introduction
Properties of Rotations
Dirac's Construction
Cartan's Definition of a Spinor
Relation between SU(2) and SO{3) Rotations
Parametrizations of the Group of Rotations
Notes
References
7
. . .7
10
15
17
19
25
26
29
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Overview
Defimtion of the Angular Momentum Operators
The Angular Momentum Multiplets
Matrices of the Angular Momentum
The Rotation Matrices (General Properties)
The Rotation Matrices (ExpUcit Forms)
xi
29
29
31
37
39
46
xii
Contents
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
55
57
66
68
71
75
84
87
94
97
99
106
127
131
133
141
162
175
180
180
184
193
198
201
203
205
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Introduction
205
Excursus on the Boson Calculus
206
The Jordan Mapping
212
An Application of the Jordan Map
214
Generalization of the Jordan Map
217
Application of the Generalized Jordan Map
219
Application of the Generalized Jordan Map to
Determine the Wigner Coefficients
223
8. Wigner Coefficients as "Discretized" Rotation Matrices . . . 2 2 6
9. Appendices
230
References
264
Contents
xiii
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
269
PART II
Chapter 7
324
1. Introductory Remarks
2. Basic Principles Underlying the Applications
3. The Zeeman Effect
324
324
326
xiv
Contents
a.
b.
d.
e.
Background
326
The Normal Zeeman Effect
327
Quantal Treatment
327
The Anomalous Zeeman Effect
331
Relation to the Development of Angular
Momentum Theory
333
f. Concluding Remarks
334
g. Note
335
References
335
4. The Nonrelativistic Hydrogen Atom
335
a. Algebraic Aspects
336
b. Properties of the Bound States of the Hydrogen
Atom
340
Explicit Hydrogen Atom Wave Functions
344
d. Momentum Space Representation
347
e. Relationship between Rotation Matrices and
Hyperspherical Harmonics
351
f. Pauli Particle (Hydrogen Atom with Spin)
353
g. Remarks
359
h. Appendix
361
References
362
5. Atomic Spectroscopy
364
a. Introduction
364
b. The Approximate Hamiltonian for Many-Electron
Atoms
365
The Central-Field Model
366
d. A Short Vocabulary of Spectroscopy Terminology . . . . 376
e. Closed Shells
377
f. The One-Electron Problem with Spin-Orbit
Coupling
378
g. Two-Electron Configurations
381
h. Equivalent Electron Configurations
393
i. Operator Structures in /"-Configurations
406
j . Appendix
421
References
428
6. Electromagnetic Processes
432
a. Preliminary Remarks
432
b. Multipole Radiation
433
The Hansen Multipole Fields
435
d. Classical Multipole Moments
437
e. Reduction of the Electric Multipole Moments
438
f. The Radiated Multipole Fields
439
g. A Curious Property of the Multipole Expansion
(Casimir [9])
439
Contents
xv
h.
i.
j.
k.
1.
7.
8.
9.
10.
440
441
442
443
449
452
453
455
455
457
463
467
469
470
471
474
476
478
478
483
484
484
488
491
492
492
493
499
500
508
510
512
515
517
523
524
525
527
xvi
Contents
a. Introduction
527
b. Definition and Kinematics of a Body-Fixed Frame . . . . 528
Form of the State Vectors for Isolated Systems
Described in a Body-Fixed Frame
533
d. The Instantaneous Principal Axes of Inertia Frame . . . . 534
e. The Eckart Molecular Frame
535
f. Distinguished Particle Frames
539
g. Uniform Method of Defining Body-Fixed Frames . . . . 540
h. Internal Coordinates
543
i. Internal Coordinates for the Eckart Frame
544
j . Internal Coordinates for the Principal Axes Frame . . . .549
k. The Linear Momentum Operators
554
1. The Hamiltonian for a Semirigid (Rigid) Polyatomic
Molecule
559
m. Approximate Form of the Hamiltonian for
Spherical Top Molecules
563
n. First-Order Energy Spectrum of a Triply Degenerate
Vibration in a Spherical Top Molecule
572
o. The Point Group of a Rigid Molecule
578
p. Higher-Order Corrections: Phenomenological
Hamiltonian
587
q. Splitting Patterns
594
r. Symmetry Axes and Induced Representations
602
s. High Angular Momentum Effects
609
t. Selection Rules and Statistical Weights
612
u. Spectra of Fundamental Transitions of SF6
624
v. Appendices
626
References
629
Appendix of Tables
Bibliography
634
667
List of Symbols
670
Author Index
687
Subject Index
695