Angular momentum commutes with Hamiltonian

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SUMMARY

The Hamiltonian operator commutes with the angular momentum operators (Lx, Ly, Lz) for systems such as the free particle, harmonic oscillator, and hydrogen atom, indicating a conservation of energy under rotations. This commutation signifies that the order of applying time translations and spatial rotations does not affect the outcome of the system's evolution. The physical interpretation reveals that energy remains conserved in spherically symmetric systems, while angular momentum remains constant during motion, establishing it as a constant of motion.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Hamiltonian mechanics
  • Familiarity with angular momentum operators (Lx, Ly, Lz)
  • Knowledge of spherical coordinates in quantum mechanics
  • Basic principles of quantum mechanics, including Schrödinger's equation
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  • Study the implications of Hamiltonian mechanics in quantum systems
  • Explore the role of angular momentum in quantum mechanics
  • Investigate non-central potentials and their effects on commutation relations
  • Learn about the conservation laws in quantum mechanics and their physical interpretations
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Physicists, quantum mechanics students, and researchers interested in the relationship between Hamiltonians and angular momentum in quantum systems.

Feynmanfan
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How can I prove that the Hamiltonian commutes with the angular momentum operator?

In spherical coordinates it is straightforward but I'd like to understand the physical meaning of it.

Thanks.
 
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Feynmanfan said:
How can I prove that the Hamiltonian commutes with the angular momentum operator?
In spherical coordinates it is straightforward but I'd like to understand the physical meaning of it.
Thanks.
What hamiltonian ? The hamiltonian of the free particle ? Of the harmonic oscillator ? Of the hydrogen atom ?
All these do indeed commute with the angular momentum operator (Lx,Ly,Lz). But if you'd have a non-central potential, this would not be the case.
The physical meaning is this:
the hamiltonian is the generator of time translations (huh ? :-) Yes, that's the content of Schroedinger's equation: the time derivative of the state (wavefunction) is the hamiltonian applied to the wavefunction.
The angular momentum operator is the generator of space rotations.
If both commute, that means that it doesn't matter if you first rotate (a small bit) and then "translate in time" (advance a bit in time), or whether you do it in the opposite order (first advance a bit in time, and then rotate).
So that means that "energy" (the hamiltonian) is "conserved under rotations" (essentially that your problem is spherically symmetrical) ;
or:
that "angular momentum" (the angular momentum operator) is "conserved under time translations", meaning: angular momentum is constant during the motion: it is a constant of motion.
cheers,
Patrick.
 

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