Matterwave said:
I don't think the spin of particles change in general. Electrons always have 1/2 spin, never 3/2 even.
Of course.
For a composite system it is true, the spin angular momentum addition requires the total spin to be separated by integers. So 2 1/2 spin particles added together may have spin 1, 0, or -1.
This is not quite the same as Angular Momentum where you can increase a single particle's l value simply by imparting to it some angular momentum.
You are right that the spins of individual quantum particles are fixed. However, at least for non-relativistic cases, the same algebra is used to describe both spin and angular momentum in quantum systems. Also, the multi-electron states are as much eigenfunctions of the total spin operator as the single electron state.
Anyway, I was more referring to something like a total angular momentum quantum number for an atom:
J=L + S.
L will always be an integer, but S can be either an integer or half-integer value, so J can either be an integer OR a half-integer in the range |L-S| <= J <= L+S. For example, if L=1 and S=3/2, then J can take any value in the set {1/2,3/2,5/2}. If L=1 and S=1, then J can take any value from the set {0,1,2}. But you never get a J that can take values from a set like {0,1/2,1,3/2,2,5/2}.
A similar condition holds for the z-component of angular momentum ... it can only ever increase or decrease in integer multiples of hbar (c.f. angular momentum raising and lower operators). For an electron, s
z=hbar/2 OR -hbar/2. For a p-orbital (l=1), l
z=hbar OR 0 OR -hbar.