Can Momentum and Spin Be Measured Simultaneously?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the relationship between momentum and spin in quantum mechanics, specifically addressing whether both can be measured simultaneously. Participants explore the mathematical properties of angular momentum and momentum operators, as well as the conceptual distinctions between spin and orbital angular momentum.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant presents a mathematical argument showing that the angular momentum operator does not commute with linear momentum, raising questions about the simultaneous measurement of momentum and spin.
  • Another participant explains that angular momentum and linear momentum do not commute due to the position operator's involvement in angular momentum's definition, suggesting that spin is independent of spatial distribution.
  • Some participants clarify that spin is distinct from angular momentum, noting that total angular momentum comprises both spin and orbital components, with the orbital component not commuting with momentum while the spin component does.
  • A later reply emphasizes that spin operators act on a different Hilbert space than momentum and position operators, which contributes to their commutation.
  • One participant requests further mathematical clarification regarding the nature of spin.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relationship between spin and angular momentum, with some asserting that spin does not affect momentum measurements while others challenge this notion. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the implications of these relationships for simultaneous measurements.

Contextual Notes

The discussion involves complex mathematical concepts and definitions that may not be fully resolved, particularly regarding the assumptions underlying the operators and their commutation relations.

haael
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I did some maths and I found that angular momentum operator does not commute with normal mometum:
[ J_{\alpha \beta}, P_{\gamma}] = \eta_{\alpha \gamma} P_{\beta} - \eta_{\beta \gamma} P_{\alpha}

Now, the "third" component of angular momentum:
J_{z} := J_{x y}
[J_{z}, P_{x}] = -P_{y}
[J_{z}, P_{y}] = P_{x}
[J_{z}, P_{z}] = 0
It does not commute with two components od momentum!

So how it is possible to measure both momentum and spin? Why is spin the "third" component, in the direction of momentum, when the act of determining momentum should make measurement of spin impossible?

Am I wrong somewhere?
 
Last edited:
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Angular momentum and linear momentum don't commute because the angular momentum operator contains the position operator in its definition. The spin operator isn't defined in terms of r x p or anything like that. In other words, the value of a particle's spin does not depend at all on the spatial distribution of its wavefunction.
 
Spin is not the angular momentum of a particle. The total angular momentum of a particle is spin plus orbital angular momentum. The orbital component doesn't commute with momentum, but the spin component does.
 
jeblack3 said:
Spin is not the angular momentum of a particle. The total angular momentum of a particle is spin plus orbital angular momentum. The orbital component doesn't commute with momentum, but the spin component does.
Thanks, I didn't know. Could you provide some maths? What is spin then?
 
The spin operators act on a different Hilbert space (let us call it \mathcal{H}_{2}) than the momentum and position operators (let us call it \mathcal{H}_{1}). That is why they commute. The total angular momentum \mathbf{J} is indeed the sum of the orbital angular momentum (\mathbf{L}) and the spin angular momentum (\mathbf{S}). However, we must note that any operator A acting on the direct product of the two Hilbert spaces \mathcal{H} = \mathcal{H}_{1} \otimes \mathcal{H}_{2} is of the form A \equiv A_{1} \otimes A_{2}. If some operator does not act on one or the other space, it's operator part for that space is simply the unit operator in that space. For example:


<br /> \mathbf{L} = \mathbf{L}_{1} \otimes 1_{2}<br />

<br /> \mathbf{S} = 1_{1} \otimes \mathbf{S}_{2}<br />

<br /> \mathbf{J} = \mathbf{L} + \mathbf{S} = \mathbf{L}_{1} \otimes 1_{2} + 1_{1} \otimes \mathbf{S}_{2}<br />

Next, the commutator of two operators A and B acting on this direct product space is defined as:


<br /> \begin{array}{rcl}<br /> [A, B] &amp; = &amp; A B - B A = (A_{1} \otimes A_{2})(B_{1} \otimes B_{2}) - (B_{1} \otimes B_{2})(A_{1} \otimes A_{2}) \\<br /> <br /> &amp; = &amp; (A_{1} B_{1}) \otimes (A_{2} B_{2}) - (B_{1} A_{1}) \otimes (B_{2} A_{2}) \\<br /> <br /> &amp; = &amp; (A_{1} B_{1} - B_{1} A_{1}) \otimes (A_{2} B_{2} - B_{2} A_{2}) \\<br /> <br /> &amp; = &amp; [A_{1}, B_{1}] \otimes [A_{2}, B_{2}]<br /> \end{array}<br />

So, the momentum operator \mathbf{P} = \mathbf{P}_{1} \otimes 1_{2} and the spin operator \mathbf{S} = 1_{1} \otimes \mathbf{S}_{2} have a commutator:


<br /> [S_{i}, P_{j}] = [1_{1}, (P_{j})_{1}] \otimes [(S_{i})_{2}, 1_{2}] = 0_{1} \otimes 0_{2} = 0<br />

i.e. they commute.
 
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Thanks.
 

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