Symmetries' (section 3.5) they explain that where a system possesses a symmetry, the corresponding Hamiltonian must be 'built up' from the Casimir operators of the corresponding symmetry group.
Does anyone know of a reference where this is gone into in any detail?
This is not a theorem that one can prove. However, in the absence of a Lagrangian ( usually the case in nuclear physics) and if experiments indicate that the system possesses certain symmetries, then one tries one best to construct a (bound-state-) “interaction Hamiltonian” out of the set of all “Good” quantum numbers (or invariants) available to him. Take (for example) the Deuteron (2-fermion bound state). Experiments indicate rotational invariance, iso-spin invariance, translational invariance and some other discrete symmetries. So one starts with the most general interaction Hamiltonian,
H(1,2) = F(r_{1}, s_{1},t_{1};r_{2},s_{2},t_{2}),
where (r_{i}, s_{i}, t_{i}), i=1,2 are the position, spin and isospin vectors,
then one uses all known symmetries to restrict its functional form:
1) translational invariance implies
H(1,2) = F(r,s_{1},t_{1},s_{2},t_{2})
where r = |r_{1}-r_{2}|.
2) invariance under parity implies even powers of r;
H(1,2) = F(r^{2n}, s_{1},t_{1}, s_{2},t_{2})
for simplicity one takes n = 1.
3) SO(3) invariance implies
<br />
H(1,2) = F\left(r^{2}, (s_{1}.s_{2}), \frac{(s_{1}.\vec{r})(s_{2}.\vec{r})}{r^{2}}, t_{1},t_{2}\right)<br />
these are the only SO(3) invariant objects available; (s_{1}.s_{2})^{n} can be reduced to a + b (s_{1}.s_{2})
4) and finally invariance under the isospin group SU(2) implies
<br />
H(1,2) = F\left(r^{2}, (s_{1}.s_{2}), \frac{(s_{1}.\vec{r})(s_{2}.\vec{r})}{r^{2}}, (t_{1}.t_{2})\right)<br />
So now you can write
<br />
H=f_{1}(r^{2})+f_{2}(r^{2})s_{1}.s_{2}+f_{3}(r^{2})\frac{(s_{1}.\vec{r})(s_{2}.\vec{r})}{r^{2}}+f_{4}(r^{2})(s_{1}.s_{2})(t_{1}.t_{2})+f_{5}(r^{2})(t_{1}.t_{2})<br />
and ask your experimental physicist friend to find the functions
f_{i}= f_{i}(r^{2}).
Does anyone know what happens when the system possesses a product of symmetries (such as, say, Poincare x SU(2))?
Noether theorem gives you a unique Hamiltonian in this case, so there is no need for the garbage I described above.
Sam