marlon said:
Well, i have no problem admitting that. the point i am trying to make is that "angular momentum J" has nothing to do with rotational motion of objects.
Still, one can transfer the spin angular momentum from electrons
to macroscopic objects.
A magnetic material which becomes polarized, (The spins of the outher
electrons become aligned) will start rotating in the opposite direction
with the correct angular momentum. (Einstein, de Haas effect)
Nevertheless one should indeed be very careful with the classical picture
of a spinning ball. First of all, Quantum Mechanically things never spin
around an axis but always around a point. That's why the total angular
momentum is always larger as any arbitrary component. (s = \sqrt{s_z(s_z+1})
marlon said:
It is a direct consequence of the invariance of, for example, probabilities being invariant under rotations. In order to do so, the fundamental building blocks of QM, ie the wavefunctions, have to transform conform "a certain" way under these rotations of SO(3). This "certain way" is...: SPINORS.
"Spinor" is maybe a somewhat misleading name. It was Paul Ehrenfest
I think who proposed this name after he stimulated van der Waerden
to write his mathematical treatment.
Every 3-vector or even 4-vector can be rewritten as a spinor.
This by itself does not yet make these vectors "spinning objects"
What the spinors really do is that they tell you how to interpret
for instance "imaginary momentum" That is, The square of the radial
momentum in Dirac solutions p_r^2 is generally negative. (The same is
true for Schroedinger's equation)
This compensates for the relativistic mass of electrons close to
the nucleus so that the total energy becomes (just a little bit) less
than the rest-mass energy and the same every ware, for instance:E^2= p_r^2 c^2 + p_\theta^2 c^2 + p_\phi^2 c^2 + m_0^2 c^4\ = (\ m_0 c^2 - 13.6eV)^2
(Simplifying out the all potential energy terms here except the 13,6 eV )It's the radial term
\frac{l(l+1)}{r^2}\hbar^2 c^2
Which enters the radial equation of the Laplacian which accounts exactly
for the "missing" relativistic mass and it's the p_r^2 component which is negative
with the right function in r to compensate for this.
With Spinors arising in the "Matrix Square Root" of the Klein Gordon equation:<br />
\left(<br />
\begin{array}{cccc}<br />
E & 0 & -p_z & -(p_x-ip_y)\\<br />
0 & E & -(p_x+ip_y) & p_z \\<br />
p_z & (p_x-ip_y) & -E & 0 \\<br />
(p_x+ip_y) & -p_z & 0 & -E<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right) \left(<br />
\begin{array}{c}<br />
C_1 \\ C_2 \\ C_3 \\ C_4<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right)\ \ =\ \ m_0c^2 \left(<br />
\begin{array}{c}<br />
C_1 \\ C_2 \\ C_3 \\ C_4<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right)<br />
After taking the Square at both sides this becomes:
<br />
\left(<br />
\begin{array}{cccc}<br />
E^2-p^2 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\<br />
0 & E^2-p^2 & 0 & 0 \\<br />
0 & 0 & E^2-p^2 & 0 \\<br />
0 & 0 & 0 & E^2-p^2<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right)\left(<br />
\begin{array}{c}<br />
C_1 \\ C_2 \\ C_3 \\ C_4<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right)\ \ =\ \ (m_0c^2)^2 \left(<br />
\begin{array}{c}<br />
C_1 \\ C_2 \\ C_3 \\ C_4<br />
\end{array}<br />
\right)<br />The normal 3-vector representations become:
<br />
\left( \begin{array}{c}<br />
p_z \\<br />
p_x+ip_y<br />
\end{array} \right)<br />
\quad \mbox{and} \quad<br />
\left( \begin{array}{c}<br />
p_x-ip_y \\<br />
-p_z<br />
\end{array} \right)<br />
\quad \mbox{and} \quad<br />
For the two opposite spin representations. That is: An imaginary
momentum ip_x is interpreted via a 90 degrees rotation in the xy plane.
Regards, Hans