nrqed said:
Let's say we combine the states ##|s_1=\frac{1}{2}, m_{s_1}=\frac{1}{2} \rangle ## with ##|s_1=\frac{1}{2}, m_{s_1}=\frac{1}{2} \rangle ##, what we get is ##|s=1,m_s=1 \rangle ## and nothing else. We can see this by using Clebsch-Gordan tables but we can also see this directly: the two z components must add up so that ##m_S = \frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{2} = 1 ## and since the z component is 1, the total spin must be 1 (it cannot be zero). So we get |1,1>.
But what you're doing is writing the state ##|m_1=1/2,m_2=1/2\rangle## in terms of the basis kets {##|S,M>##}.
i.e. you're changing the basis. I have no problems with that.
However, i think your answer did not justify why one should choose ##|1,1>##. You simply explained why ##|1,1> = |1/2,1/2>## (where the rhs is in the eigenbasis of (S
z1, S
z2) and the lhs is in the eigenbasis of (S, S
z), with S=S
1+S
2. I repeat: this only explains how the change of basis was carried out. It does not explain why one should choose ##|1,1>## (or ##|m_1=1/2,m_2=1/2\rangle## - it's the same thing, only in a different basis) as the isospin state of the system in the first place.
I think I'm beginning to understand what my problem is:
When you combine two particles, each described by a state which "lives" in a two dimensional state space ##\epsilon_i## spanned by ##{|+\rangle,|-\rangle}## (like in the spin(or isospin) 1/2 case), then your combined state "lives" in the state space given by the tensor product of those two state spaces, giving a state space ##\epsilon = \epsilon_1 \otimes \epsilon_2## spanned by ##{|+,+\rangle, |+,-\rangle, |-,+\rangle, |-,-\rangle}##. Until now I think everything is correct. Now, my mistake: I was thinking of the proton (and the neutron, for that matter) as a particle "living" in a 2-dimensional isospin state space, like the ones I described above. That is, I was thinking as if the state of the proton could be written as an arbitrary linear combination of the basis kets:
$$|p\rangle = \alpha |+\rangle + \beta |-\rangle$$
But this is incorrect! In fact: ##|p\rangle = |+\rangle##.
i.e. the state of the proton isn't described by some arbitrary ket in the isospin state space. It is a concrete ket belonging to that space. That said, I need not find all the basis kets which span ##\epsilon##. I apply the tensor product between two kets which are fixed. And that's easy:
In the case with a proton and a neutron on the lhs, for example:
$$|p\rangle \otimes |n\rangle = |1/2, -1/2\rangle$$
And
now I'm ready do apply the change of basis. In the case of the proton+neutron:
$$|1/2,-1/2\rangle = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(|1,0\rangle+|0,0\rangle)$$
I'm sorry if this got a little confusing, but I think it's correct...