Rubiss
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Homework Statement
I have two questions. Both involve derivations from textbooks, not end-of-the-chapter problems. The two textbooks are Quantum Mechanics by Griffiths, and A Modern Approach to Quantum Mechanics by John Townsend.
My first question is about the discussion of Larmor precession found on page 180 of Griffiths. On that page, he calculates
\langle S_{x} \rangle = \frac{\hbar}{2}\mbox{sin}(\alpha)\mbox{cos}(\gamma B_{0}t)
\langle S_{y} \rangle = -\frac{\hbar}{2}\mbox{sin}(\alpha)\mbox{sin}(\gamma B_{0}t)
\langle S_{z} \rangle = \frac{\hbar}{2}\mbox{cos}(\alpha)
and then states, "Evidently
\langle \bf{S} \rangle is tilted at a constant angle \alpha to the z-axis, and precesses about the field the field at the Larmor frequency \omega = \gamma B_{0}..."
My question is how is does one know something about the expectation value of S from the expectation values of the components of S? Isn't it correct that
\langle {\bf S} \rangle \neq \langle S_{x} \rangle + \langle S_{y} \rangle + \langle S_{z} \rangle
Is one supposed to just "see/know" that because the expectation values of the components of the spin have a trigonometric function of alpha, the expectation value of the spin is tilted at an angle alpha to the z-axis? Or, is this understanding similar to transforming/decomposing a vector from spherical coordinates to Cartesian coordinates (looking at figure 4.10 and decomposing S)? If that is the case, then I understand.
My second question involves the force on a magnetic dipole. On page 3 of Townsend, he states that, "If we call the direction in which the inhomogeneous magnetic field is large the z direction, we see that
F_{z} = \vec{\mu}\cdot \frac{\partial \vec{B}}{\partial z}\simeq \mu_{z}\frac{\partial B_{z}}{\partial z}"
Here's my question. I know that \vec{F}=\nabla(\vec{\mu}\cdot\vec{B})
How does he pull the partial derivative into the dot product before first applying the dot product? Is it because the magnetic dipole moment is a constant in the z direction?
Homework Equations
\vec{F}=\nabla(\vec{\mu}\cdot\vec{B})
\vec{S}=S_{x}\hat{x}+S_{y}\hat{y}+S_{z}\hat{z}
\langle S^{2} \rangle = \langle S_{x}^{2} \rangle + \langle S_{y}^{2} \rangle + \langle S_{z}^{2} \rangle
The Attempt at a Solution
Refer to the problem description. Thank you for any help.