Thank you very much, this helped a lot, really: was able to finish and get the exercise approved.
Anyways, if you (or any) got the time, I'd like to tidy up some elementary stuff,
Wikipedia, WolframAlpha and other sources state that the proton and the neutron both have isospin 1/2. This must imply that their isospin is ±1/2, right?
From the exercise over, we may write a two-particle system of particle X and Y as,
|X, Y > = |\alpha_X , \alpha_Y> = (CG)|\alpha , \beta>,
where (CG) is a clebsch-gordan coefficient, and the isospin, I = I_1+I_2+I_3, and \alpha_X, \alpha_Y, \alpha, \beta are defined by,
<br />
I = I_X + I_Y \\<br />
I_3 = I_{X3} + I{Y3}<br />
<br />
|\alpha_X - \alpha_Y| \leq \alpha \leq (\alpha_X + \alpha_Y)\\<br />
\beta = \beta_X + \beta_Y<br />
<br />
\hat{I}^2 |\alpha,\beta> = \alpha (\alpha + 1) |\alpha,\beta> \\<br />
\hat{I}_3 |\alpha,\beta> = \beta |\alpha,\beta>\\<br />
Now that we have some theory and definitions: let particle X and Y be a proton and a neutron with isospins \alpha_X = \alpha_p,\alpha_Y = \alpha_n,respectively. What values of isospin will these have, and why? To solve my problems I had to set \alpha_n = -1/2, \alpha_p = 1/2, but the math would have come out if I changed these two (it seems so at least...).