Quantum Mechanics measurement of spin

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on the measurement of angular momentum in quantum mechanics, specifically through the use of rotation matrices and their generators. Shankar's approach involves the D^{(j)} matrices, which are essential for understanding how angular momentum is measured in quantum systems, drawing parallels to classical mechanics. The transformation of a wavefunction under rotation is described, highlighting the role of the orbital angular momentum operator and its relation to spin. The example of a spin-1/2 wavefunction illustrates how these concepts apply in practice, particularly through the use of Pauli matrices. Overall, the thread emphasizes the mathematical framework necessary for understanding angular momentum measurements in quantum mechanics.
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reading shankar he develops the measurement of angular momentum by discussing rotation state vectors in 3-D by the angle-and-axis parameterization so he creates these generators of rotation matrices and says these are what we use to measure angular momentum in analogy to classical mechanics.

He goes on to describe these D^{(j)} (\hat{n}\theta J^{(j)}) when we just use the J_i^{(j)} i = 1,2,3 (designation of axis) to measure the angular momentum what are the D^{(j)} (\hat{n} \theta J^{(j)}) matrices used for? how are they related to the original rotation matrix we are all used to?

such as R(\textbf{n}\theta) |v> = |v'> make |v> a typical 3-d vector...and make it rotated about the z axis
<br /> <br /> R(\textbf{z}\theta)|x,y,z&gt; = |x cos(\theta) - y sin(\theta), x sin(\theta) + y cos(\theta),z&gt;<br />
how can i use the D matrices to get the same result?
 
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Hi...
The orbital angular momentum L=r \wedge p is the generator of the rotation:
U \Psi(r) = e^{i L \cdot \omega}(r). For an infinitesimal rotation \omega
U \Psi(r) \approx (1+ iL\cdot \omega)=(1+\omega_i \epsilon_{ijk}x_j \partial_k)\Psi<br /> \approx \Psi(r + \omega \wedge r ).
A generic operator transfor like O \rightarrow UOU^{\dagger}
If you take r \rightarrow r+\omega \wedge r that is the action of a rotatation \omega.
For a wavefunction with spin s the generator is e^{i \omega \cdot (L+s)}.
For example a wavefuncion of spin 1/2 (it has 2 component) and L=0 transform with
U(\theta \bold{n})=cos(\theta/2)+i \bold{n}\cdot \bold{\sigma} sin (\theta /2) where \bold{\sigma} are the pauli matrices
 
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