Quantum mechanics - spin operator eigenvalue probability?

jeebs
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Hi,
I have this problem on a past exam paper I am having some trouble with:

"in the conventional basis of the eigenstates of the Sz operator, the spin state of a spin-1/2 particle is described by the vector:

u = \left( \stackrel{cos a}{e^i^b sina} \right) where a and B are constants.

find the probability that a measurement of the y-component of the spin of the particle will yield the result 0.5\hbar ."

For the life of me I cannot work out how to write out matrices legibly on this thing, so I will summarize what is bothering me. I am given pauli matrices \sigma_x_,_y_,_zthat I cannot write out properly, and the spin operator is given by S_i = i\hbar\sigma_i.

In the question I am given the vector u, which is apparently expressed in the basis of Sz eigenstates.

Am I justified in putting this vector u into an eigenvalue equation S_{y} u = a_{y} u ,

where ay is my eigenvalue, when the vector I would be operating on is made from a basis of eigenstates of another operator (Sz)?

I tried this and got two equations for ay, neither of which gives a_y = 0.5\hbar.

does this mean I can conclude that there is zero probability of finding the y-component of the spin being equal to 0.5\hbar ?

or do I somehow have to wangle it so that I get another vector (not u) that is in the Sy eigenstate basis?

thanks.



PS. sorry, this crazy thing will not let me change something 5 lines up where I should have said
"Am I justified in putting this vector u into an eigenvalue equation S_y u = 0.5\hbar u"
 
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jeebs said:
"Am I justified in putting this vector u into an eigenvalue equation S_y u = 0.5\hbar u"

You tell me. If u is an eigenvector of S_z, is it also an eigenvector of S_y[/itex]?
 
gabbagabbahey said:
You tell me. If u is an eigenvector of S_z, is it also an eigenvector of S_y[/itex]?

are you actually asking me, do these two operators commute? and if their commutator [Sy, Sz] = 0, then yes they do?

is that right, if the eigenvector of one operator is equal to the eigenvector of another, then the operators commute?
 
jeebs said:
if the eigenvector of one operator is equal to the eigenvector of another, then the operators commute?

Yes. So, do S_z and S_y commute?
 
gabbagabbahey said:
Yes. So, do S_z and S_y commute?

not by my calculations, although I just woke up 5 minutes ago. I get [Sy,Sz] is equal to
(hbar^2)/4 multiplied by a 2x2 matrix containing zeros on the leading diagonal and 2i elsewhere.
 
Right, they don't commute; [S_y,S_z]=i\hbar S_x. So, u is clearly not an eigenstate of S_y.

What are the eigenstates of S_y?
 
gabbagabbahey said:
Right, they don't commute; [S_y,S_z]=i\hbar S_x. So, u is clearly not an eigenstate of S_y.

What are the eigenstates of S_y?

i got that one of them was the column vector, say, x:
x_1

ix_1

and the other vector y:
y_1

-iy_1

but I was not convinced by this because, if the upper component is say, x1, and I choose x1 = 1, then if I go to normalize it i do
1/sqrt[(1^2) + (i^2)] = 1/(1-1) = 0, so how can this be right if I am getting a normalization constant of zero?
 
You forgot to take the conjugate. You should be calculating \langle x|x \rangle = x^\dagger x, not x^T x.
 
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