PhysicsKin
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Hello! This is my first time posting, so please correct me if I have done anything incorrectly.
There's something that I don't understand about the spin-orbit interaction.
First of all I know that
[\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{L_z}] \ne 0
[\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{S_z}] \ne 0
so this means that \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L} doesn't share a common set of eigenstates with \hat{S_z} and \hat{L_z}.
I know that | nlm_lsm_s> is a common eigenstate for \hat{S_z} and \hat{L_z},
so that would mean it is not an eigenstate for \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}.
However, I've read that <nlm_l'sm_s'|\hat{S}\cdot\hat{J}|nlm_lsm_s>\ne0 for all m_l \ne m_l', m_s\ne m_s' i.e. the diagonal elements are non-zero. Surely if | nlm_lsm_s> is not an eigenstate of \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, then the matrix element cannot be evaluated?
Thank you in advance!
There's something that I don't understand about the spin-orbit interaction.
First of all I know that
[\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{L_z}] \ne 0
[\hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, \hat{S_z}] \ne 0
so this means that \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L} doesn't share a common set of eigenstates with \hat{S_z} and \hat{L_z}.
I know that | nlm_lsm_s> is a common eigenstate for \hat{S_z} and \hat{L_z},
so that would mean it is not an eigenstate for \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}.
However, I've read that <nlm_l'sm_s'|\hat{S}\cdot\hat{J}|nlm_lsm_s>\ne0 for all m_l \ne m_l', m_s\ne m_s' i.e. the diagonal elements are non-zero. Surely if | nlm_lsm_s> is not an eigenstate of \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, then the matrix element cannot be evaluated?
Thank you in advance!