Spin-orbit Interaction & Degenerate Perturbation Theory

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!
 
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PhysicsKin said:
Surely if | nlm_lsm_s> is not an eigenstate of \hat{S} \cdot \hat{L}, then the matrix element cannot be evaluated?
I can't follow your conclusion.
 
Hiya! Thanks for the reply!

I think my thought process went like this:
Suppose I have an operator \hat{Q}, then the eigenvalue equation \hat{Q} |q>=q|q> can only be evaluated if |q> is an eigenstate of \hat{Q}.
Then since |nlm_lsm_s> is not an eigenstate of \hat{S}\cdot\hat{L}, then surely the matrix element <nlm_l'sm_s'| \hat{S}\cdot\hat{L}|nlm_lsm_s> could not be evaluated? I feel like something went wrong, because all the books I've read managed to evaluate it to be \ne 0 for m_l'\ne m_l \& m_s'\ne m_s. Or could you shed some light into how to go about evaluating it?

Thank you so much!
 
Of course, |q> is only an eigenstate if it fulfills the eigenvalue equation. However, Q can act on any state within it's domain of definition, only that the resulting state will not be a multiple of the original state.
E.g. take ##Q=L_z## and ## |q\rangle =a |m>+b|m'>## where |m> and |m'> are eigenvectors of ##>L_z## with corresponding eigenvalues m and m', respectively. Then ##L_z|q\rangle=a m |m\rangle +b m' |m'\rangle##.
 
Ok I see you what you mean, but how could I evaluate the matrix elements <nlm_l'sm_s'|\hat{S}\cdot\hat{L}|nlm_lsm_s> if I cannot use the eigenvalue equation?
 
PhysicsKin said:
Ok I see you what you mean, but how could I evaluate the matrix elements <nlm_l'sm_s'|\hat{S}\cdot\hat{L}|nlm_lsm_s> if I cannot use the eigenvalue equation?
Either you express ##| n l m_l m_s \rangle## in terms of a linear combination of eigenstates of ##\hat{S}\cdot\hat{L}## (in this particular case, using Clebsch-Gordan coefficients), or you actually calculate the integral corresponding to the bracket, as you would do to calculate ##\langle \hat{x} \rangle## or ##\langle \hat{p} \rangle## for say an eigenstate of the harmonic oscillator.
 
Is there a quick way to show that it is not diagonal?
 
PhysicsKin said:
Is there a quick way to show that it is not diagonal?
$$
[\hat{L}_z, \hat{S}\cdot\hat{L} ] \neq 0
$$
 
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