The rotational analog of Ehrenfest's Theorem

Bobbo Snap
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Homework Statement


Show \frac{d}{dt}\langle\bf{L}\rangle = \langle \bf{N} \rangle where \bf{N} = \bf{r}\times(-\nabla V)

2. Homework Equations .
\frac{d}{dt}\langle A \rangle = \frac{i}{\hbar} \langle [H, A] \rangle

The Attempt at a Solution


I get to this point: \frac{i}{\hbar}\langle [H,L] \rangle = \frac{i}{\hbar}\langle [H, r \times p] \rangle and then I'm stuck. I know the next step is supposed to use something like [H, r \times p] = [H,r] \times p + r \times [H,p] but I don't see how to get this. I don't understand how operators distribute over the cross-product. Can anyone help or point me to some online resource where I can study how to work with operators/commutators/ etc.? I've been searching the internet all day with little to show for it.
 
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Hey Bobbo Snap,

[H,L] = HL - LH = H(r\times p) - (r\times p)H = (Hr)\times p - (rH)\times p = [H,r]\times p
 
Thanks PhysicsGente, your expression is exactly what I keep getting. That is,
[H, r \times p] = [H, r]\times p.

Maybe my mistake is trying to follow a solution I found which includes an extra term. It begins with the commutator reversed though, like this:
[r \times p, H] = r \times [p, H] + [r, H] \times p
I don't get how they come up with this.
 
I find it least confusing to just write it out in Cartesian components. For the x-component of the identity that you want to prove, use Lx = (r x p)x = (ypz - zpy). Then simplify [H, Lx]. The y- and z-components of the identity then follow by "cyclic permutation" of x,y,z. Not very elegant, but it gets the job done.
 
Bobbo Snap said:
Thanks PhysicsGente, your expression is exactly what I keep getting. That is,
[H, r \times p] = [H, r]\times p.

Maybe my mistake is trying to follow a solution I found which includes an extra term. It begins with the commutator reversed though, like this:
[r \times p, H] = r \times [p, H] + [r, H] \times p
I don't get how they come up with this.

You can also write it as [H, r \times p] = r\times [H, p]. I don't see why you'd need the second term though. Just calculate the commutator [H, p] and you should be done.
 
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