The rotational analog of Ehrenfest's Theorem

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around demonstrating a relationship involving the time derivative of the expectation value of angular momentum and the torque in a quantum mechanical context. The subject area is quantum mechanics, specifically focusing on the properties of operators and commutators in relation to angular momentum.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the application of commutators in the context of angular momentum and Hamiltonians. There is an exploration of how to manipulate the commutator involving the cross product of position and momentum operators. Questions arise regarding the distribution of operators over the cross product and the validity of different expressions encountered in external resources.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, sharing their attempts and questioning specific steps in the derivation. Some guidance has been provided regarding the manipulation of commutators, but there is no explicit consensus on the correct approach or resolution of the problem.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of confusion stemming from differing expressions found in external solutions, indicating potential discrepancies in understanding the application of commutators. Participants are also considering the use of Cartesian components to simplify the problem, suggesting a variety of approaches being explored.

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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