Unitarity angular momentum operators

Yoran91
Messages
33
Reaction score
0
Hi,

I'm confused by a sentence in a set of lecture notes I have on quantum mechanics. In it, it is assumed there is some representation \pi of SO(3) on a Hilbert space. This representation is assumed to be irreducible and unitary.

It is then said that the operators J_i, which are said to be the infinitesimal generators of the rotation group satisfying [J_i,J_j]=i \epsilon_{ijk}, are Hermitian as a consequence of the unitarity of this representation.

This confuses me. Shouldn't they say that the operators \pi (J_i) are Hermitian? Are they writing J_i for both the infinitesimal generators of the group and the operators they are mapped to?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Yoran91 said:
This confuses me. Shouldn't they say that the operators \pi (J_i) are Hermitian? Are they writing J_i for both the infinitesimal generators of the group and the operators they are mapped to?

Yes, they should do so. But it is quite common to write J for some representation.
 
Thanks for your quick answer.

Does that, then, imply that the Casimir operator is actually \sum_i \pi(J_i)^2?
Do the commutation relations satisfied by the Lie group generators carry over to the operators under the representation map? I can see that

[\pi(J_i),\pi(J_j)] = \pi(J_i)\pi(J_j) - \pi(J_j)\pi(J_i) = \pi(J_i J_j) -\pi(J_j J_i),

but I don't see why I could conclude that the last line equals \pi([J_i,J_j])

EDIT: The only way I could see that happen if the representation is linear, but I haven't seen that assumed in its definition. Should that be included?
 
Last edited:
The representation is linear, if the representation space is linear (and a separable Hilbert space is).
 
How so? I mean : how do you know the representation is linear whenever the representation space is?
 
In QM it's the result of the theorem of Wigner. The representation operators can only be linear or antilinear (i.e. conjugate linear).
 
Not an expert in QM. AFAIK, Schrödinger's equation is quite different from the classical wave equation. The former is an equation for the dynamics of the state of a (quantum?) system, the latter is an equation for the dynamics of a (classical) degree of freedom. As a matter of fact, Schrödinger's equation is first order in time derivatives, while the classical wave equation is second order. But, AFAIK, Schrödinger's equation is a wave equation; only its interpretation makes it non-classical...
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
Is it possible, and fruitful, to use certain conceptual and technical tools from effective field theory (coarse-graining/integrating-out, power-counting, matching, RG) to think about the relationship between the fundamental (quantum) and the emergent (classical), both to account for the quasi-autonomy of the classical level and to quantify residual quantum corrections? By “emergent,” I mean the following: after integrating out fast/irrelevant quantum degrees of freedom (high-energy modes...
Back
Top