Wavefunction of a space and spin rotated state

NiRK20
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Homework Statement
Basically, I have the wavefunction of a particle with spin (not necessarly 1/2) given by ##\psi(\textbf{r}, m) = \psi _{m} (\textbf{r}) = \langle\textbf{r}, m|\psi \rangle##. My task is to find the wavefunction of a rotated state ##U(R)|\psi \rangle##, with ##U## being the product of a spacial rotation by a spin rotation.
Relevant Equations
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Since ##U## is a space and spin rotation, it would be

$$U(R) = e^{-i\textbf{L}\cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}\phi/\hbar}\cdot e^{-i\textbf{S}\cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}\phi/\hbar}$$

And, then

$$\psi'(\textbf{r}, m) = \langle\textbf{r}, m|e^{-i\phi(\textbf{L} + \textbf{S}) \cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}/\hbar}|\psi \rangle = \sum_{m'}\int \langle\textbf{r}, m|e^{-i\phi(\textbf{L} + \textbf{S}) \cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}/\hbar}|\textbf{r}', m'\rangle\psi _{m'}(\textbf{r}') d^{3}r'$$

The problem is where to go from here (if this is right until now). There is a way to compute these matrix elements? Does ##|\textbf{r}\rangle## equals to the eigenkets of angular momentum ##|nlm\rangle##?
 
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It is difficult to answer because it depends on what is expected. Can you post the full text of the question?

NiRK20 said:
$$U(R) = e^{-i\textbf{L}\cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}\phi/\hbar}\cdot e^{-i\textbf{S}\cdot \hat{\textbf{n}}\phi/\hbar}$$
How does ##U(R)## become a function of ##\phi## only?

NiRK20 said:
Does ##|\textbf{r}\rangle## equals to the eigenkets of angular momentum ##|nlm\rangle##?
No, they are completely different. This is how you recover the wave function for a given ##n,l,m## from the ket:
$$
\psi_{n,l,m} (\mathbf{r}) = \braket{\mathbf{r} | nlm}
$$
 
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