Quantum Fundamentals: NoTerm-2023
HW 7 : Due Day 18 W 3/8

  1. Matrix Elements and Completeness Relations S0 4640S

    Writing an operator in matrix notation in its own basis is easy: it is diagonal with the eigenvalues on the diagonal.

    What if I want to calculate the matrix elements using a different basis??

    The eigenvalue equation tells me what happens when an operator acts on its own eigenstate. For example: \(\hat{S}_y\left|{\pm}\right\rangle _y=\pm\frac{\hbar}{2}\left|{\pm}\right\rangle _y\)

    In Dirac bra-ket notation, to know what an operator does to a ket, I need to write the ket in the basis that is the eigenstates of the operator (in order to use the eigenvalue equation.)

    One way to do this is to stick completeness relationships into the braket: \begin{eqnarray*} \left\langle {+}\right|\hat{S_y}\left|{+}\right\rangle = \left\langle {+}\right|(I)\hat{S_y}(I)\left|{+}\right\rangle \end{eqnarray*}

    where \(I\) is the identity operator: \(I=\color{blue}{\left|{+}\right\rangle _{yy}\left\langle {+}\right|}\;+\;\color{blue}{\left|{-}\right\rangle _{yy}\left\langle {-}\right|}\). This effectively rewrites the \(\left|{+}\right\rangle \) in the \(\left|{\pm}\right\rangle _y\) basis.

    Find the top row matrix elements of the operator \(\hat{S}_y\) in the \(S_z\) basis by inserting completeness relations into the brakets. (The answer is already on the Spins Reference Sheet, but I want you to demonstrate the calculation.)

  2. Probabilities of Energy S0 4640S (adapted from McIntyre Problem # 3.2)
    1. Show that the probability of a measurement of the energy is time independent for a general state:

      \[\left|{\psi(t)}\right\rangle = \sum_n c_n(t) \left|{E_n}\right\rangle \]

      that evolves due to a time-independent Hamiltonian.

    2. Show that the probabilities of measurements of other observables that commute with the Hamiltonian are also time independent (neither operator has degeneracy).
  3. Spin Three Halves Operators S0 4640S If a beam of spin-3/2 particles is input to a Stern-Gerlach analyzer, there are four output beams whose deflections are consistent with magnetic moments arising from spin angular momentum components of \(\frac{3}{2}\hbar\), \(\frac{1}{2}\hbar\), \(-\frac{1}{2}\hbar\), and \(-\frac{3}{2}\hbar\). For a spin-3/2 system:
    1. Write down the eigenvalue equations for the \(S_z\) operator.
    2. Write down the matrix representation of the \(S_z\) eigenstates in the \(S_z\) basis.
    3. Write down the matrix representation of the \(S_z\) operator in the \(S_z\) basis.
    4. Write down the eigenvalue equations for the \(S^2\) operator. (The eigenvalues of the \(S^2\) are \(\hbar^2s(s+1)\), where \(s\) is the spin quantum number. \(S^2=(S_x)^2+(S_y)^2+(S_z)^2\), which is proportional to the identify operator. For spin-3/2 system, \(s=\frac{3}{2}\))
    5. Write down the matrix representation of the \(S^2\) operator in the \(S_z\) basis. Check Beasts: Is your operator proportional to the identity operator?