Friday, October 18, 2024

The Spin Chronicles (Part 4): spin up and down

This post is a continuation of "The Spin Chronicles (Part 3): Spin frames". It is purely technical. This previous post ended with:

"In other words, when you rotate an element of O(V) by an SU(2) matrix A, the corresponding lab element rotates, too, by and SO(3) matrix R(A). It’s like a cosmic interlock between spinors and real-world rotations."

Today we will see how this can be realized, and, in fact, is realized, in quantum mechanics. I should say that I am not happy with this way of dealing with spin, but, at the moment, this is the best I can do. What I present here is just one way of dealing with spinors. There are other formulations possible, but, in fact, they are all equivalent and equally unsatisfactory.

I should say that I am not happy with this way of dealing with spin

We will treat V as a Hilbert space, with its scalar product (u|v).

Note: Here, more in the spirit of quantum physics we will use the notation (u|v) instead of (u,v) for the scalar product.

Once we have a Hilbert space, we have linear operators acting on this space. Let us denote the space of linear operators  by L(V). Then L(V) becomes itself a Hilbert space if we define the scalar product by

(A|B) = Tr(A*B),

where (*) denotes the Hermitian conjugation, and "Tr" stands for "trace". In an orthonormal basis operators are represented by matrices, and (*) becomes the ordinary Hermitian conjugation of matrices (complex conjugate and transpose), while trace becomes the sum of diagonal elements of the matrix. Notice that (A|B)* = (B|A), where now (*) is applied to a complex number, and denotes the ordinary complex conjugation, usually denoted by a "bar" over that number. But "bar" is easy in Latex, and not really supported on the web page. So I will stick with the (*) notation.


In L(V) we have, in particular, Hermitian operators. The set of all Hermitian operators is a real vector space. We denote it by H(V). For Hermitian A,B the scalar product (A|B) is real. So H(V) is a real vector space, with a real scalar product. In order to see what kind of scalar product it is, we need a basis in H(A), So, let us construct one. First of all, given any two unit vectors u,v in V, where where "unit" means (u|u) = (v|v) = 1,we denote by |u)(v| the operator in L(V) defined as

|u)(v| w = (v|w) u.

Then (|u)(v|)*= |v)(u|

Then |u)(u| is the orthogonal projection operator on u. It acts, by definition, as

|u)(u| v =(u|v)u

It is Hermitian (thus in H(V)), and idempotent (that means ( |u)(u| )2 = |u)(u|. Its eigenvalues are 1 and 0. Its eigenvectors are u (for eigenvalue 1), and 0 for any non-zero vector orthogonal to u). Sometimes it is easier yo write Pu instead of |u)(u|. So we have Pu=Pu*, and Pu2 = Pu, (Pu|Pu) = 1. We will construct a basis in H(V) from a basis in V. But first let us talk some "physics". Let us think of "spin in a given direction" as a binary quantity. It can be "up" or "down". So, we want to associate with its "measurement" a Hermitian operator with eigenvalues +1 and -1, +1 for "up" and -1 for "down". But which one? The answer, as far as I know, is this: "anyone", but it should be done in a "consistent" way. We can do it as follows: first choose an orthonormal basis e1,e2 in V. Then we have the following (easy to prove) Theorem:

Theorem: Every Hermitian operator with eigenvalues ±1 can be uniquely represented as σ(n) = n1σ1+n2σ2+n3σ3, where
σ1,σ2,σ3 are the Pauli matrices

Pauli matrices

and n is a unit vector in R3. Conversely, if n is a unit vector in R3, then σ(n) represents a Hermitian operator with eigenvalues ±1 in the basis e1,e2. Moreover, if A is any matrix from SU(2), then

A σ(n) A* = σ( R(A)n ).

Now we associate spin "up" in "z" direction in the lab with n =(0,0,1). The formula above allows us to consistently associate Hermitian operator, namely σ(n), with "spin up" in any direction.

Why is that not quite satisfactory? The problem is that we have chosen the particular Pauli matrices above. Why these and not other? If U is any unitary matrix, then the matrices U σi U* would do as well. This seems to tell us that these "spin directions" are in a space that looks and behaves as "our space", but it is not "our space". It is a mystery that needs to be understood. We will continue these considerations in the next post.

 

P.S.4 Time is a function of consciousness. Just one of the "observables", or "dimensions"  of the consciousness topological space. It has nothing to do with space. Space-time is a trap. There are other "observables", infinitely many of them. Consciousness can be organized in many different, incompatible ways. Roughly.

P.S.5.  Gonçalves, Madeira, "The Problem of Time in Quantum Cosmology and Non-chronometric Temporality", with their "binary relational structure" and "magma" - added to my reading list and started reading. But where is consciousness? Only in this sentence:

"According to Einstein (1953, [2004]) the states of consciousness of an individual appear, to that individual, pictured in a series of events in which each particular state, accessible to the individual’s memory, appears to be placed in accordance with an irreducible criterion of a “before” and an “after”. There is, thus, to each individual, a sense of personal time, a subjective time that is not, in itself, and, still according to Einstein (1954, [2004]), measurable, although one can associate numbers to the different events, such that what takes place after something else, always gets a higher number, even if only the ordering of events matters, for the subjective time, and not the particular distance between the two numbers, which means that this time is not metrizable, but, solely expressible upon an ordinal scale."

P.S.6 Recently discovered: Marcin Schroeder,  my ex-PhD student. I was trying to force him to work with simplicial complexes and algebraic topology, but he has chosen  a more ambitious career. His papers about philosophical issues of  information theory on academia.edu - very interesting.

P.S.7. Back to Aristotle, Galileo and Newton (and Cartan) - so I acquired this wonderful book:


Not to mention the fact that my name is listed in the References several times (with those of Blanchard, Canarutto, Janyška and Modugno).

P.S.8. Reading now (p. 409):


P.S.9. 

https://twitter.com/revoltwear/status/1654521604251197440

P.S.10.


P.S. 18-10-24 9:28 Igor Bayak (1.1.6)



 

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

katex test

Math can be inline like \(2^{2x}=4\), or displayed like:

\[2^{3x}=8\]

The Spin Chronicles (Part 4): spin up and down

This post is a continuation of " The Spin Chronicles (Part 3): Spin frames ". It is purely technical . This previ...