Paper 3, Section II, D

Principles of Quantum Mechanics
Part II, 2011

The Pauli matrices σ=(σx,σy,σz)=(σ1,σ2,σ3)\boldsymbol{\sigma}=\left(\sigma_{x}, \sigma_{y}, \sigma_{z}\right)=\left(\sigma_{1}, \sigma_{2}, \sigma_{3}\right), with

σ1=(0110),σ2=(0ii0),σ3=(1001)\sigma_{1}=\left(\begin{array}{cc} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{array}\right), \quad \sigma_{2}=\left(\begin{array}{cc} 0 & -i \\ i & 0 \end{array}\right), \quad \sigma_{3}=\left(\begin{array}{cc} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{array}\right)

are used to represent angular momentum operators with respect to basis states |\uparrow\rangle and |\downarrow\rangle corresponding to spin up and spin down along the zz-axis. They satisfy

σiσj=δij+iϵijkσk\sigma_{i} \sigma_{j}=\delta_{i j}+i \epsilon_{i j k} \sigma_{k}

(i) How are |\uparrow\rangle and |\downarrow\rangle represented? How is the spin operator s related to σ\sigma and \hbar ? Check that the commutation relations between the spin operators are as desired. Check that s2\mathbf{s}^{2} acting on a spin one-half state has the correct eigenvalue.

What are the states obtained by applying sx,sys_{x}, s_{y} to the eigenstates |\uparrow\rangle and |\downarrow\rangle of szs_{z} ?

(ii) Let VV be the space of states for a spin one-half system. Consider a combination of three such systems with states belonging to V(1)V(2)V(3)V^{(1)} \otimes V^{(2)} \otimes V^{(3)} and spin operators acting on each subsystem denoted by sx(i),sy(i)s_{x}^{(i)}, s_{y}^{(i)} with i=1,2,3i=1,2,3. Find the eigenvalues of the operators

sx(1)sy(2)sy(3),sy(1)sx(2)sy(3),sy(1)sy(2)sx(3) and sx(1)sx(2)sx(3)s_{x}^{(1)} s_{y}^{(2)} s_{y}^{(3)}, \quad s_{y}^{(1)} s_{x}^{(2)} s_{y}^{(3)}, \quad s_{y}^{(1)} s_{y}^{(2)} s_{x}^{(3)} \quad \text { and } \quad s_{x}^{(1)} s_{x}^{(2)} s_{x}^{(3)}

of the state

Ψ=12[123123]|\Psi\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left[|\uparrow\rangle_{1}|\uparrow\rangle_{2}|\uparrow\rangle_{3}-|\downarrow\rangle_{1}|\downarrow\rangle_{2}|\downarrow\rangle_{3}\right]

(iii) Consider now whether these outcomes for measurements of particular combinations of the operators sx(i),sy(i)s_{x}^{(i)}, s_{y}^{(i)} in the state Ψ|\Psi\rangle could be reproduced by replacing the spin operators with classical variables s~x(i),s~y(i)\tilde{s}_{x}^{(i)}, \tilde{s}_{y}^{(i)} which take values ±/2\pm \hbar / 2 according to some probabilities. Assume that these variables are identical to the quantum measurements of sx(1)sy(2)sy(3),sy(1)sx(2)sy(3),sy(1)sy(2)sx(3)s_{x}^{(1)} s_{y}^{(2)} s_{y}^{(3)}, s_{y}^{(1)} s_{x}^{(2)} s_{y}^{(3)}, s_{y}^{(1)} s_{y}^{(2)} s_{x}^{(3)} on Ψ|\Psi\rangle. Show that classically this implies a unique possibility for

s~x(1)s~x(2)s~x(3),\tilde{s}_{x}^{(1)} \tilde{s}_{x}^{(2)} \tilde{s}_{x}^{(3)},

and find its value.

State briefly how this result could be used to experimentally test quantum mechanics.