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00:37
guys I've begun reading about angular momentum addition. My professor's notes(taken by me during lectures) aren't clear enough, unfortunately. So I searched online and found this by Prof. Zweibach ocw.mit.edu/courses/8-05-quantum-physics-ii-fall-2013/…
Most of the stuff he says I did not understand completely like the thing about direct sum of representation, etc etc.
My conclusion is: we know that since the two operators $S^2,S_z$ commute with each other, we want to find a basis of simultaneous eigenkets
we then choose to work with the basis $2.7$
I have the momentum operators $\hat{S}_z = S_z^{(1)}+S_z^{(2)}$ and $\mathbf{\hat{S}}^2 = \mathbf{S}_1^2+ \mathbf{S}_2^2 + 2\mathbf{S}_1 \cdot \mathbf{S}_2$, now represented, wrt the following basis $\mathcal{B} = \{|++\rangle, |+-\rangle, |-+\rangle, |--\rangle\}$, by the following $ {4\times4}$ matrices:
$$ S^2 = \hbar^2\begin{bmatrix}
2 & 0 & 0 \\
0 & \mathbb{J}_2 & 0 \\
0 & 0 & 2 \\
\end{bmatrix};S_z = \hbar\begin{bmatrix}
1 & 0 & 0 \\
0 & [0]_2 & 0 \\
0 & 0 & 1 \\
\end{bmatrix}
$$
where $J_i$ is a all-ones matrix and $[0]$ the null matrix
now I restrict myself to the subspace spanned by $|+-\rangle, |-+\rangle$ and I diagonalize $S^2$ restricted to this subspace
and I have successfully removed the degeneracy in the subspace of $S_z$ and I now have a CSCO since no two vectors have the same eigenvalues for both $S_z,S^2$
why isn't the matter presented in this way?
The question is: is what I did somehow related to this weird and obscure result: $1/2 \otimes 1/2 = 1 \oplus 0$?
00:59
@ClaudioMenchinelli i would not characterize this result as being weird because it is a mathematical fact. you can prove a characterization of all projective representations of $SO(3)$ (this characterization is in math language what physics textbooks call the theory of angular momentum) in terms of irreducible representations. then taking direct sums of irreps allows you to construct any representation. in particular you can decompose a tensor product of irreps into a direct sum of irreps.
(is a mathematical fact about representations of a compact group)
My professor never mentioned projective representations of $SO(3)$ nor irreducible representations. He just gave me 2.27
I forgot to say: weird and obscure result $\textbf{to me}$
so my approach is correct
?
but why do we denote the eigenvalues of $S^2$ as $1,0$?
I don't get the one unfortunately
only the zero
Ok I get it now
@SillyGoose do you have any refs about what you've just stated?
@SillyGoose maybe something very noob-friendly on the subject :P
Brian C. Hall's Lie groups, lie algebras, and representations ch.4 section 6 classifies the representations of an algebra that is the relevant algebra when talking about spin in quantum mechanics. and the computation is actually mostly linear algebra. but some of the crucial facts are representation theoretic.
but it might take a bit to build up to that part of the text
are you familiar with representation theory?
the first two chapters contain the necessary definitions and relevant theories
the operational thinking is this. 1) representations of compact groups/algebras are decomposable into a direct sum of irreducible representations. 2) finite dimension projective representations of $SO(3)$ model quantum spin correctly. 3) these projective representations are equivalent to normal representations of $\mathfrak{su(2)}$ or $\mathfrak{sl}(2;\mathbb{C})$. 4) do some linear algebra and such to classify all irreducible representations of $\mathfrak{sl}(2;\mathbb{C})$
i think the subject can be a bit overwhelming though (at least it is for me) :P can try to pick it up in bits and pieces.
But if you want to learn some lie theory/representation theory, I was recommended to use Brian C. Hall's text because it deals with groups of matrices, which are very concrete. Other canonical texts deal with lie groups in the abstract, which makes things harder in the sense of increasing the pre-reqs to include some differential geometry and so on. and, applications to physics usually is for groups of matrices, not groups in the abstract.
01:37
@SillyGoose You say that you are following Sakurai, but you miss the wonderful result that Sakurai has; your Equations (6) do not seem to have anything to do with Sakurai and visibly seems to mix up the perturbations with the unperturbed ket, and it would not be obvious how to solve them. Your Taylor expansions in Equations (3) and (4), the middle part, is also nonsense because you already substituted zero for the parameter; you have to differentiate first before substitution.
@SillyGoose Equation (8) is just wrong. Sakurai's problem 5.15 explicitly fails if you assert the wrong thing.
@naturallyInconsistent oh yes i was using some sloppy notation where $0$ in the input means evaluate after differentiating
everything in the Ignore section is to be ignored :P since it is wrong but still usable LaTex for later
@SillyGoose What is $O$? You should be very wrong here too; The perturbation does not have to have zero action on the unperturbed kets. It just needs to be diagonalised. That is very very different.
i think i was mixing up some of the problems and their resolutions though for sure
@ClaudioMenchinelli The restriction is purely for the sake of simplicity. You can choose to diagonalise the matrix in its original 4x4 grandeur; the eigenkets are clearly $$\left\{\begin{pmatrix}1\\0\\0\\0\end {pmatrix},\begin{pmatrix}0\\1/\sqrt2\\1/\sqrt2\\0\end {pmatrix},\begin{pmatrix}0\\1/\sqrt2\\-1/\sqrt2\\0\end {pmatrix},\begin{pmatrix}0\\0\\0\\1\end {pmatrix}\right\}$$
@ClaudioMenchinelli Then you note that the $S^2$ eigenvalues of this set is compartmentalised into one single one having $S^2=0$ and the other set of three have $S^2=2=1(1+1)$. i.e. simply rearranging your eigenkets to put them together, you realise that you have a spin-zero and a spin-one irrep as the result of coupling two spin-halfs together.
 
2 hours later…
03:20
okay i think i understand time-independent perturbation theory now lol
1) you do non-degenerate perturbation theory via inverting an operator. there are no singularities here. 2) you observe that the inverting the operator method does not work in a degenerate subspace because you get singularities. okay! then try another method. the new method is to solve the schrödinger equation proper in the degenerate subspace!!!
so there literally are no singularities. every time you encounter a singularity, you either cannot use the method you've just tried OR you have done a computational error.
oops the first equation in (12) should not have an $= 0$ on the right hand side
03:50
@SillyGoose what do you mean by solving the Schrödinger equation proper?
04:08
@SillyGoose but of course this is correct. It is physics, after all. Annoyances that are not experimentally there, must have some way to be dealt with.
04:35
@naturallyInconsistent err sorry i should say solving the eigenvalue problem proper (in the degenerate subspace)
instead of doing inverse operator shenanigans
i guess i didn't understand this properly. after reading and re-reading sakurai, i was left with the impression that we are disregarding singularities. not that there are no singularities at any point in a correct procedure of perturbation theory (in this context)
04:52
@SillyGoose The funny part is that the presentations do explicitly state that it is about diagonalisation. Sakurai is not emphasising it, but I know that the others do.
05:37
Actually, Wacky Fowl, do you know what I am talking about when I say that the presentations do explicitly state this? It feels like you didn't catch it.
@naturallyInconsistent I think I did not understand that the diagonalization is a method to replace our method of inverting the operator, which is invalid due to the singularities you would encounter had you inverted
I do get that sakurai and so on say to diagonalize, but I don't think I caught that we should diagonalize simply because that it is another way of approaching the problem and our first way doesn't work. the emphasis on it being a "resolution" to a "singularity problem" threw me off because it does not resolve the singularity problem. it is just another way of handling the problem more carefully
the singularity problem is not even a problem with the operator or the problem we're trying to solve. it's a problem with us as solvers of the problem being careless
but now it is a lot more clear
it is like solving $x\cdot x = x$. at first sakurai tries looking for solutions based off of $x^2/x = x/1 \iff x = 1, x \neq 0$. which works given $x \neq 0$. it so happens that $x \neq 0$ is satisfied always in non-degenerate perturbation theory. then we move to degenerate and have to look at the full statement of the problem $x^2 = x$ and solve it from there (albeit within a restricted domain and with some freedom due to degeneracy)
05:55
@SillyGoose But many authors should have asserted that the issue is that there is a potential for a singularity to arise, and that the place it could have been happening, is because the perturbation series involves many instances of $\frac{\left<m\right|V\left|n\right>}{H_0-E_D}$. It is plausible for singularity to arise in these expressions if the numerator is non-zero; and so the correct way to deal with them is to make the numerator always zero via diagonalisation,
hm well i guess i still don't understand that logic
because one can obtain that you should choose your degenerate subspace eigenstates to be eigenstates of the perturbation $V$ without saying the numerator of something should be $0$ (at least I think so, perhasp I did something wrong)
so that the zero in the denominator becomes no longer destructive. Note that it is a diagonalisation: $\left<\ell\right|V\left|\ell\right>$ does not need to be zero. As long as the degenerate subspace is not having off-diagonal terms, none of the potential singularities will be an actual singularity
@SillyGoose Yes, but this is the argument that will be most clearest to physicists: do it properly or else the fire burns!
i have been stuck on this for so long...
Also, Sakurai problem 5.15 is a direct example where V is zero in the subspace, so that the degeneracy is only lifted in 2nd order perturbation. i.e. it can be arbitrarily complicated how this thing is actually done.
idk i guess to me the loose analogy i wrote above makes it clear that this "inverting operator" method in general destroys information
in the simple case, you lose the solution $x = 0$.
then one can immediately observe that if a destruction of information is happening due to the method, you must use another method
@naturallyInconsistent i am def going to do this problem soon hehe
06:02
Ah, but here we are explicitly saying that x=0 is unphysical and so it needs to be gone...
right i get that and in non-degenerate p-theory that is what is done and I am cool with that
In degen p-th it is also what is done
basically, it is just generally the case that you are always diagonalising the perturbation in your degenerate subspaces. It just so happens that in non-degen, the subspace is dim=1 and trivially diagonalised
hm but I don't see how you can justify throwing away the singular points
there is thus no singularity anywhere
here I justify it by never inverting the operator and so never encountering singular points because the equation proper is mathematically equivalent to an eigenequation in the degenerate subspace
06:06
Eigenequation = diagonalising...
in non-degenerate, for example, you can justify never encountering singular points by orthogonality of $\langle n^{(0)} \lvert n^{(j)}\rangle$ for $j = 1, 2, ...$
in particular, any time you act with the inverse of the operator will be on higher order corrections to the eigenstate, each of which have no contribution from the singular point.
@SillyGoose In degen, $\left<\ell,\alpha|\ell,\beta\right>=\delta_{\alpha\beta}\propto\left<\ell,\alpha|V|\ell,\beta\right>$ after the process of diagonalisation, i.e. eigen-equation
well i am not arguing against a diagonalization
And from then on it is free for us to invert the operator because it is never singular
hm well in my books $\frac{0}{0}$ is singular
06:11
@SillyGoose If the numerator is a stronger zero than the denominator, this is always zero. That's what the authors are trying to say
hm but i just don't get why even hand-wave in that way here
Because it is natural for physicists to reason in such a way?
well I think it is confusing :P
If you can find a way that is demonstrably better without causing other students to be confused, then we might consider using that treatment in the future
i personally like the way i have written it up (though it is probably more idiosyncratic than pedagogical)
06:16
I can tell you that it is not going to be readable for other students. You will have a much better time if you write it out as a matrix, because then the diagonalness is extremely visually striking.
oh yeah i want to draw some images...since that helps when dealing with the degenerate subspace and what not business
I think part of the thing that got lost in translation is that the fundamental problem of perturbation theory is about diagonalisation in the first place. The statement that $H_0+\varepsilon V$ is a difficult problem to solve is exactly the statement that it is difficult to diagonalise that. Essentially, what is happening in degen p-th is that we have no choice but to manually diagonalise in the degen subspace, leaving the p-th to diagonalise over the non-degen bits.
yes!! that is what was not getting across to me as i read
but now it is clear
i think i will try 5.15 now
06:33
good
I havent tried the p-th expansions on it, but the diagonalisation is fun.
06:57
what is the point in debating what the "best" way to write something up is? i dont feel that this concept is useful at all.
@Relativisticcucumber treatments can be arbitrarily ugly! Notation can be so bad that it hinders scientific progress of nations for centuries on end. Such things do matter...
i think there are for sure bad ways
but i think as someone who is learning whats the point of debating what is the best way or why something is wrong? seems its more productive to just learn and move on?
But a debate on the best way to present something can dramatically change the student's understanding of stuff. For example, I have been trying to write up the Thomas precession answer that I wanted to write, but it is still mysterious even to myself. The treatment of "consider the proton orbiting the electron" is so bad that I am annoyed that people even tried it. The working I was typing up was trying to use some Lie algebra trickery, and then I couldn't get the correct rotation.
And then I found a totally different argumentation that is about putting a cone on top of a sphere and deriving the shrinking-ness of the rotation angle that way, i.e. a global rather than a local derivatives way to get the answer, and it is a fundamentally different kind of understanding.
 
1 hour later…
08:11
@ClaudioMenchinelli Your subspace is not an invariant subspace - the result of applying $S_\pm$ to $\lvert +-\rangle + c\lvert -+\rangle$ is not again a vector of this form (but contains $\lvert ++\rangle$ and $\lvert --\rangle$, too), so this doesn't mean anything.
The "obscure" result you're talking about is physically just the statement that $\lvert ++\rangle, \lvert +-\rangle + \lvert -+\rangle, \lvert --\rangle$ span an invariant subspace isomorphic to the usual spin-1 space, and $\lvert +-\rangle - \lvert -+\rangle has spin-0.
08:22
I have a Hunch
That question I had a while back about the necessity for the compactness of the kinematic group's timelike component
What if it relates to ordered topological vector spaces
Since a spacetime is basically that
what exactly do you mean by "kinematic group"?
and how are you identifying the "timelike component"?
It is a somewhat vague notion of a group acting on a space in such a way that it is "like a spacetime"
Basically having to obey a few axioms
It comprises the Poincaré group, Galilean group, De Sitter group, Carrolian group, etc
Basically it admits the rotation group as a subgroup and has something akin to a time direction
one condition of which being that the subgroups generated by the "boosts" are compact
errr *non compact
3
Q: Why must boosts be non-compact?

SlereahIt is a common argument in the theory of kinematic groups (the groups of motions for a spacetime) that the subgroups generated by boosts must be non-compact[1][2][3]. This is true of all commonly used kinematic groups such as the Poincaré group, Galilean group, De Sitter group, Anti De Sitter gro...

^cf this
I'm very confused
Mayhaps using the theory of ordered topological vector spaces might be a good way to define them basis-free
here in chat you say that the timelike component should be compact, but in your question you say the subgroups generated by boosts should be non-compact
08:29
What has you confused
which is it?
Non-compact
I misspoke :p
I mean if these subgroups were compact, what that would mean physically would be that you can get so fast that you're at rest again (with respect to your starting velocity), right?
After a wick rotation it becomes compact no?
@ekardnam_ no, Galilean boosts are non-compact, too (no speed limit)
08:32
@Slereah my view of this is with sezik. This is due to the highly non-trivial fact that we have inertial frames. For every boosted frame, there exists a frame boosted even faster, because either you can just do the same boost twice, or you can find an inverse boost to bring the frame to rest, and find out that there are faster frames than it. Thus, boost subgroup has to be non-compact
@ACuriousMind I think the fundamental reason behind it is that if the group is compact, there's no notion of causality
You don't have a split of your spacetime into past and future
yes, because you cannot distinguish between being at rest and moving forward; I think this would mess up all sorts of assumptions about physics
in order to make a technical argument I'd need to see a technical definition of "kinematic group" :P
@ACuriousMind Now im confused. After a wick rotation the metric become Euclidean and the boosts should become rotations.
@naturallyInconsistent The isometries of the Euclidean metric are rotations SO(4), but the Galilean group is not that
08:37
I guess which of the two applies here depends on what exactly you mean by "Wick rotation"
@ACuriousMind Yes, but SO(3,1) turns into SO(4) after a Wick rotation, isn't it? Galilean group isn't relevant because it is Lorentz group that converts to rotation group
SO(4) is very much not a kinematic group
@naturallyInconsistent On a formal level, there really isn't a process where Wick rotation "turns" one group into another
Formally presents shocked pikachu face
Wick rotation, as we use it in QFT, is just analytic continuation of scattering functions; there is no fully consistent "Euclidean physics" underlying it
08:41
the kinematic algebra basically follows these rules with the usual number of generators for a group acting on a spacetime :
\begin{eqnarray}
\left[J, H\right] &=& 0\\
\left[J, J\right] &=& J\\
\left[J, P\right] &=& P\\
\left[J, K\right] &=& K
\end{eqnarray}
Plus $J$ has the SO(3) algebra
also there's some condition on discrete symmetries but that is less interesting
@Slereah I still don't really know what a kinematic group is
It's a Lie group with a Lie algebra obeying those conditions
saying it has to be vaguely of the form of the Poincaré algebra isn't really a definition :P
Why not
The kinematic groups are well classified
Because all of these algebras also have compact forms, and apparently you want to say they're forbidden from being compact
08:45
Well yes, that is an extra condition on the group
And one which I would like to investigate
or, well, if you really only want this to be a real Lie algebra and you don't implicitly complexify as physicists often do, then this actually suffices as a definition but then there's just nothing to show - as a real Lie algebra this isn't compact (compute the Killing form), so it will have non-compact subgroups
The existence isn't the issue, it is more the motivation
@naturallyInconsistent i just did it :D
Like the boosts being non-compact is a pretty reasonable sounding condition, but otoh it still allows for some pretty weird group, so obviously there's more to it than just being like the Poincaré group
Which I suspect is just causality
Like you wouldn't have a partial ordering from causality that's invariant under the group I think
@SillyGoose 🥳
08:57
@ACuriousMind what i meant is what @naturallyInconsistent is saying
SO(4) is often called the Lorentz group of "Euclidean Minkowski spacetime" which is Euclidean 4-space
in the physics litterature
as much as hyperbolic space is often called "Euclidean AdS"
@ACuriousMind I always felt it was the opposite, stuff is more consistent in the Euclidean side of things and then we continue analitically to Minkowski
@ekardnam_ have you ever looked into how Wick rotation works for spinors? it's a mess
also, the Euclidean world isn't really physics as we usually understand it - since there is no distinguished time direction, the equations of motion aren't well-posed initial value problems
Can't just turn around to go back in time
@ACuriousMind not really, but I can see how spinors would be more "sensitive" to the change of the signature
Gets even worse when spacetime is curved
@ACuriousMind yeah i can see that
09:10
Doesn't seem to be a whole lot on group represetations for ordered topological vector spaces alas
Might have to figure it out myself
@Slereah what you mean by kinematic group is the isometry group of spacetime? (In a general spacetime not just Poincare for Minkowski)
Roughly speaking it maps allowed trajectories to allowed trajectories
@Slereah oh so isometries seem to be only a subgroup maybe
but maybe it is enough to prove it is not compact
I mean the two are connected
If you have your kinematic group, you can find some structures which are preserved by it
That's the whole theory of Klein spaces thing
is the isometry group of a lorentzian manifold always non-compact?
09:22
You can define the Lorentz group as the group that leaves the metric tensor invariant, but in some sense the metric tensor is also defined by the Lorentz group
because if yes then since it is a subgroup of the kinematic group also the kinematic group has to be not compact
@ekardnam_ Kinematic groups are local notions
As you may know manifolds may not have any isometry group at all
(outside of the identity)
The kinematic group wrt manifolds is what people mean when they say that GR is "locally Minkowski"
local in what sense? defined on the tangent space like lorentz group
@Slereah oh so isnt it always the lorentz group once you fix the signature to be (3, 1)
GR's kinematic group is the Poincaré group yes
Different kinematic groups are for other theories
@ekardnam_ yes
@Slereah oh okay I see what you mean
I was thinking less general than you
09:28
The simple example being that classical mechanics has the Galilean group as its kinematic group
@ACuriousMind Do I have the courage to get a glimpse of this monstrosity? Not today, not today.
10:02
sick way from the Russians to draw Young diagrams
also note that particles are hard to define in the Euclidean QFT
If I want the notion to be applicable to all kinematic group I'm still gonna have to deal with manifolds because the De Sitter group doesn't act on a vector space
ugh
let's say i expand $T(e^{iH(t) t})$ perturbatively, H(t) is the interaction picture hamiltonian. and then i expand $<0| T(\Pi \phi (x_i)|0>$ using the path intgeral perturbatively
how r these two expansions related
both sort of give the S-matrix. the former more explicitly
the latter needs to be fed to lsz before sort of giving a portion of the S matrix
sorry i think i meant $T(e^{\int H(t) dt})$ for the former
10:34
i think I have been dealing with the $\Omega$-background for more about an year now
I still don't know what it is
10:56
there is this great result that particles can only have 0 momentum in a massless euclidean qft
so the Fock space shud b like : vacuum, particle with zero momentum, two particles with zero momentum.....
this is because E^2+p^2=0 for massless, and energy cant b imaginary
wait does this also hold in the classical.theory then
so in a classical euclidean universe, massless particles stay at rest
11:32
Is a congruence of null geodesics always hypersurface orthogonal?
I would say no, but then why a congruence of null generators is?
Man, I can't get this stuff about null hypersurfaces from Physics books
Is there any diff geo book discussing these things?
 
1 hour later…
12:43
In ordered topological spaces, is what the math people calling a cone-saturated set the causal diamond of a set
The domain of dependence of the set I guess
13:05
lol
13:20
apparently Pythagoras got a bit of the runaround from the priests in Egypt
They were not enthused by having to teach some random greek kid because his important dad asked the pharaoh to do it
^this guy apparently
13:49
what do u gain from learning physics and math?
 
1 hour later…
15:04
Pharaohs mustve been really powerful
God on Earth
yeah. both religious and political power at its max
how come they got god status without even doing magic
sounds like North Korea
to be god on earth, you should be expected to do miracles everyday
Pharaohs died in wars
He made the nile rise every year
What more do you want
@Slereah on Earth in da big house
15:08
did Pharaos consciously scam others
or they believed they were gods
I don't think they left any writings of it if they did
Although the greek pharaohs kind of phoned it in
I think the Ptolemy's weren't super convinced of their divine stature
Also like the first few Roman emperors that humored the egyptians by pretending to be pharaohs
But IIRC they gave it up
15:21
it's generally safe to assume that people in the past largely believed in what they professed to believe in, just like people today do
Considering the egyptians considered the greeks to be basically children as far as civilizations go it must have been pretty humiliating for them to be conquered like that
Like if the Vatican was conquered by the US
Gonna replace the eucharist with hamburgers
the interplay of the different polytheistic religions of the Mediterranean is interesting because both Romans and Greeks were very willing to identify foreign gods as their own; I'm fairly certain the Greeks did not consider the Egyptian gods to be different gods in the sense we would understand the term
@Slereah a free hamburger would make going to church suddenly more appealing
generally - before they became Christians - the Romans were pretty content with leaving local religious practices as they were as long as they paid tribute and accepted some form of the interpretatio Romana that identified their gods with the Roman gods
@ACuriousMind I know that they certainly found the animal heads amusing
Also this is one of those things that people say but it's not entirely true
Pre-Christian religions placed less emphasis on orthodoxy and were more syncretic but it's not entirely true that they didn't care about it at all
IIRC at some point the Ptolemies basically stopped doing their pharaoh duties because they couldn't be arsed
15:31
@Slereah oh, I don't mean to imply they somehow cared less about their religion, they just found other aspects like proper ritual practice more important than the specific names or myths the others told about the gods
sounds like they were into equivalence classes
I mean they were fine with letting it go on, but from what I've read they weren't as interested in participating
and the Ptolemies were the worst anyway :P
they spent 300 years without learning the language of the empire they ruled
> If you consider the effects of Alexander's instruction, you will see that he educated the Hyrcanians to contract marriages, taught the Arachosians to till the soil, and persuaded the Sogdians to support their parents, not to kill them,and the Persians to respect their mothers, not to marry them. Most admirable philosophy, which induced the Indians to worship Greek gods, and the Scythians to bury their dead and not to eat them!
Plutarch was certainly not that respectful of foreign traditions :p
> And Socrates was condemned by the sycophants in Athens for introducing new deities, while thanks to Alexander Bactria and the Caucasus worshipped the gods of the Greeks. Plato drew up in writing one ideal constitution but could not persuade anyone to adopt it because of its severity, while Alexander founded over seventy cities among barbarian tribes, sprinkled Greek institutions all over Asia, and so overcame its wild and savage manner of living.
Few of us read Plato's Laws, but the laws of Alexander have been and are still used by millions of men.
He had an axe to grind
15:47
genghis was secular
you would almost think he was a good guy
he was good post-war according to historians
In a question on gravitational time dilation John Rennie gives a calculation for gravitational potential outside a mass and says it's, "the same result we get from the Schwarzschild metric, though you should note that the Schwarzschild r co-ordinate is subtly different from the r co-ordinate used in Newton's law."

How do the coordinates differ?
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/69043/the-higher-you-go-the-slower-is-ageing/69048#69048
Didn't Genghis Khan have muslim killed for following some rituals that he disagreed with on tengrist grounds
havent heard of that. maybe historians whitewashed it
@WaveInPlace $r$ isn't the radial distance
The radial distance you have to integrate
I'm not 100% sure I follow. Is this a variable-length-close-to-mass issue?
15:56
Coordinates do not have to be connected to distance in general relativity, they're just numbers that give you the location of a point
The actual distance in the Schwarzschild metric will be the calculated distance by checking the length of a spacelike radial geodesic, and this turns out not to be equal to r
It's bigger?
@ACuriousMind I read your messages
You said that the action of the ladder operators on the vectors that span the subspace returns vectors not belonging to that subspace
but I'm interested in the action of $\mathbf{S}^2$
If I let the latter act on the subspace-spanning vectors, I obtain a linear combination of them, which is totally fine. Why is my reasoning a failure then?
@ClaudioMenchinelli No, not really. What you're really interested in is irreducible representations of the rotation algebra. It just turns out those are labeled by values of $S^2$
or, at least that's what the texts you're reading are interested in even if they often fail to present this in a coherent manner :P
Is there a reason we work with the basis $|++\rangle, |+-\rangle, ....$ spanning $V_1 \otimes V_2$ to begin with?
is there a definition of irreducible?
I'm not really sure what kind of reason you're looking for here
and of course there's a definition of irreducible :P
16:08
I meant a definition I can understand, even intuitevely
@ClaudioMenchinelli it's a space on which the rotation operators act that doesn't have a smaller subspace that you can restrict to and they still all act on it
There's no definition of irreducible
It's more of a feeling
your $V_1\otimes V_2$ has two such subspaces, one spanned by $\lvert ++\rangle , \lvert +-\rangle + \lvert -+\rangle, \lvert --\rangle$ and one spanned by $\lvert +-\rangle - \lvert +-\rangle$
these spaces are interesting, for instance, precisely because $S^2$ is a constant on them (by Schur's lemma), i.e. they are spaces of constant total angular momentum
1 and 0 respectively
I see
oh so Schur's lemma applies to S^2.
becuz it commutes with others
i hadnt seen an application of this lemma yet. thanks
16:13
A representation sends group elements to linear maps—it lets us make contact with groups and our Hilbert space. as linear maps (with an emphasis on where they send vectors to), we have something like $O: V \rightarrow V$. A representation is irreducible when the action of every group element represented on $V$ sends it to $V$ and the only other subspace for which this happens is the trivial subspace.
@ACuriousMind is $S^2$ an intertwiner between the tensor product and the direct sum representation?
ok so this is how we know that diagonalising S^2 would produce irreducible reps
becuz S^2 must b diagonal in irreducible reps
@SillyGoose sure, because both are the same space, just written differently - and then the intertwiner condition is just that it's an operator that commutes with all algebra elements
wait, what would be the correlation between this sentence: "it's a space on which the rotation operators act that doesn't have a smaller subspace that you can restrict to and they still all act on it" and the subspace $$|+-\rangle, |-+\rangle $$
well, technically the $\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}S^2}$ generated by it is the intertwiner (since $S^2$ itself can have 0 eigenvalues) but same difference
this subspace is not irreducible because....
16:21
@ClaudioMenchinelli the relation is that that subspace is not such a space - the ladder operators $S_\pm$ and hence also $S_x$ and $S_y$ act on it such that they produce states that are not inside of it
@SillyGoose is trivial subspace the 0 vector?
@ACuriousMind that's what I thought as well, ok I get it
it fails the condition of actually being a representation of the rotation algebra, not the condition about non-trivial subspaces
@RyderRude yes
Oh oops i said group when i should say algebra
i think u said correct?
16:23
So $S_x,S_y$ are two of the $O$ elements in @SillyGoose's answer
which do not satisfy the relation
@ACuriousMind hm wait i think i misunderstood. so we are actually taking $1/2 \otimes 1/2$ to $0\oplus 1$ and then applying shur’s lemma to $S^2: 0\oplus 1$? This would make more sense to me for the statement of shur’s lemma that i have from Hall (which is defined in terms of irreps)
@ClaudioMenchinelli I'm not really sure what's going on with the $O$ tbh :P
@RyderRude it is true for groups, but i think Claudio is dealing with algebra elements (S_z and so on)
"a group element sent to a linear map..."
16:26
@SillyGoose it's still Schur and yes, the application of Schur's lemma is to the individual summands, i.e. $S^2$ restricted to the irreps is an intertwiner of those irreps with themselves and hence constant on them
Oh god yes schur
So this schurs lemma business is mostly useful for compact groups? Or it is generally still useful
what does any of this have to do with compactness?
Because finite dimensional representations of compact groups are decomposable into direct sums of irreps (at the least).
not sure why that would imply that Schur's lemma is only useful for compact groups
@Slereah To lead, yearly, to ... rise ... and donate via onanism ... barely contains amusement
16:30
Perhaps you want to deal with a representation that cannot be decomposed into irreps. Which is conceivable as happening for non compact groups
So? Schur's lemma still gives you that any intertwiner of reducible representations is either zero or an isomorphism between them
@WaveInPlace The usual flat space spherical coördinates we are very used to r being both the radial distance of the origin and the area of the sphere that is centred on the origin. In the Schwarzchild metric, because of the curvature of spacetime, these two things differ, and we are using the area of the sphere centred on the origin to define the radial coördinate r. This causes the length from the singularity to any point on the sphere (or from the Event Horizon to the point on the sphere)
to differ from what $r$ would have led you to believe it was.
how is r area of sphere?
@ClaudioMenchinelli Remember the thesis of the thing you are trying to do. In general, under reductionism, one studies complicated stuff by composing simple stuff together. It does not matter if you are trying to add the contributions of many different spins together, or you are trying to add orbital angular momentum to spin angular momentum, there are just some angular momenta you have to add together. They couple together, and so the natural beginning point is to use the basis of each initial
@naturallyInconsistent, I get that they're different, it's more a matter of how they differ. If I'm understanding this correctly, is it true to say that the radial coordinate r is always >= the radial distance r?
16:35
theres too many interesting fields to learn
u can never learn all of them
angular momentum as the basis for the coupled space. Then you can obtain the result that adding (irreps of) angular momenta together leads to new irreps, which is inherently an interesting result.
@WaveInPlace I do not care if it is always larger or always smaller. They just differ. Yes, under Schwarzchild metric, they differ only in one direction. I am not sure if there are metrics whereby they can differ in the other way, or vary in the way that they differ, but as long as you are aware that they differ, that is more than good enough for meow
@naturallyInconsistent I see
adding apples to apples hahaha
Good enough for a test, but not good for an intuitive understanding. :)
Thanks!
@WaveInPlace What are you talking about? I am literally giving you the intuitive understanding...
@ACuriousMind hm i didn’t know this. I guess i am confused because the statement of Schur’s lemma i have seen applies only to irreps. But if my representation cannot be decomposed as a direct sum of irreps, how can i apply Schur’s lemma?
16:39
physics.stackexchange.com/a/18582 this says it's circumference
@SillyGoose Oh, sorry, I was briefly confused; you are correct, Schur's lemma only applies to irreps
@naturallyInconsistent Knowing how they differ let's me visualize how increased curvature relates to the size of radial coordinate r. Only knowing that they differ isn't enough for that.
that doesn't mean it's "mostly" useful for compact groups, though, you'll plenty of times still look at irreps for non-compact groups (e.g. Poincaré group!)
I tend to be pretty visual with these things. Probably a hold over from my chemistry training.
Oh okay i see makes sense
So for the lorentz algebra case, we get the complete reducibility result because it is semi-simple?
16:47
@WaveInPlace It is kinda the opposite? The important intuitive takeaway is that one realises to question (and know what the actually useful convention is) that it is even a possibility for these two things that have always been the same prior to curvature, to differ. How precisely it differs is a grunt work brute force integration. It is the opposite of intuitive.
@SillyGoose yes
Hm okay i see. So at least the import of Schur’s lemma is clear for semi-simple lie algebras and compact lie groups
Fair enough.
The weather is too cold to be fair.
And it is too rainy.
same here
is the import of casimir elements that they label irreps?
16:59
yes
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