Lesson 336: Eigenvalues of Angular Momentum

Introduction: What Values Can L Take?

Using ladder operators (analogous to the harmonic oscillator), we can derive the allowed eigenvalues of \(\hat{L}^2\) and \(\hat{L}_z\) algebraically.

Ladder Operators for Angular Momentum

\[\hat{L}_{\pm} = \hat{L}_x \pm i\hat{L}_y\]

These raise and lower the \(m\) value:

\[\hat{L}_{\pm}|l, m\rangle = \hbar\sqrt{l(l+1) - m(m \pm 1)}|l, m \pm 1\rangle\]

The Eigenvalue Equations

\[\hat{L}^2|l, m\rangle = \hbar^2 l(l+1)|l, m\rangle\] \[\hat{L}_z|l, m\rangle = \hbar m|l, m\rangle\]

With restrictions:

Physical Meaning

The Quantum Connection

The non-intuitive result \(|\vec{L}| = \hbar\sqrt{l(l+1)} \neq l\hbar\) means angular momentum can't point in a definite direction. For \(l = 1\): \(|\vec{L}| = \sqrt{2}\hbar\) but max \(L_z = \hbar\). The "extra" angular momentum is distributed in \(L_x\) and \(L_y\) through quantum fluctuations.