In quantum mechanics and its applications to quantum many-particle systems, notably quantum chemistry, angular momentum diagrams, or more accurately from a mathematical viewpoint angular momentum graphs, are a diagrammatic method for representing angular momentumquantum states of a quantum system allowing calculations to be done symbolically. More specifically, the arrows encode angular momentum states in bra–ket notation and include the abstract nature of the state, such as tensor products and transformation rules.
The notation parallels the idea of Penrose graphical notation and Feynman diagrams. The diagrams consist of arrows and vertices with quantum numbers as labels, hence the alternative term "graphs". The sense of each arrow is related to Hermitian conjugation, which roughly corresponds to time reversal of the angular momentum states (c.f. Schrödinger equation). The diagrammatic notation is a considerably large topic in its own right with a number of specialized features – this article introduces the very basics.
They were developed primarily by Adolfas Jucys (sometimes translated as Yutsis) in the twentieth century.
Equivalence between Dirac notation and Jucys diagrams
As a general rule, the arrows follow each other in the same sense. In the contrastandard representation, the time reversal operator, denoted here by T, is used. It is unitary, which means the Hermitian conjugateT† equals the inverse operator T−1, that is T† = T−1. Its action on the position operator leaves it invariant:
and therefore the total angular momentum operator J = L + S becomes negative:
Acting on an eigenstate of angular momentum |j, m⟩, it can be shown that:[1]
The time-reversed diagrams for kets and bras are:
Time reversed ket |j, m⟩.
Time reversed bra ⟨j, m|.
It is important to position the vertex correctly, as forward-time and reversed-time operators would become mixed up.
Inner product
The inner product of two states |j1, m1⟩ and |j2, m2⟩ is:
and the diagrams are:
Inner product of |j1, m1⟩ and |j2, m2⟩, that is ⟨j2, m2|j1, m1⟩.
Time reversed equivalent.
For summations over the inner product, also known in this context as a contraction (c.f. tensor contraction):
it is conventional to denote the result as a closed circle labelled only by j, not m:
Outer products
The outer product of two states |j1, m1⟩ and |j2, m2⟩ is an operator:
and the diagrams are:
Outer product of |j1, m1⟩ and |j2, m2⟩, that is |j2, m2⟩⟨j1, m1|.
Time reversed equivalent.
For summations over the outer product, also known in this context as a contraction (c.f. tensor contraction):
where the result for T|j, m⟩ was used, and the fact that m takes the set of values given above. There is no difference between the forward-time and reversed-time states for the outer product contraction, so here they share the same diagram, represented as one line without direction, again labelled by j only and not m:
Tensor products
The tensor product ⊗ of n states |j1, m1⟩, |j2, m2⟩, ... |jn, mn⟩ is written
and in diagram form, each separate state leaves or enters a common vertex creating a "fan" of arrows - n lines attached to a single vertex.
Vertices in tensor products have signs (sometimes called "node signs"), to indicate the ordering of the tensor-multiplied states:
a minus sign (−) indicates the ordering is clockwise, , and
a plus sign (+) for anticlockwise, .
Signs are of course not required for just one state, diagrammatically one arrow at a vertex. Sometimes curved arrows with the signs are included to show explicitly the sense of tensor multiplication, but usually just the sign is shown with the arrows left out.
Tensor product of |j1, m1⟩, |j2, m2⟩, |j3, m3⟩, that is |j1, m1⟩|j2, m2⟩|j3, m3⟩ = |j1, m1, j2, m2, j3, m3⟩. Similarly for more than three angular momenta.
Time reversed equivalent.
For the inner product of two tensor product states:
there are n lots of inner product arrows:
Inner product of |j′1, m′1, j′2, m′2, j′3, m′3⟩ and |j1, m1, j2, m2, j3, m3⟩, that is ⟨j′3, m′3, j′2, m′2, j′1, m′1|j1, m1, j2, m2, j3, m3⟩. Similarly for more than three pairs of angular momenta.
Zenonas Rudzikas (2007). "8". Theoretical Atomic Spectroscopy. Cambridge Monographs on Atomic, Molecular and Chemical Physics. Vol. 7. University of Chicago: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-02622-2.
Lietuvos Fizikų draugija (2004). Lietuvos fizikos žurnalas. Vol. 44. University of Chicago: Draugija.