Spin¶
Quantum mechanical angular momemtum.
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JxBra(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenbra of Jx. - See JzKet for the usage of spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKet
- Usage of spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JxBraCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenbra of Jx. - See JzKetCoupled for the usage of coupled spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Usage of coupled spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JxKet(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenket of Jx. - See JzKet for the usage of spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKet
- Usage of spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JxKetCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenket of Jx. - See JzKetCoupled for the usage of coupled spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Usage of coupled spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JyBra(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenbra of Jy. - See JzKet for the usage of spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKet
- Usage of spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JyBraCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenbra of Jy. - See JzKetCoupled for the usage of coupled spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Usage of coupled spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JyKet(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenket of Jy. - See JzKet for the usage of spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKet
- Usage of spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JyKetCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenket of Jy. - See JzKetCoupled for the usage of coupled spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Usage of coupled spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JzBra(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenbra of Jz. - See the JzKet for the usage of spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKet
- Usage of spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JzBraCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenbra of Jz. - See the JzKetCoupled for the usage of coupled spin eigenstates. - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Usage of coupled spin states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JzKet(j, m)[source]¶
- Eigenket of Jz. - Spin state which is an eigenstate of the Jz operator. Uncoupled states, that is states representing the interaction of multiple separate spin states, are defined as a tensor product of states. - Parameters
- j : Number, Symbol - Total spin angular momentum - m : Number, Symbol - Eigenvalue of the Jz spin operator 
 - Examples - Normal States: - Defining simple spin states, both numerical and symbolic: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JzKet, JxKet >>> from sympy import symbols >>> JzKet(1, 0) |1,0> >>> j, m = symbols('j m') >>> JzKet(j, m) |j,m> - Rewriting the JzKet in terms of eigenkets of the Jx operator: Note: that the resulting eigenstates are JxKet’s - >>> JzKet(1,1).rewrite("Jx") |1,-1>/2 - sqrt(2)*|1,0>/2 + |1,1>/2 - Get the vector representation of a state in terms of the basis elements of the Jx operator: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.represent import represent >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Jx, Jz >>> represent(JzKet(1,-1), basis=Jx) Matrix([ [ 1/2], [sqrt(2)/2], [ 1/2]]) - Apply innerproducts between states: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.innerproduct import InnerProduct >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JxBra >>> i = InnerProduct(JxBra(1,1), JzKet(1,1)) >>> i <1,1|1,1> >>> i.doit() 1/2 - Uncoupled States: - Define an uncoupled state as a TensorProduct between two Jz eigenkets: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.tensorproduct import TensorProduct >>> j1,m1,j2,m2 = symbols('j1 m1 j2 m2') >>> TensorProduct(JzKet(1,0), JzKet(1,1)) |1,0>x|1,1> >>> TensorProduct(JzKet(j1,m1), JzKet(j2,m2)) |j1,m1>x|j2,m2> - A TensorProduct can be rewritten, in which case the eigenstates that make up the tensor product is rewritten to the new basis: - >>> TensorProduct(JzKet(1,1),JxKet(1,1)).rewrite('Jz') |1,1>x|1,-1>/2 + sqrt(2)*|1,1>x|1,0>/2 + |1,1>x|1,1>/2 - The represent method for TensorProduct’s gives the vector representation of the state. Note that the state in the product basis is the equivalent of the tensor product of the vector representation of the component eigenstates: - >>> represent(TensorProduct(JzKet(1,0),JzKet(1,1))) Matrix([ [0], [0], [0], [1], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0]]) >>> represent(TensorProduct(JzKet(1,1),JxKet(1,1)), basis=Jz) Matrix([ [ 1/2], [sqrt(2)/2], [ 1/2], [ 0], [ 0], [ 0], [ 0], [ 0], [ 0]]) - See also - JzKetCoupled
- Coupled eigenstates 
- sympy.physics.quantum.tensorproduct.TensorProduct
- Used to specify uncoupled states 
- uncouple
- Uncouples states given coupling parameters 
- couple
- Couples uncoupled states 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.JzKetCoupled(j, m, jn, *jcoupling)[source]¶
- Coupled eigenket of Jz - Spin state that is an eigenket of Jz which represents the coupling of separate spin spaces. - The arguments for creating instances of JzKetCoupled are - j,- m,- jnand an optional- jcouplingargument. The- jand- moptions are the total angular momentum quantum numbers, as used for normal states (e.g. JzKet).- The other required parameter in - jn, which is a tuple defining the \(j_n\) angular momentum quantum numbers of the product spaces. So for example, if a state represented the coupling of the product basis state \(\left|j_1,m_1\right\rangle\times\left|j_2,m_2\right\rangle\), the- jnfor this state would be- (j1,j2).- The final option is - jcoupling, which is used to define how the spaces specified by- jnare coupled, which includes both the order these spaces are coupled together and the quantum numbers that arise from these couplings. The- jcouplingparameter itself is a list of lists, such that each of the sublists defines a single coupling between the spin spaces. If there are N coupled angular momentum spaces, that is- jnhas N elements, then there must be N-1 sublists. Each of these sublists making up the- jcouplingparameter have length 3. The first two elements are the indices of the product spaces that are considered to be coupled together. For example, if we want to couple \(j_1\) and \(j_4\), the indices would be 1 and 4. If a state has already been coupled, it is referenced by the smallest index that is coupled, so if \(j_2\) and \(j_4\) has already been coupled to some \(j_{24}\), then this value can be coupled by referencing it with index 2. The final element of the sublist is the quantum number of the coupled state. So putting everything together, into a valid sublist for- jcoupling, if \(j_1\) and \(j_2\) are coupled to an angular momentum space with quantum number \(j_{12}\) with the value- j12, the sublist would be- (1,2,j12), N-1 of these sublists are used in the list for- jcoupling.- Note the - jcouplingparameter is optional, if it is not specified, the default coupling is taken. This default value is to coupled the spaces in order and take the quantum number of the coupling to be the maximum value. For example, if the spin spaces are \(j_1\), \(j_2\), \(j_3\), \(j_4\), then the default coupling couples \(j_1\) and \(j_2\) to \(j_{12}=j_1+j_2\), then, \(j_{12}\) and \(j_3\) are coupled to \(j_{123}=j_{12}+j_3\), and finally \(j_{123}\) and \(j_4\) to \(j=j_{123}+j_4\). The jcoupling value that would correspond to this is:- ((1,2,j1+j2),(1,3,j1+j2+j3))- Parameters
- args : tuple - The arguments that must be passed are - j,- m,- jn, and- jcoupling. The- jvalue is the total angular momentum. The- mvalue is the eigenvalue of the Jz spin operator. The- jnlist are the j values of argular momentum spaces coupled together. The- jcouplingparameter is an optional parameter defining how the spaces are coupled together. See the above description for how these coupling parameters are defined.
 - Examples - Defining simple spin states, both numerical and symbolic: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JzKetCoupled >>> from sympy import symbols >>> JzKetCoupled(1, 0, (1, 1)) |1,0,j1=1,j2=1> >>> j, m, j1, j2 = symbols('j m j1 j2') >>> JzKetCoupled(j, m, (j1, j2)) |j,m,j1=j1,j2=j2> - Defining coupled spin states for more than 2 coupled spaces with various coupling parameters: - >>> JzKetCoupled(2, 1, (1, 1, 1)) |2,1,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,2)=2> >>> JzKetCoupled(2, 1, (1, 1, 1), ((1,2,2),(1,3,2)) ) |2,1,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,2)=2> >>> JzKetCoupled(2, 1, (1, 1, 1), ((2,3,1),(1,2,2)) ) |2,1,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(2,3)=1> - Rewriting the JzKetCoupled in terms of eigenkets of the Jx operator: Note: that the resulting eigenstates are JxKetCoupled - >>> JzKetCoupled(1,1,(1,1)).rewrite("Jx") |1,-1,j1=1,j2=1>/2 - sqrt(2)*|1,0,j1=1,j2=1>/2 + |1,1,j1=1,j2=1>/2 - The rewrite method can be used to convert a coupled state to an uncoupled state. This is done by passing coupled=False to the rewrite function: - >>> JzKetCoupled(1, 0, (1, 1)).rewrite('Jz', coupled=False) -sqrt(2)*|1,-1>x|1,1>/2 + sqrt(2)*|1,1>x|1,-1>/2 - Get the vector representation of a state in terms of the basis elements of the Jx operator: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.represent import represent >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Jx >>> from sympy import S >>> represent(JzKetCoupled(1,-1,(S(1)/2,S(1)/2)), basis=Jx) Matrix([ [ 0], [ 1/2], [sqrt(2)/2], [ 1/2]]) 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.Rotation(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶
- Wigner D operator in terms of Euler angles. - Defines the rotation operator in terms of the Euler angles defined by the z-y-z convention for a passive transformation. That is the coordinate axes are rotated first about the z-axis, giving the new x’-y’-z’ axes. Then this new coordinate system is rotated about the new y’-axis, giving new x’’-y’’-z’’ axes. Then this new coordinate system is rotated about the z’’-axis. Conventions follow those laid out in [R596]. - Parameters
- alpha : Number, Symbol - First Euler Angle - beta : Number, Symbol - Second Euler angle - gamma : Number, Symbol - Third Euler angle 
 - Examples - A simple example rotation operator: - >>> from sympy import pi >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Rotation >>> Rotation(pi, 0, pi/2) R(pi,0,pi/2) - With symbolic Euler angles and calculating the inverse rotation operator: - >>> from sympy import symbols >>> a, b, c = symbols('a b c') >>> Rotation(a, b, c) R(a,b,c) >>> Rotation(a, b, c).inverse() R(-c,-b,-a) - References - 
classmethod D(j, m, mp, alpha, beta, gamma)[source]¶
- Wigner D-function. - Returns an instance of the WignerD class corresponding to the Wigner-D function specified by the parameters. - Parameters
- j : Number - Total angular momentum - m : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along axis after rotation - mp : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along rotated axis - alpha : Number, Symbol - First Euler angle of rotation - beta : Number, Symbol - Second Euler angle of rotation - gamma : Number, Symbol - Third Euler angle of rotation 
 - Examples - Return the Wigner-D matrix element for a defined rotation, both numerical and symbolic: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Rotation >>> from sympy import pi, symbols >>> alpha, beta, gamma = symbols('alpha beta gamma') >>> Rotation.D(1, 1, 0,pi, pi/2,-pi) WignerD(1, 1, 0, pi, pi/2, -pi) - See also - WignerD
- Symbolic Wigner-D function 
 
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classmethod d(j, m, mp, beta)[source]¶
- Wigner small-d function. - Returns an instance of the WignerD class corresponding to the Wigner-D function specified by the parameters with the alpha and gamma angles given as 0. - Parameters
- j : Number - Total angular momentum - m : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along axis after rotation - mp : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along rotated axis - beta : Number, Symbol - Second Euler angle of rotation 
 - Examples - Return the Wigner-D matrix element for a defined rotation, both numerical and symbolic: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Rotation >>> from sympy import pi, symbols >>> beta = symbols('beta') >>> Rotation.d(1, 1, 0, pi/2) WignerD(1, 1, 0, 0, pi/2, 0) - See also - WignerD
- Symbolic Wigner-D function 
 
 
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class sympy.physics.quantum.spin.WignerD(*args, **hints)[source]¶
- Wigner-D function - The Wigner D-function gives the matrix elements of the rotation operator in the jm-representation. For the Euler angles \(\alpha\), \(\beta\), \(\gamma\), the D-function is defined such that: \[<j,m| \mathcal{R}(\alpha, \beta, \gamma ) |j',m'> = \delta_{jj'} D(j, m, m', \alpha, \beta, \gamma)\]- Where the rotation operator is as defined by the Rotation class [R597]. - The Wigner D-function defined in this way gives: \[D(j, m, m', \alpha, \beta, \gamma) = e^{-i m \alpha} d(j, m, m', \beta) e^{-i m' \gamma}\]- Where d is the Wigner small-d function, which is given by Rotation.d. - The Wigner small-d function gives the component of the Wigner D-function that is determined by the second Euler angle. That is the Wigner D-function is: \[D(j, m, m', \alpha, \beta, \gamma) = e^{-i m \alpha} d(j, m, m', \beta) e^{-i m' \gamma}\]- Where d is the small-d function. The Wigner D-function is given by Rotation.D. - Note that to evaluate the D-function, the j, m and mp parameters must be integer or half integer numbers. - Parameters
- j : Number - Total angular momentum - m : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along axis after rotation - mp : Number - Eigenvalue of angular momentum along rotated axis - alpha : Number, Symbol - First Euler angle of rotation - beta : Number, Symbol - Second Euler angle of rotation - gamma : Number, Symbol - Third Euler angle of rotation 
 - Examples - Evaluate the Wigner-D matrix elements of a simple rotation: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import Rotation >>> from sympy import pi >>> rot = Rotation.D(1, 1, 0, pi, pi/2, 0) >>> rot WignerD(1, 1, 0, pi, pi/2, 0) >>> rot.doit() sqrt(2)/2 - Evaluate the Wigner-d matrix elements of a simple rotation - >>> rot = Rotation.d(1, 1, 0, pi/2) >>> rot WignerD(1, 1, 0, 0, pi/2, 0) >>> rot.doit() -sqrt(2)/2 - See also - Rotation
- Rotation operator 
 - References 
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sympy.physics.quantum.spin.couple(expr, jcoupling_list=None)[source]¶
- Couple a tensor product of spin states - This function can be used to couple an uncoupled tensor product of spin states. All of the eigenstates to be coupled must be of the same class. It will return a linear combination of eigenstates that are subclasses of CoupledSpinState determined by Clebsch-Gordan angular momentum coupling coefficients. - Parameters
- expr : Expr - An expression involving TensorProducts of spin states to be coupled. Each state must be a subclass of SpinState and they all must be the same class. - jcoupling_list : list or tuple - Elements of this list are sub-lists of length 2 specifying the order of the coupling of the spin spaces. The length of this must be N-1, where N is the number of states in the tensor product to be coupled. The elements of this sublist are the same as the first two elements of each sublist in the - jcouplingparameter defined for JzKetCoupled. If this parameter is not specified, the default value is taken, which couples the first and second product basis spaces, then couples this new coupled space to the third product space, etc
 - Examples - Couple a tensor product of numerical states for two spaces: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JzKet, couple >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.tensorproduct import TensorProduct >>> couple(TensorProduct(JzKet(1,0), JzKet(1,1))) -sqrt(2)*|1,1,j1=1,j2=1>/2 + sqrt(2)*|2,1,j1=1,j2=1>/2 - Numerical coupling of three spaces using the default coupling method, i.e. first and second spaces couple, then this couples to the third space: - >>> couple(TensorProduct(JzKet(1,1), JzKet(1,1), JzKet(1,0))) sqrt(6)*|2,2,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,2)=2>/3 + sqrt(3)*|3,2,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,2)=2>/3 - Perform this same coupling, but we define the coupling to first couple the first and third spaces: - >>> couple(TensorProduct(JzKet(1,1), JzKet(1,1), JzKet(1,0)), ((1,3),(1,2)) ) sqrt(2)*|2,2,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,3)=1>/2 - sqrt(6)*|2,2,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,3)=2>/6 + sqrt(3)*|3,2,j1=1,j2=1,j3=1,j(1,3)=2>/3 - Couple a tensor product of symbolic states: - >>> from sympy import symbols >>> j1,m1,j2,m2 = symbols('j1 m1 j2 m2') >>> couple(TensorProduct(JzKet(j1,m1), JzKet(j2,m2))) Sum(CG(j1, m1, j2, m2, j, m1 + m2)*|j,m1 + m2,j1=j1,j2=j2>, (j, m1 + m2, j1 + j2)) 
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sympy.physics.quantum.spin.uncouple(expr, jn=None, jcoupling_list=None)[source]¶
- Uncouple a coupled spin state - Gives the uncoupled representation of a coupled spin state. Arguments must be either a spin state that is a subclass of CoupledSpinState or a spin state that is a subclass of SpinState and an array giving the j values of the spaces that are to be coupled - Parameters
- expr : Expr - The expression containing states that are to be coupled. If the states are a subclass of SpinState, the - jnand- jcouplingparameters must be defined. If the states are a subclass of CoupledSpinState,- jnand- jcouplingwill be taken from the state.- jn : list or tuple - The list of the j-values that are coupled. If state is a CoupledSpinState, this parameter is ignored. This must be defined if state is not a subclass of CoupledSpinState. The syntax of this parameter is the same as the - jnparameter of JzKetCoupled.- jcoupling_list : list or tuple - The list defining how the j-values are coupled together. If state is a CoupledSpinState, this parameter is ignored. This must be defined if state is not a subclass of CoupledSpinState. The syntax of this parameter is the same as the - jcouplingparameter of JzKetCoupled.
 - Examples - Uncouple a numerical state using a CoupledSpinState state: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JzKetCoupled, uncouple >>> from sympy import S >>> uncouple(JzKetCoupled(1, 0, (S(1)/2, S(1)/2))) sqrt(2)*|1/2,-1/2>x|1/2,1/2>/2 + sqrt(2)*|1/2,1/2>x|1/2,-1/2>/2 - Perform the same calculation using a SpinState state: - >>> from sympy.physics.quantum.spin import JzKet >>> uncouple(JzKet(1, 0), (S(1)/2, S(1)/2)) sqrt(2)*|1/2,-1/2>x|1/2,1/2>/2 + sqrt(2)*|1/2,1/2>x|1/2,-1/2>/2 - Uncouple a numerical state of three coupled spaces using a CoupledSpinState state: - >>> uncouple(JzKetCoupled(1, 1, (1, 1, 1), ((1,3,1),(1,2,1)) )) |1,-1>x|1,1>x|1,1>/2 - |1,0>x|1,0>x|1,1>/2 + |1,1>x|1,0>x|1,0>/2 - |1,1>x|1,1>x|1,-1>/2 - Perform the same calculation using a SpinState state: - >>> uncouple(JzKet(1, 1), (1, 1, 1), ((1,3,1),(1,2,1)) ) |1,-1>x|1,1>x|1,1>/2 - |1,0>x|1,0>x|1,1>/2 + |1,1>x|1,0>x|1,0>/2 - |1,1>x|1,1>x|1,-1>/2 - Uncouple a symbolic state using a CoupledSpinState state: - >>> from sympy import symbols >>> j,m,j1,j2 = symbols('j m j1 j2') >>> uncouple(JzKetCoupled(j, m, (j1, j2))) Sum(CG(j1, m1, j2, m2, j, m)*|j1,m1>x|j2,m2>, (m1, -j1, j1), (m2, -j2, j2)) - Perform the same calculation using a SpinState state - >>> uncouple(JzKet(j, m), (j1, j2)) Sum(CG(j1, m1, j2, m2, j, m)*|j1,m1>x|j2,m2>, (m1, -j1, j1), (m2, -j2, j2)) 
