5 - The quantum universe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2009
Summary
Quantum uncertainty
Spin
I want to start this section with a description of particle spin. In addition to the usual properties of mass, charge, position and velocity, particles have a further parameter which describes their state of rotation. Physicists call this ‘spin’. We have already seen that in quantum physics it is impossible to measure simultaneously, in a precise way, both speed and position (recall the Heisenberg uncertainty relations). The same considerations apply to spin, which cannot be absolutely determined with arbitrary precision. The things that we can in principle find out are the rate of rotation (that is, the number of revolutions per second) and the component of this rotation in a given direction in space (for example, the angle of the axis of rotation relative to the direction of motion).
It is important to understand that these two knowable quantities can take only certain quantised values. This is an aspect of quantum physics that we have already encountered when describing wave motion. We can use as an analogy the stable vibrations that can be sustained on a piano string: the basic note is generated when the centre of the string vibrates to its maximum extent while the two ends are (necessarily) fixed.
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- Cosmic Odyssey , pp. 93 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989