392 Appendix: Exercises...
The result is
Bμν(α)=
⎛
⎝
cos 2α−sin 2α 0
sin 2α cos 2α 0
000
⎞
⎠. (A.8)
Consequently. one has
Bμν(α)=
1
3
cos 2α
⎛
⎝
10 0
01 0
00 − 2
⎞
⎠, (A.9)
andBμμ=2 cos 2α. Thus one hasBμμ=0forα=π/4, or 45◦. For this angle,
the two tensors (A.7) are ‘orthogonal’ in the sense that the trace of their product
vanishes.
3.3 Angular Momentum in Terms of Spherical Components(p.43)
Compute the z-component of the angular momentum in terms of the spherical
components.
For a particle with massm,thez-component of the angular momentum isLz=
m(xy ̇−yx ̇), in cartesian coordinates. In polar coordinates, cf. Sect.2.1.4, one has
x=rsinθcosφ,y=rsinθsinφ,z=rcosθ. The time change ofxandyis
x ̇= ̇rr−^1 x+θ ̇rcosθcosφ− ̇φrsinθsinφ,
y ̇= ̇rr−^1 y+θ ̇rcosθsinφ+ ̇φrsinθcosφ.
In the calculation ofLz, the terms involvingr ̇andθ ̇cancel, the remaining terms add
up to
Lz=mr^2 φ. ̇
3.4 Torque Acting on an Anisotropic Harmonic Oscillator(p.44)
Determine the torque for the force
F=−kr·ee−(r−r·ee),
where the parameter k and unit vectoreare constant. Which component of the
angular momentum is constant, even for k= 1?
The torque isT=r×F=−(k− 1 )(r·e)r×e. Clearly, the torque vanishes fork=1.
Fork=1, the torque still is zero, whenr×e=0or(r·e)=0 hold true. The first
case corresponds the one-dimensional motion along a line parallel toewhich passes
through the originr=0. This is a one-dimensional harmonic oscillator. The second
case is a motion in the plane perpendicular toe. This corresponds to an isotropic
two-dimensional harmonic oscillator.