Concept information
Preferred term
Clebsch-Gordan coefficient
Definition
- In physics, the Clebsch–Gordan (CG) coefficients are numbers that arise in angular momentum coupling in quantum mechanics. They appear as the expansion coefficients of total angular momentum eigenstates in an uncoupled tensor product basis. In more mathematical terms, the CG coefficients are used in representation theory, particularly of compact Lie groups, to perform the explicit direct sum decomposition of the tensor product of two irreducible representations (i.e., a reducible representation into irreducible representations, in cases where the numbers and types of irreducible components are already known abstractly). The name derives from the German mathematicians Alfred Clebsch and Paul Gordan, who encountered an equivalent problem in invariant theory. (Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clebsch%E2%80%93Gordan_coefficients)
Broader concept
In other languages
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/MDL-JD9QM5FD-K
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