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I have pulled up and read as many answered questions as I can find here on why spin emerges as a consequence of making quantum mechanics compatible with special relativity- and still have problems understanding why this is so. The closest I can come is that Lorentz invariance is not the same as Galilean invariance (where time does not get mixed up with position at high velocities) and so rotations cannot be treated the same way in the Lorentz case as in the Galilean case- and that's why quantum mechanical spin pops up in the Lorentz case. I have a question the answer to which might help me grasp this, please correct me if it is ill-posed:

In the case of a quantum particle which possesses intrinsic spin, that spin gets labeled on the particle by imagining the particle has a vector running through it with its head end emerging at the particle's "north pole" and its tail emerging at its "south pole". This means that a description of that particle at some instant in time must specify not only its position in space but also the direction in which its "spin vector" is pointing. In the case where the spin vector is parallel to the particle's velocity, the spin vector also uniquely labels the "head end" and the "tail end" of the particle for us. Now my question:

Is the reason that Lorentz invariance introduces spin in any way related to the need to label and keep track of the head and tail ends of a relativistic particle- and that you don't need to keep track of that for slow-moving particles?

Qmechanic
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niels nielsen
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    We can think of the head and tail ends as vectors representing points on Riemann sphere, which can be labelled using pair of complex numbers $k^A=(k^0,k^1)$ (2-spinors). The transformation of these complex numbers (SL(2,C)) forms the universal cover of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group – KP99 Sep 11 '21 at 06:09
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    Why wouldn't you need to keep track of that for slow-moving particles? – SuperCiocia Sep 11 '21 at 07:28
  • @kp99 that is so cool! – niels nielsen Sep 11 '21 at 16:57
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  • Who claims "Lorentz invariance introduces spin"? Spin exists for non-relativistic physics just as well. 2. The picture about the "spin vector" is inaccurate and dangerously misleading - since the individual components of the spin operator do not commute with each other, there is no definite spin vector . This idea is exactly as wrong as believing that a quantum particle can have both definite position and momentum.
  • – ACuriousMind Sep 11 '21 at 23:32
  • @ACuriousMind, Several of my old references assert that making QM comport with SR involves making it lorentz-invariant, and after the mathematical dust subsides one is presented with spin and antiparticles as a consequence. is this wrong? – niels nielsen Sep 12 '21 at 02:57
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    I believe Galilean invariance is a special case of Lorentz invariance where if one applies an infinite speed of light for Lorentz invariance one obtains Galilean invariance. So Galilean invariance like Newtons Laws of motion only apply for speeds much less than c. – Frank Kolmann Sep 12 '21 at 04:42