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Some properties of Wigner $3j$ coefficients: non-trivial zeros and connections to hypergeometric functions

Jean-Christophe Pain
- 01 Nov 2020 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 11, pp 296
TLDR
The contribution of Raynal to angular-momentum theory is highly valuable as mentioned in this paper, and we recall the main aspects of his work related to Wigner 3j symbols.
Abstract
The contribution of Jacques Raynal to angular-momentum theory is highly valuable. In the present article, I intend to recall the main aspects of his work related to Wigner 3j symbols. It is well known that the latter can be expressed with a hypergeometric series. The polynomial zeros of the 3j coefficients were initially characterized by the number of terms of the series minus one, which is the degree of the coefficient. A detailed study of the zeros of the 3j coefficient with respect to the degree n for $$J=a+b+c\le 240$$ (a, b and c being the angular momenta in the first line of the 3j symbol) by Raynal revealed that most zeros of high degree had small magnetic quantum numbers. This led him to define the order m to improve the classification of the zeros of the 3j coefficient. Raynal did a search for the polynomial zeros of degree 1 to 7 and found that the number of zeros of degree 1 and 2 are infinite, though the number of zeros of degree larger than 3 decreases very quickly as the degree increases. Based on Whipple’s symmetries of hypergeometric $$_3F_2$$ functions with unit argument, Raynal generalized the Wigner 3j symbols to any arguments and pointed out that there are twelve sets of ten formulas (twelve sets of 120 generalized 3j symbols) which are equivalent in the usual case. In this paper, we also discuss other aspects of the zeros of 3j coefficients, such as the role of Diophantine equations and powerful numbers, or the alternative approach involving Labarthe patterns.

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References
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Book

Angular Momentum in Quantum Mechanics

TL;DR: In this article, the angular momentum, one of the most fundamental quantities in all of quantum mechanics, is introduced and a concise introduction to its application in atomic, molecular, and nuclear physics is provided.
Book

Quantum Theory Of Angular Momemtum

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a collection of useful formulas besides those related to angular momentum, and compare different notations used by previous authors, and present results relating to different aspects of the angular momentum theory.
Book

Generalized hypergeometric functions

TL;DR: The Generalized Gauss Function (GGF) as mentioned in this paper is a generalized version of the Gauss function that can be used to compute the generalized Gauss functions (GFG).
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