Suppose I have two quantum systems associated with angular momenta $J_1$ and $J_2$ respectively.
I can define the angular momentum of the whole system with the operator $J$ acting on $\scr H:={\scr H_1 \otimes H_2}$, defined as $J := J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2 + \mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2$, where $\mathbb I$ is the identity operator.
The inner product $\langle .,. \!\rangle : {\scr H \otimes H} \to \mathbb C $ is defined as $\langle\psi, \phi\rangle = \langle \psi_1 \otimes \psi_2, \phi_1 \otimes \phi_2\rangle = \langle \psi_1, \phi_1 \!\rangle _1 \langle \psi_2, \phi_2 \!\rangle _2$, where $\langle .,. \!\rangle_1 $ and $ \langle ., .\!\rangle_2$ are the inner products defined on $\scr H_1$ and $\scr H_2$ respectively.
Question. How is $J^2$ defined?
According to the previous definition $J^2 = J \cdot J = \left ( J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2 + \mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2 \right ) \cdot \left ( J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2 + \mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2 \right ) = \\ \underbrace{(J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2) \cdot (J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2)}_{J_1^2} + \underbrace{(J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2) \cdot (\mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2)}_{J_1 \cdot J_2} + \underbrace{(\mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2) \cdot (J_1 \otimes \mathbb I_2)}_{J_2 \cdot J_1} + \underbrace{(\mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2) \cdot (\mathbb I_1 \otimes J_2)}_{J_2^2} $
What does it all mean? I know how the inner product behaves with vectors, but not with linear operators...