This question is inspired by my recent question How to prove $e^{+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)}\sigma e^{-i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)} = e^{\theta \hat{n}\cdot J}\sigma$? with answer https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/819562/128186 and chatroom https://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/153836/discussion-between-jagerber48-and-lpz.
We have one formula $$ \tag{1} U^{\dagger}(R)\sigma U(R) = e^{+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)}\sigma e^{-i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot J)} = e^{\theta (\hat{n}\cdot J)} \sigma = R\sigma $$ Where $\sigma$ is a vector of the Pauli matrices (generators of $SU(2)$) and $J$ is a vector of the anti-symmetric generators of $SO(3)$.
There is another deeper formula involving Lie groups and Lie algebras: $$ \tag{2} \text{Ad}\circ \exp = \exp \circ \text{ad} $$ I am trying to understand the relationship between $(1)$ and $(2)$. Can $(2)$ be used to straightforwardly prove/derive $(1)$? I see the ingredients being something like
- $(2)$ holds generically for Lie groups/algebras and
- $\mathfrak{su(2)}$ is a representation of $\mathfrak{so}(3)$
- so somehow we can derive $(1)$ from $(2)$.
I'm very tempted to write $$ e^{+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)}\sigma e^{-i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)} = \text{Ad}(\exp(-i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)))(\sigma) $$ Then, using $(2)$, I'd want to equate this too \begin{align*} \exp(\text{ad}(+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot \sigma)))(\sigma) \end{align*} but then I need to somehow relate this expression to $$ e^{\theta(\hat{n}\cdot J)}\sigma $$ and this step I do not know how to do. I suspect/wonder if it is related to the representation of $\mathfrak{so}(3)$ by $\mathfrak{su}(2)$.
A few further steps: I wish I could show $$ \exp(\text{ad}(+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot\sigma))) \stackrel{?}{=} \exp(\theta \hat{n}\cdot J) $$ Or, we would like to show $$ \text{ad}(+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot\sigma)) \stackrel{?}{=} \theta \hat{n}\cdot J $$ Because $\text{ad}$ is linear we have $$ \text{ad}(+i(\theta/2)(\hat{n}\cdot\sigma)) = i(\theta/2)\text{ad}(\hat{n}\cdot\sigma) $$ So it seems if we could show $$ \text{ad}(\hat{n}\cdot\sigma) = -2 i \hat{n}\cdot J $$ that we would about have the answer.