Spin is a quantum number with no classical analogue. The “spinning” electron that doesn't actually spin — and why this has enormous technological applications.
🌀 What Is Spin? A Property Like Nothing Else
When we hear the word “spin,” we instinctively think of something rotating — a ball, a top, the Earth around its axis. But particle spin is none of those things. It is an intrinsic quantum property with no classical analogue — a kind of “internal angular momentum” that doesn't require anything to actually rotate in space.
More specifically, every elementary particle — electrons, quarks, photons — carries a fixed amount of angular momentum that cannot be changed. An electron always has spin ½. A photon always has spin 1. These values are not the result of physical rotation — they are fundamental quantum numbers.
🧲 The Stern-Gerlach Experiment: The Discovery That Changed Everything
The first experimental evidence of spin came in 1922, years before it was named. Otto Stern and Walther Gerlach in Frankfurt sent a beam of silver atoms through an inhomogeneous magnetic field. If the atoms behaved classically, the beam would spread uniformly. Instead, it split into exactly two spots.
This was incomprehensible. No classical model could explain why angular momentum takes only two values — “up” or “down.” The interpretation came later, in 1925, from Samuel Goudsmit and George Uhlenbeck, who proposed that every electron carries an intrinsic spin of ½, which can only take projections of +½ or −½ along any measurement axis.
⚛️ Fermions and Bosons: The Great Divide
Spin determines the fundamental behavior of every particle. Particles are divided into two major categories based on their spin:
Fermions (spin = ½, 3/2, 5/2...): The particles that make up matter — electrons, protons, neutrons, quarks, neutrinos. They obey the Pauli exclusion principle: two fermions can never occupy the same quantum state simultaneously. This principle explains why electrons “stack” into different energy levels, creating chemistry, the periodic table, and the very structure of matter.
Bosons (spin = 0, 1, 2...): The particles that carry forces — photons (electromagnetic force, spin 1), gluons (strong force, spin 1), gravitons (gravity, spin 2 — hypothetical). The Higgs boson has spin 0. Bosons do not obey the exclusion principle — they can accumulate in the same state, which explains phenomena like lasers and Bose-Einstein condensates.
🔄 Left-Handed and Right-Handed: Chirality
Beyond the value of spin, the relationship between the spin axis and the direction of motion of a particle is called helicity. If the spin points in the direction of motion, the particle is called “right-handed.” If it points the opposite way, “left-handed.”
What makes chirality remarkable in quantum physics is that the weak nuclear force — one of the four fundamental forces — interacts only with left-handed particles. This asymmetry, known as parity violation, is one of the most striking features of the Standard Model. It was experimentally discovered in 1957 by Chien-Shiung Wu.
💻 Applications: From Spintronics to Quantum Computers
Spin is not just a theoretical concept — it lies at the core of technologies that are changing the world.
Spintronics: Instead of using only an electron's charge (like classical transistors), spintronic devices exploit spin as well. Modern hard drives already use spintronic effects (GMR — Giant Magnetoresistance, Nobel 2007). MRAM (Magnetic RAM) technology promises memory that combines the speed of RAM with the permanence of disk.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI): Medical MRI imaging is entirely based on spin. Hydrogen protons in our body have spin ½. Inside a strong magnetic field, the spins align. Radio waves “flip” the spins, and as they return to their original state, they emit signals that create the image.
Quantum computers with spin qubits: In January 2026, Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC) unveiled the 14|15 processor, which uses the nuclear spins of phosphorus atoms embedded in silicon. The team demonstrated Bell states with an error rate of just 0.5% — results published in Nature. Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Rochester managed to transfer quantum spin states through a linear chain of 4 electrons, using Heisenberg exchange coupling — breaking the distance record for spin transfer.
🔮 What Still Hides Behind Spin?
Despite the mathematical success of the theory, spin remains one of the most mysterious properties of nature. A spin-½ particle requires a 720° rotation (not 360°) to return to its original state. This has no classical analogue — no object in everyday experience behaves this way.
Paul Dirac, combining relativity with quantum mechanics in 1928, showed that spin is not something “added” to physics — it emerges inevitably from the combination of special relativity and quantum mechanics. The Dirac equation automatically predicted the electron's spin ½, and as a bonus, predicted the existence of antimatter — confirmed experimentally by Carl Anderson in 1932 with the discovery of the positron.
Today, spin stands at the crossroads of physics, technology, and philosophy. It is the property that makes atoms possible, lasers work, MRI imaging function, and tomorrow — quantum computers. And yet, no one can “see” or “touch” what actually happens inside an electron. It is a truth written exclusively in the language of mathematics.
