To help improve students understanding of the geometric constraints on the system, we use a physical sphere (a volleyball) when discussing this problem. The use of a physical prop helps students quickly grasp the geometry so they can focus their intellectual energy on other aspects of the solution.
The Schrodinger Equation is written down for the rigid rotor (aka motion of a particle on a sphere and separated into the $\Theta$ and $\Phi$ parts. By inspection it is shown that the $\Phi$ part of the equation was already solved in the previous section (The Ring Problem).
A change of variables is applied to cast the $\Theta$ equation in dimensionless terms. We strongly recommend using the variable $z=\cos\theta$ rather than some other letter (many texts use $w$) since $\cos\theta$ is literally the physical variable $z$ from rectangular coordinates.
The $\Theta$ equation is then solved using the Series Solution Method (for the case in which m=0).
The Legendre Polynomials are defined and shown to be the solutions of the $\Theta$ equation.
Notice that the $\Theta$ equation is a second order linear differential equation. As such, it should have two solutions for all values of the separation constant. However, there are only a few values of the separation constant for which the solutions will be regular (i.e. not blow up) at both the north and south poles. These special solutions are the physical ones and all other solutions are thrown out, i.e two solutions are thrown out for most values of the separation constant and one solution is thrown out for the special values. Regularity at the poles is boundary condition just like having a solution go to zero at a boundary or fall off appropriately at infinity. The discreteness of the quantum number $\ell$ is a direct consequence of this boundary condition.