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7:24 AM
0
Q: False duplicate

ExocytosisI asked this question: What is the magnetic field of a radially moving current? "What is the magnetic field of a radially moving current?" It was closed as a duplicate of "Why is the magnetic field of a spherically symmetric current zero?". Three remarks: 1. Unless we share a different defini...

 
8:00 AM
@Slereah That's...actually one of the more understandable definitions! Given your self-professed love for "useless" GR and your recent forays into classical mechanics on bundles, can you not understand the lure of trying to formulate physics in the most general way possible? That there is just how you say "the exponential of the action in the path integral is circle-valued" when you have generalized away concrete representations of naturals and reals.
 
8:25 AM
@ACuriousMind I recoil at the sight of topoi
 
You need to face your fears
Topophobia can be overcome
 
How courageous are you, @ACuriousMind
By which I mean
How many authors will you list before using "et al."
 
Zero.
My entire bibliography is written simply by "Et al."
 
Well
that would just be "al"
 
Fair point
 
8:29 AM
I tend to list two before going to et al
although depends on the size of the name, I think
I can list a whole bunch of chinese physicists
Polish tho
not so much
I tried learning what topoi were once
I went on nlab
looked the topos page
then went to other pages to learn the other more fundamental terms
after a while I ended up back to the topos page
 
8:57 AM
Time to learn more differential geometry :V
 
9:10 AM
I am predicting that the normal neighbourhood is not gonna do well around a Schwarzschild singularity
"the Toponogov triangle comparison theorem"
obvious fake name
 
 
4 hours later…
12:57 PM
@Slereah Cheeger-Gromov-Taylor is one of the key pieces of Perelman’s work
It’s a good thing to learn about
 
There seems to be many an estimation of the injectivity radius
Hopefully there is one that's just "if the energy and pressure are not big then it is big"
 
I would suggest first reading the original Cheeger Lemma in Cheeger and Ebin’s book
 
Ebin is probably too old to understand that
 
Oh man
That reminds me of my master thesis
Having to watch my 60 year old thesis advisor trying to type an address in a browser
One letter at a time
 
1:01 PM
You can find a proof of the CGT estimate in Qi Zhang’s book on the Poincaré conjecture
A version of it anyway
Do you know basic comparison geometry
 
Slereah is basically an astronomically cynical bloke who has had enough of the world in many ways, but is also inexorably compelled to solve boring, horribly complicated equations.
 
The natural solution is to focus on more interesting equations!
 
@RyanUnger I do not
@WhitePrime Welcome to theoretical physics
If boring horribly complicated equations do not appeal you're not gonna have much fun
 
Imagine spending tons of time thinking about a topic where you literally don't even understand the language and actually mock the language in trying to invalidate it without ever having learned it
 
@bolbteppa Something I do once in a while, because I'm lazy, is just look at big list of solved differential equations
And then I think
"Is there a physics problem I could put on that?"
which would be a whole lot easier than actually solving PDEs of random physics problems
 
Jim
1:08 PM
@Slereah I'm a physicist, not a mathematician. Obviously boring, horribly complicated equations do not appeal to me. I only like boring, horribly complicated physics (and terrible physics-based puns)
 
Well I mean
This is true, too
@bolbteppa It's a sad fact that any cool idea that you can have about a physical theory has been investigated already
Usually 80 to 50 years ago
 
Yeah
(There's a standard way to get around that issue as we keep bringing up :p)
 
Jim
@Slereah that's where I use my engineering background.... "The answer probably has a pi in the denominator... Multiply the whole thing by 8.... maybe put a G in there somewhere... yeah, that looks right. Now let's square the whole thing"
 
@Slereah That XKCD had reminded me of my entire time studying engineering. "Oh, this exam question has more than one unknown. Can I solve for one unknown and then the other. If yes, just work in order. If no, make an assumption to remove an unknown."
 
Sometimes I feel really smart because I think of an idea about general relativity, and I find out that it has only been done 10 years ago
 
1:13 PM
Especially in GR I'd say this is true too
 
Well there's no lack of open problems in GR, but the remaining ones are like
They're not a "cool idea" sort of problems
That was more the 20's to 70's era
I mean there's a few novel ideas popping up once in a while, but they are much less trivial
In the early days of GR you could just pick a bunch of Killing vectors at random and solve for that
 
Doing GR in an AdS/CFT context seems to be the way to go nowawadays
 
@Jim No wait... that's not giving me the right units. If I divide by distance it does though... sure that answer seems reasonable-ish.
 
Jim
@JMac If it's stupid but it works, it's not stupid
 
My smartest GR idea was trying to work out the uniqueness of geodesics for thin-shell spacetimes
And it was only done a few years ago!
 
1:18 PM
People in this chat seem completely ignorant of what people in the big universities are doing in GR...
 
Jim
Random side note: Here's a fun way to weed out any mathematician spies pretending to be physicists. Try saying something that a physicist would be like "yeah that's obvious" to, but a mathematician would have their head explode about. Example: "The total number of integers is itself an odd number. Same number of positives and negatives and then 0 as well. QED"
 
@RyanUnger Different crowds my man
It's a vast field
I mean really
 
It's the golden age of mathematical GR
 
The real big field in GR isn't even theory
Most of it is just like simulations of gravitational waves and cosmology
 
I have an idea to produce infinite energy
 
1:21 PM
Is it a hand-operated crank
 
@Akash.B Do not say it here, Amerika spy watching
 
@Slereah The trick is it's operated by Superman
 
It would be quite disappointing if we found out a source of infinite energy but we could only get 1 Watt out of it
 
Really 🙄🙄?
Nah@Slereah
 
Just a long line of people waiting to charge their devices at the source of infinite energy
 
1:23 PM
the future of GR is PDEs
 
It basically uses newton's first law of motion
 
the global geometry of Penrose and Hawking is dead
and physically meaningless
 
Jim
@RyanUnger Not ignorant. I know they're expanding on eternal inflation (pun intended), shining the light on GR tests of dark matter distributions, flashing ideas on the theoretical sources of FRBs, etc
 
classical GR could end up in engineering departments soon enough beside fluid mechanics runs
 
Also really
GR is mostly useless
So I don't care that much about being cool with GR trends
As true as it was 60 years ago
 
Jim
1:26 PM
@Slereah agreed. It's really never done anything for us, nor does it even matter when you look at the big picture
 
Stationary remains stationary and moving object will retain its motion
 
@Akash.B Odds are the idea has been proposed (or at least something which does the same things) and there are many practical reasons why it cannot achieve infinite energy production. I usually find it interesting to read them and find the flaws, but there are always flaws.
 
I have a whole book of weird physics idea with their experimental results
 
@JMac can you check for flaws in my idea?
 
Turns out we still don't have any source of infinite energy or faster than light travel
They've been tried!
 
1:28 PM
@Akash.B If you want to share it. I can see if I can find any obvious ones
 
Jim
still? I thought we were close to having that
 
Well let me say
If i rotate a iron rod in space wouldn't it stay rotating forever? If i stopped applying my force?
 
Guess it would!
 
@Akash.B Assuming a perfect vacuum with no outside interaction, sure, it could rotate forever. But you wouldn't be able to get any more energy out than it takes to get it spinning in the first place
 
Well
1) no
2) even if so, it would be finitely much energy
the energy is just the rotational energy
 
1:32 PM
So what if I subject it to an magnetic field?
 
$$E = \frac{1}{2} I \omega$$
 
Jim
@Akash.B forever as in an arbitrarily long time? yes. Forever as in forever? no. I'm sure it'd decay or get bored
 
@Akash.B well it's going to rotate less.
Lenz law
 
Jim
@Slereah $\omega^2$?
 
Lenz's law, named after the physicist Emil Lenz (pronounced ) who formulated it in 1834, states that the direction of the current induced in a conductor by a changing magnetic field is such that the magnetic field created by the induced current opposes the initial changing magnetic field. It is a qualitative law that specifies the direction of induced current, but states nothing about its magnitude. Lenz's law explains the direction of many effects in electromagnetism, such as the direction of voltage induced in an inductor or wire loop by a changing current, or the drag force of eddy currents...
 
1:33 PM
@Akash.B Then there is energy involved with that magnetic field, and it will exchange energy with the rod in some way; but it's not going to generate any energy that wasn't put into the system in the first place
 
@Jim I use natural units so $\omega = 1$
 
Jim
lmao
 
@Akash.B Ok we got some induction going, what's next, how do you get energy out?
 
Simple
I will add a coil to the iron rod
And will place a coil next to it
 
So what about the energy powering the magnet?
Or are you talking permanent magnets?
 
1:36 PM
Electricity will be produced according to mutual induction
 
I would advise reading about Lenz's law
since it's exactly why that idea cannot work
 
220
Q: Stack Overflow Inc., sinat chinam, and the goat for Azazel

Monica CellioOn Friday, half an hour before Shabbat and two days before Rosh Hashana, Stack Overflow Inc. suddenly revoked my moderator status on all sites where I had it. I found this out while handling flags, when I suddenly got notifications for Marshal and Deputy badges (which moderators are ineligible t...

Yikes
What is going on with the SE staff
 
971
Q: Firing mods and forced relicensing: is Stack Exchange still interested in cooperating with the community?

amon The last weeks and days have seen some erratic behaviour by Stack Exchange Inc., such as likely illegal changes to the content license and the firing of an upstanding community moderator with no explanation except copy-pasted responses (leaving many to believe it was for no good reason). It wou...

Yikes-er
 
Jim
@Akash.B yeah, anything that takes energy from the rod will act like a resistive force (analogous to friction or air resistance). So I'm not sure why you think having it in space will make this work better
 
Yeah read about lenz's law
It opposes cause that produces it?
Right?
 
1:40 PM
Yes.
Your rod rotating in a magnetic field has induced currents that will produce its own magnetic field
Counter to the existing one
You can work out the full system to find out that energy is conserved
 
So how does the ac motor works?
 
Jim
this phenomenon is sometimes called "magnetic braking". I'm inclined to say that any term with "braking" in it is not going to result in something moving forever (although, technically, magnetic braking can only have the kinetic energy asymptotically approach zero)
 
@Akash.B By using another source of energy to rotate things
 
Jim
@Akash.B you pump energy into the system yourself
 
I'm gonna go out and say that if you're trying to use classical mechanics to generate infinite energy, you're gonna be disappointed
Nothing in classical mechanics, special relativity or quantum mechanics will help you get free energy
 
1:47 PM
So let me ask you, why this phenomenon called magnetic braking does'nt happen in normal generators ?
 
@Akash.B It does.
 
@Slereah so what does it do to overcome this?
 
@Akash.B as I said, external source of energy.
Electric generators typically use some manner of thermal generators to rotate thems rods
Just your typical thermodynamical cycle
If you try to extract some electricity from a rotating rod in a magnetic field, it's just going to slowly stop spinning
And the electric energy you're getting will be at most $I\omega^2 / 2$
 
Thermal generators to rotate the rods? can you please be kind to elaborate it?
@Slereah
 
The Carnot cycle is a theoretical ideal thermodynamic cycle proposed by French physicist Sadi Carnot in 1824 and expanded upon by others in the 1830s and 1840s. It provides an upper limit on the efficiency that any classical thermodynamic engine can achieve during the conversion of heat into work, or conversely, the efficiency of a refrigeration system in creating a temperature difference by the application of work to the system. It is not an actual thermodynamic cycle but is a theoretical construct. Every single thermodynamic system exists in a particular state. When a system is taken through...
a good example
Generate motion from heat
You may use this to convert this linear motion to rotary motion, as well
A rack and pinion is a type of linear actuator that comprises a circular gear (the pinion) engaging a linear gear (the rack), which operate to translate rotational motion into linear motion. Driving the pinion into rotation causes the rack to be driven linearly. Driving the rack linearly will cause the pinion to be driven into a rotation. For example, in a rack railway, the rotation of a pinion mounted on a locomotive or a railcar engages a rack between the rails and forces a train up a steep slope. For every pair of conjugate involute profile, there is a basic rack. This basic rack is the profile...
You can generate electricity in many ways but thermal generators are the most common
 
1:56 PM
A turbine (from the Latin turbo, a vortex, related to the Greek τύρβη, tyrbē, meaning "turbulence") is a rotary mechanical device that extracts energy from a fluid flow and converts it into useful work. The work produced by a turbine can be used for generating electrical power when combined with a generator. A turbine is a turbomachine with at least one moving part called a rotor assembly, which is a shaft or drum with blades attached. Moving fluid acts on the blades so that they move and impart rotational energy to the rotor. Early turbine examples are windmills and waterwheels. Gas, steam, and...
 
If you don't know how a generator works I would recommend learning before building a perpetual motion machine
 
😅😅😅 I was taught that generators were a simple machine with slip rings, dc magnet and a armature, never expect generators to be such a complex machine
 
2:17 PM
@Akash.B Most things that handle high power wind up pretty complex. Just the heat that comes off real generators is crazy. A job I'm at has radiators that are basically as big as the generators themselves to be able to expel all the excess heat coming off of it
 
@Akash.B Thar sounds like you were taught how to pass physics exams, rather than being taught how to think like a physicist. Feynman wrote a great essay on this topic. v.cx/2010/04/feynman-brazil-education
 
That’s a drawing of the generator of the previous power plant I worked at.
 
Well I mean
You can have fairly simple generators
 
BTW, with the iron cylinder in space, if it's rotating on its axis & you don't try to extract any energy from it, it will spin for a very long time, since there's almost no friction in space. But if it's rotating like a propeller, it won't spin for quite as long, since it will radiate a tiny amount of energy as gravitational waves. And I guess it'll also suffer magnetic braking, since there are almost always magnetic fields of some form or another in space.
 
toot toot
 
2:24 PM
@Slereah Damn, and we paid Siemens so much money for that big thing. ;-)
 
@Loong Just hire a bunch of people to turn the crank
 
Hamsters!
 
@Loong It's a huge conspiracy. They just add a bunch of useless metal, wires, and controllers to it so that you pay more
 
@PM2Ring how they turn themselves into gravitational waves?
 
2:27 PM
There's a simple generator
@Loong All I'm saying is
Maybe the Siemens generator isn't the most pedagogical example!
That's why the first metric you study in GR isn't the mixmaster universe!
 
@JMac Everything with magnets is a scam.
Fuel saving devices are sold on the aftermarket with claims to improve the fuel economy and/or the exhaust emissions of any purport to optimize ignition, air flow, or fuel flow in some way. An early example of such a device sold with difficult-to-justify claims is the 200 mpg carburetor designed by Canadian inventor Charles Nelson Pogue. The US EPA is required by Section 511 of the Motor Vehicle Information and Cost Savings Act to test many of these devices and to provide public reports on their efficacy; the agency finds most devices do not improve fuel economy to any measurable degree, unlike...
 
"The Mixmaster universe (named after Sunbeam Mixmaster, a brand of Sunbeam Products electric kitchen mixer)"
Despite its great name
I should build a little generator
They are very darling devices
 
I always wanted a little steam turbine.
 
toot toot
with a little tea kettle for the steam
for being extra adorable
I tried to replicate the Michelson Morley experiment once but I ran into some issues
Chinese laser I bought stopped working pretty fast!
I need to get me a fancy laser
one of those german lasers
Oh man
maybe I can even do the Sagnac effect!
On a little lazy suzan
 
In other news: A bloke called Slereah brought down a passenger air jet by waving around a 5000W green laser. When asked to explain himself, he said: "I was just trying to replicate the Michelson Morley experiment"
 
2:39 PM
Devilish
I wouldn't mind a 5000W laser but I'm guessing price goes up quickly
Chinese laser was 250 mW
The chinese laser before its death
not very well collimated
 
I'm a bit paranoid about them due to how they can burn your retina etc. But they are cool.
 
So can fire
 
@Akash.B Some of the rotational energy gets emitted as gravitational waves because the gravitational field of the rod is changing (technically speaking, it has a quadrupole moment). But the amount of power radiated is microscopic. The Earth orbiting the Sun only radiates about 120 watts of gravitational waves.
 
The fancier german laser
michelson and morley did it all with a lantern so I'm guessing you don't need your laser to be too fancy, either
Space age technology
"Michelson suffered a nervous breakdown in September 1885, from which he recovered by October 1885. Morley ascribed this breakdown to the intense work of Michelson during the preparation of the experiments."
 
@Slereah this product series looks like it can comfortably go to 5kW
 
2:50 PM
I'm guessing there was probably a lot of swearing about that bloody interferometer
 
I'd be careful where I point them at, though
you probably want to invest in a sturdy beamstop
 
@EmilioPisanty I'm not trying to blow up the moon
 
Laser stands for Light Amplification through Stimulated Emission of Radiation. A laser does amplify its own signal, and some laser designs can be used to amplify the beam produced by another laser. But strictly speaking, a laser is an Oscillator operating in positive feedback mode. However, it was decided that there are negative financial implications in the acronym LOSER. ;)
 
@EmilioPisanty Do you mean "a cinderblock"
 
"my house fell down because I accidentally laser-cut one of the support columns" might not be a universally accepted excuse for not handing in a lab report
@Slereah dunno if a cinderblock will stand up to 5kW tbh
 
2:52 PM
Well then just open the window
 
it's probably a question that ought to be researched before trying it out experimentally ;-)
 
Let the sky take care of that beam
@EmilioPisanty That doesn't sound like the scientific method
How can you be sure it's true until you try
 
@Slereah yeah, I know, it's health and safety gone mad, innit
 
I mean you know
It's interferometry
I'm not trying to weld steel here
 
@Slereah 5kW sounds like a mild overshoot for an interferometry experiment
 
2:54 PM
@EmilioPisanty I mean I guess maybe if I'm doing gravitational wave detection
and I need it to go over 10 km
 
@Slereah probably a good thing. From amadamiyachi.eu/products/laser-welding it sounds like welding tends to stay about an order of magnitude lower in power not true, rofin.com/en/products/co2-laser/slab-lasers/dc-series does mention welding
 
What do you do with a 5k laser?
Shoot down missiles?
 
laser cutting?
 
@Slereah That picture is clearly just NASA CGI. You can tell that it's not real, therefore aether is real, no GR, something something flat earth
 
There is something oddly satisfying about being able to shine a dot on buildings miles away.
 
2:57 PM
This is what happens with a 5kW laser
 
Or the clouds.
The film, Ad Astra, is worth watching for the effects etc, by the way. But it misses with the overly emotional stuff. Tommy Lee's performance is stunning, though.
Not that emotional stuff is bad. The film just delves into uninteresting facets.
 
Can you remember when laser pointers first got really popular, and people would shine them through everyone's windows and stuff.
Those cheap and nasty pointers, with the awful attachments.
If I got a laser now, I would make sure it's a quality one.
 
3:32 PM
Important Note: I myself never pointed lasers irresponsibly. I'm not like that.
Although, I did once try to kill a spider with one.
I failed to kill the spider, by the way.
 
 
1 hour later…
4:39 PM
@Jim That’s not what mathematical GR is about these days.
 
vzn
5:07 PM
in theory salon, 27 mins ago, by vzn
Stochastic magnetic circuits rival quantum computing / Nature https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-019-1557-9
 
5:22 PM
0
Q: Two-coupled oscillator: Doubt in finding normal modes and natural frequency

tatanI want to find the natural frequency of a two coupled oscillator system like this- My book does it this way but I don't really get it. The equations of motion for the pendula are- $I\frac{d^2\theta_1}{dt^2}=−M_{eff}gL\sin \theta_1− κl^2(\sin \theta_1−\sin \theta_2)$ $I\frac{d^2\th...

 
1
Q: If $\mathrm df$ is an inexact differential, how would the function $f$ look like?

Vishal JainI am studying thermodynamics and in the first chapter the concept of exact and inexact differentials were used to talk about the differences between internal energy, work and heat. From Blundell and Blundell: $\Delta f=\int_{x_i}^{x_f}\mathrm df=f(x_f)-f(x_i)$. My issue is I can not imagine a f...

oooooohhhh, exciting
this is how good HNQs are made
 
Since cyclones have low pressure at the center, shouldn't that mean less air and therefore colder, and not warmer?
 
5:39 PM
@EmilioPisanty That will never hit the HNQ, due to the MathJax in the title.
 
@PM2Ring ah, good point
shame, that
 
Do HNQs factor in titles?
I was under the impression it was just some kind of formula
 
1
Q: How can a proton travel the milky-way in 296 seconds?

NapsIn the Introductory Special Relativity book, by W. G. V. Rosser, the author presented an example about Lorentz Length contraction. In this example, a proton is crossing the milky-way galaxy and he is calculating the time required for the proton to cross the galaxy from two inertial reference fram...

... by going really really really fast
@SirCumference they don't. They just kick out stuff with MathJax in the title.
That's because HNQ is displayed network-wide, and those titles would look bad on sites without MathJax enabled.
 
Ah, makes sense
 
@SirCumference yes and no. It's a formula, with timeouts and with ways to kick questions out.
372
Q: Updating the Hot Network Questions List - now with a bit more network and a little less "hotness"!

CatijaSome of you may have noticed that we've been making some changes to the Hot Network Questions on the back end over the last week or so. I'm here announcing our first round of changes to how the HNQ works and give you some ideas of why we're starting here and where we're planning to go in the futu...

 
5:58 PM
Is it correct to say that the Stack Exchange directors got triggered and started removing loads of Mods because someone got someone's gender pronouns wrong?
 
@WhitePrime Nope, not really close at all. They removed one mod because there seemed to be a misunderstanding about how they were going to approach upcoming rules about gender pronouns. The way they handled the mod removal led to many more mods either resigning or suspending their own activity. Pretty much every mod who stepped down or went inactive did it on their own
 
Oh, I see.
I'm into politics, but I admit I don't even know what gender pronouns are.
 
A pronoun is what comes before a verb, specifically "I", "you", "he", "she", "they", etc.
 
@WhitePrime how is that possible
 
gender pronouns are the ones that imply gender, i.e. "he" and "she"
 
6:12 PM
@SirCumference ..."before a verb"?
 
@WhitePrime he/she/they etc. Some people are very sensitive about how they are addressed; apparently others are very sensitive about how they use them. The discussion on it seems to have gotten a bit out of control on SE right now
 
@ACuriousMind ok i'm on 2 hours of sleep...
 
@SirCumference That's...not a good thing to be :P
 
tell that to my brain at night lol
going to sleep is hard
 
Ah, that sucks
 
6:16 PM
@DanielSank Sorry for the delayed response. This is going back to your email system question. I set up my account with an existing email. At first it was putting thr messages into the spam folder.( I use Gmail) So I had to take it out of the spam folder. For me it did it automatically.
 
At any rate the response from SE has been, well, not satisfactory to most people
The entire "keeping things private" sounds good in theory but can have very negative consequences
 
@DanielSank But, in this case it seems that you arent subscribed to it. There is an option for that. I am assuming.. Based on knowing in the email it gives you the option to unsubscribe. So I am assuming you can subscribe. I have no clusr how to subscribe if it didnt ask you about it before. When I signed up with my account it asked me if I would like to receive email notifications.
@DanielSank The box was already checkmarked for me. And I've recieved notifications ever since. But they do come the next day. It acts as a reminder notification I guess. Reminding you who responded to you the day before.
 
@SirCumference do you drink
 
@RyanUnger no, why?
 
@DanielSank Other than that, That's all I know. My guess is you could go to your settings in your account and find it somewhere. But I dont know. I'll look at my account to see where I can find that information. But bare in mind I'm on mobile. So it'll be a little different maybe.
 
6:22 PM
Whiskey is a good Schlafmittel
 
my adhd meds prevent me from drinking
doing both would give me a heart attack or something
 
Stop taking those
 
Wtf why would you take anything that can give you a heart attack
 
drinking while taking those meds would cause a bad reaction
otherwise it's fine
 
6:23 PM
ADHD isn’t life threatening, you should try to live without the meds
 
i wish. but even with the meds i usually spend twice as long studying as most people
 
It’s very highly misdiagnosed
 
without the meds that becomes 4x longer
 
Yeah you do better with Adderall because it’s Adderall
 
@RyanUnger trust me, i can tell it's not misdiagnosed
 
6:24 PM
It’s probably related to sleep issues
 
@RyanUnger mine isn't adderall, and either way the way it works is correcting the intake of dopamine in brain neurons
so it doesn't help if you don't have adhd
 
Hmm
In any case drinking helps some people
 
welp i imagine :P
 
It’s not a perfect solution
 
@RyanUnger I'd wager that drinking alcohol to be able to sleep is, in fact, a rather bad solution!
 
6:26 PM
Why
 
You might start relying on it, and when you build a tolerance you'll be tempted to increase the dose.
 
that is precisely me with coffee
5 cups just doesn't work anymore
 
@ACuriousMind when you get to half a bottle a night it’s bad
That’s why you stop before then
The most powerful alcoholics drink a lot more than that
Which is scary
 
@SirCumference Don't worry, the updated apology seems to have got rid of all the friction..... meta.stackexchange.com/questions/334248/…
 
@JMac oof
 
6:31 PM
@SirCumference That's less than 3 hours of votes lol
 
i am watching the vote counter go down in real time
that's a useful feature i guess lol
 
Since cyclones have low pressure at the center, shouldn't that mean less air and therefore colder, and not warmer?
 
@SirCumference I have ADHD as well. I understand what your saying. Drinking and meds don't mix well.
@SirCumference I was once on meds, the meds helped a little bit, but I wanted to try to go without them for a while. And I started to work hard on knowing how to deal with it without the meds. And it's been 2 years without them. But some can't go off of meds and some can. I was lucky enough to be good enough without them. But it's a personal preference and decision.
 
Honestly I'm too compounded with college work to experiment with not using them atm. But hopefully it'll be better in grad school
 
Yeah
People have always told me all sorts of ways to get the ultimate coffee. But what really is the best mixture?
 
6:47 PM
I'm not even convinced coffee contains caffeine at this point
 
@SirCumference what?
 
Doesn't work for me
 
What vote counter are you watching? Could you send a link so I could see?
 
It updates on the page over time
 
@SirCumference Well, if you want coffee to feel like it has an effect again, you "just" have to go a few weeks without it ;)
 
6:48 PM
@RyanUnger I don't know, wishful thinking maybe
 
@SirCumference Hahha! Yeah. It does in some cases but according to sources there is a way you can mix it or brew it to make it not have caffeine.
 
@ACuriousMind Yeah but it's the difference between very tired and barely alive
 
Yes, caffeine withdrawal isn't fun, I'll grant that
 
@SirCumference Does it make you tired or sleepy or even fall asleep when you drink a lot of coffee?
 
@ScientistSmithYT Thanks for the information.
 
6:50 PM
Maybe. Idk I'm always sleepy especially without it
Mainly because of mandatory attendance for classes
Like I gotta wake up for an 8:30am TA session to do ungraded mandatory problem sets
Just destroys my ability to study for the rest of the day
 
@SirCumference Well my guess is that when you don't have coffee. You have so much of it daily that your body is already going through a withdrawal. Plus sleep schedule and unpredictable wake up and sleep times. Then when you drink the coffee it makes you sleepy instead of making you "hyper" or "energized". Like other people.
@SirCumference I am guessing that because That's exactly what happens to me when I drink caffeine or even a lot of sugar. (Drinks)
 
Mandatory attendance is a silly concept
2
 
@DanielSank Oh yes! You're very welcome. But like I said I'll look at mine and find where mine is. Maybe it'll help you. This is a question I was so unprepared for. :)
@ACuriousMind Hahaha!
 
7:19 PM
@SirCumference I see what you mean now by just watching the down vote counter going up. Thats probably the most down votes in the least amount of time I've ever seen.
 
@ACuriousMind for once we agree
 
@ACuriousMind Quite destructive, really
40% for one of my physics classes relied on me going to lecture or TA sessions
 
What is up with your university
People pay a lot of money to go there
Why make attendance mandatory
 
@RyanUnger you're preaching to the choir :P
the education is so bad, in some aspects
 
Sad because the math department is one of the best
 
7:28 PM
yeah math usually never mandates attendance, plus they often have takehome finals and nicer curves
(very very difficult takehome finals, but professional mathematicians are still able to look up theorems if they need to do a proof)
 
7:40 PM
We only use one pronoun here and it is the Spivak pronoun
The Spivak pronouns are a set of gender-neutral pronouns in English promulgated on LambdaMOO based on pronouns used by Michael Spivak. Though not in widespread use, they have been employed in writing for gender-neutral language by those who dislike the standard terms "he/she" or singular they. Three variants of the Spivak pronouns are in use, highlighted in the declension table below. The original ey has been argued to be preferable to e, because the latter would be pronounced the same as he in those contexts where he, him, his loses its h sound. == History == The precise history of the Spivak...
Official pronoun of differential geometry
 
 
1 hour later…
9:10 PM
I have problem in proving the transformation law of Christoffel symbols by using the covariance of covariant derivative of a vector. Starting from this
$D_{\mu'} v^{\nu'}= \partial_{\mu'} x^{\mu} \partial_{\nu} x^{\nu'} D_\mu v^\nu.$
In order to have the symbols alone we need to get rid off the primed vector In front of primed gamma
But this seems annoying a little bit
 
"annoying" is an accurate description of working out coordinate transformations explicitly, so it doesn't sound like you're necessarily doing something wrong :P
 
Ok I think I got it
 
9:39 PM
Even in classical EM in equation $ m \frac{d^2 x^{\mu}}{ds^2} = e F^{\mu \nu} \frac{dx_{\nu}}{ds}$ changing the direction of proper time to backwards is equivalent to changing the charge on the electron i.e. getting a positron, pretty cool
 
9:57 PM
@SirCumference Wow! The down votes on that apology post we were talking about earlier went from -300 | -424 in just 2 hours.
 
07:00 - 22:0022:00 - 00:00

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