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00:00 - 21:0022:00 - 00:00

00:13
Which of the following do you guys think is more representative of what theorists do when they want natural constants to disappear:
1) "I work in units in which $\hbar=1$."
2) "In the following, we redefine the symbol $\hat{H}$ to mean $\hat{H}/\hbar$."
?
I'd say 1
@DanielSank What they say: 1. What they actually (should/implicitly) do: 2.
@ACuriousMind You just made my month.
o/\o
user54412
@ACuriousMind But we can't make it too easy for readers to restore the constants. Exercise for the reader and all that.
@KyleKanos Because of habit or because it makes more sense?
00:17
I'd say probably more habit than anything. It's mostly just a convenience thing for writing really
@ACuriousMind Why is 2 better?
@0celo7 For one, so that $\hbar\to 0$, or semiclassical expansions in $\hbar$ don't become nonsensical. If it were literally a value we could set, it would not be a parameter to control the scale of quantum effects, and not a parameter one could meaningfully expand in.
@0celo7 Also, if I write $i \hbar \partial_t |\Psi\rangle = H |\Psi\rangle$, that equation is written with absolutely no reference to any "units".
Units are things like "meter", "second", etc. Physics equations don't involve units.
@tpg2114: grep -rni "jameson" only presented AMRVAC which has Jameson time stepping as an alternative to other schemes
So no artificial dissipation :/
We can choose to define $\Omega \equiv H/\hbar$ in which case we have
$i \partial_t |\Psi\rangle = \Omega |\Psi\rangle$.
Note that this is a redefinition of the Hamiltonian, not a choice of units.
@ACuriousMind Heh, I would argue that expanding in a dimensionful constant is not particularly meaningful either...
00:28
But we can pick units so it is 1.
Is doing so mathematically inconsistent ?
@0celo7 Well, yes, you can do that, but then your equations don't make any sense.
@DanielSank Hm...yeah, you're right, we're actually expanding in things like$\frac{S}{\hbar}$, I think.
@ACuriousMind Yep.
Nobody ever says that though, nor do they actually write the expansions in a way that respects that fact.
Usually it's the reciprocal though.
@DanielSank Does writing a dimensionless form of the equations (e.g., these) count as #1 or #2?
Definitely #2.
00:34
Okay, then I do #2 way more than #1
@KyleKanos Yeah, that's not the same thing as declaring e.g. $c=1$.
if you say "$v$ means $v/c$" then your equation is still meaningful.
Dang it. I'm listening to some Indian style music in which the percussive instrument sounds exactly like the @ ping on the chat room.
I'm listening to Caleb Hart talk to like 4 different people
@KyleKanos Is he that speed runner?
Why do my neurons care about that?
He is a speedruner
He's doing Pentafecta Thursday: Rockman&Forte (?) and MM 1,2,3,4
00:41
Megaman
And it's actually Megaman X series he's playing
So it really should be MMX 1,2,3,4
@KyleKanos Oh snap!
Those are some of my favs!
link?
Has he done MM3 yet?
He's finishing up X2
Oh.
Dang.
00:43
Like literally about ot be swapping cartridges
I thought MM not MMX.
Dang.
Oh, sorry to disappoint
@KyleKanos Dat walljump.
@Qmechanic do you happen to know why my "unclear what you are asking" flag on this version of this question declined? After I flagged the question, it was edited by Kyle Oman and only after then it became clear what OP was trying to ask.
btw I'm just following the advice of Manishearth and "ping one of the moderators in chat before going off to meta" :)
@gonenc Automatically declined because of three leave open votes in the close review.
00:50
@gonenc It's possible that it was seen in the review queue, and the reviewer decided to edit and then decline the close vote.
@ACuriousMind I see...
I only saw Kyle Oman's edit to the query & thought it was sensible enough.
@KyleKanos oman's edit is indeed sensible enough. but the original one that I flagged was utterly impossible to understand :)
well at least it was for me
apparently oman achieved to understand it :)
Don't worry, declined flags have no detrimental consequences - and in this case, declined simply means that the close review did not decide to close the question.
@gonenc Eh, looking at it I think I would have the same thoughts the other Kyle did. Perhaps that's hindsight speaking, though.
00:56
@ACuriousMind are you sure? cause AFAIK disputed flags are the neutral ones, whereas declined flags are the negative ones
@KyleKanos well having read oman's edit I too am able to understand the previous version now.
40
Q: What is the difference between disputed and declined flags?

saluceI'm looking at my flag count, and I see a couple 'declined' flags and a few 'disputed' flags, and I'm wondering: what is the difference between the two? I've had both disputed and declined flags where the action I expected from the flag was taken, so I can't quite nail down what they mean (other...

> Disputed flags are considered neutral; they do not count toward flag ban.
Probably, though, the bigger thing is the ratio
I've got 512 helpful flags and 23 disputed & 5 declined; I'm not particularly worried about the 5% decline+disputed rate (or even the 0.9% declined rate)
@KyleKanos that probably is the case
anyhow it is good to know why it was declined
user54412
Hmm, there seem to be fireworks going off nearby. This may be the start of 3 consecutive nights of explosions in the air.
@ChrisWhite 'Murica!
How else to celebrate one's independence?
@ChrisWhite Ah, but do you know why there's going to be 'splosions in the sky? Because these people sure don't...
01:06
@DanielSank is it 4th of july already?
@gonenc No but some folks start early.
@DanielSank like two days early? that is IMHO too early to celebrate :D
@gonenc Apparently you don't have fireworks which need exploding at hand.
user54412
@KyleKanos Clearly they need more explosions in the air to help teach them.
2
01:10
@KyleKanos the declaration of independence signed in 1964?! that is awful
@gonenc 19-84!
@gonenc 'murica?
That guy is pretty funny. he goes around that pier and finds people to sign petitions for ridiculous things (e.g., banning the American flag, supporting illiteracy)
@KyleKanos that video is hilarious and sad in a way
 
5 hours later…
05:58
@ChrisWhite question #1: what kind of textbook would you recommend to somebody who wants to learn physics?
Perhaps, the Feynman lectures :-)
That certainly would put an end to "sitting in on a physics class belittling it all as poorly defined." In my opinion.
Or perhaps something from the PSSC?
Your point is valid is what I'm trying to say, Sir.
06:27
@skillpatrol Is it just me or is (question to the audience) the most important thing just reading consistently and working through hard points. That seems to be my sticking point.
The consistency I think is the difference between independent study and an actual university course.
@KyleKanos Of course, they must be cherry picking ignorant blokes. How else could a nation of almost 100 pc literacy possess such specimens in sizeable proportion as in the videos ?
0
Q: Importance sampling for Coulomb potential

freudeThe integral I have to solve is: $$I=\int\int d \mathbf{r}d \mathbf{r}' \frac{\Phi(\mathbf{r})\Phi(\mathbf{r}')}{|\mathbf{r}-\mathbf{r}'|}$$ It is a six-dimensional integral which I am going to solve using the Monte-Carlo integration method with importance sampling. My question is how do peopl...

(1) off topic (2) if so, where to send it (if anywhere)?
opinions (and corresponding votes) wanted
JiK
JiK
@DavidZ (2) I'd say it's an exact fit for stats.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/importance-sampling but others disagreed yesterday.
06:43
Yeah, I'm hoping to get some more eyes on it
user54412
07:15
Not seeing anything too wrong with it. I mean, if someone were to ask about tweaking MC to work for the Ising model or radiative shock simulation or cosmological BAO measurements, I feel it would have better reception here. The fact the 1/r distributions are easy doesn't make this any less physics.
2
user54412
Not that I'm particularly attached to the question.
@NeuroFuzzy Which is to say according to you that people who do independent study are less consistent ? You're not clear there.
user54412
@skillpatrol Something written by a particularly clear-minded and insightful physicist, like Purcell or Carroll. Nothing by Spivak or Arnold, since they just care about symbols. And nothing by Griffiths (not insightful), Jackson (plain wrong), or Weinberg (confusedly complicated exposition).
user54412
Of course, many subjects in physics have no textbook that meets my requirements...
user54412
Honestly, though, I think @NeuroFuzzy is onto an important point -- you learn by working out problems. Also by talking to your peers who are also working out problems (this is what a lot of MOOCs are missing, to their detriment).
07:24
@ChrisWhite I have to strongly disagree about Griffiths
user54412
I figured someone would.
Sure, it might not be insightful (for some definition of the word) but in that case I think "insightful" is not what a learner needs
Apart from that, I do think independent study does help you to study at your own pace, you get to work your way into the concepts on your own terms, which gives a fuller understanding of the given topic at hand.

Consistency helps you keep focus, but it's not impossible for someone doing self-study to be consistent as well.
user54412
@DavidZ And I think many would agree with you. I've always felt, though, that undergrad physics curricula are all wrong. They focus on teaching physics for future-generic-people ("this is what society has come to learn") rather than physics for physicists ("this is how people who make discoveries actually think").
Hm, that's not really the impression I've gotten. At least not in the courses that use Griffiths' books.
user54412
07:38
You might also have had good profs. I don't have much positive to say about the two courses I had that used Griffiths.
That's why I think, even if rare, physicists who've done considerable self study like Feynman come out as being strong at concepts at every level. Rare because so few enthusiastic about self-study can be consistent at it too.
JiK
JiK
I remember having a strong opinion about Griffiths but I can't remember what it was.
Self-study is also the reason (i think) why such people are strong at pedagogy. Perhaps this also translates as having enough confidence to teach, and in turn an eagerness to communicate concepts to learners.
JiK
JiK
I think insightful is precisely what I would have needed in my studies. I learned all stuff required in the courses but in the end I didn't feel I was any wiser in anything outside the topic of the course. And I don't have any physical intuition, i.e., ability to know which model to choose where.
If I could travel back 9 years, I'd tell the freshman-JiK to choose learning resources wisely, to maintain enthusiasm for self-study (and tell him to join Physics.SE the minute it is created). University courses didn't teach much about understanding, and learning to understand things without good books or other resources didn't give me much confidence on my skills. And based on what I've read in Physics.SE in past year, my lack of confidence was indeed jutsified in many cases...
07:58
@JiK Of course, formal courses are meant to only guide a learner into gaining expertise at something of his/her interest.
JiK
JiK
But of course, that is just my opinion, and probably it's not wise to trust "If I'd done this and that I'd be a nobelist instead of not wanting to get a physics PhD".
I also saw a huge difference between BS level and MS level courses: in the first, the teachers acted like they were teaching students; in the latter, teachers acted like they were teaching future coworkers. The latter resulted in a much more insightful course; too bad I had lost a nontrivial part of my motivation in the way.
Should we set a limit to the number of questions asked within a question ?
-1
Q: Can you correct the following thinking process ?

samoEach element in universe is forming at an instance. Now when i observe the existence of two visible points to me , they appear to be present at all the intervals of my observation because my observation is part of formation interval of universe. Question : Space has dual nature. Existence and...

JiK
JiK
08:13
@Gaurav I'm thinking whether that question would make as nice poem as physics.stackexchange.com/questions/192299/…
Ha !
@JiK The poor guy got downvoted to death. Clearly shows how unappreciative physicists at PSE are to quality poetry.
JiK
JiK
@Gaurav Personally I don't appreciate the question marks at the end of each line; that might be the reason for the downvotes.
08:30
If math is the poetry of logical ideas, then physics is the poetry of physically possible logical ideas.
The results can satisfy the equations used but not the physical conditions of the problem situation.
@Gaurav the limit is technically 1
08:46
@skillpatrol nice insight there
Mew
Mew
09:11
hello
 
2 hours later…
10:43
What would happen if I created really cold solid hydrogene or helium like a bose einstein condensate and took it and put it in a coconut and and sealed the hole. Everybody know that coconuts are really hard to crack, so then I would heat up the coconut with the near absolute zero bose einstein condensate and put it in a tokamak at a really high temperature and pressure. Would it explode violently?
JiK
JiK
@MatsGranvik Seals are not as hard to crack (even with a club) as coconuts.
11:20
@MatsGranvik I assume you're more interested in how awesome the explosion would be, as I am too. F*ck physics.
2
@JiK god i didn't notice that he actually wrote a poem. it actually rhymes, nice catch :)
@gonenc Well, all the questions end in 'time' or in 'observed'. Not a great display of poetry... ;)
 
1 hour later…
12:34
For the record: I don't know if it's written explicitly anywhere, but offensive flags are used to seed SE's automatic anti-trolling scripts, so it's better not to edit out offensive content from posts. cc @innisfree and everyone else who was involved in that post.
what post?
this one (deleted)
yikes
13:02
@ACuriousMind Is German tech support available today?
I'm reformatting my partitions to give me 500GB for Windows; I have no clue what I'm doing.
Should I flag this as Engineering-related ?
@0celo7 Bad timing, I have to go in about ~5mins. I haven't used multiple OS on the same computer in quite a time, though, so not sure if I could help you anyway
@ACuriousMind Crap. I'm totally incapable of downloading the Windows ISO file it seems.
Last time I tried it on a Win 7 PC, now I'm doing it on my own Win 8. Maybe that will work.
If I were to use multiple OS, I'd get a nice copy of VMware Fusion and dual boot windows on top of Mac. That way you get the best of both OS simultaneously
@JimsBond Too complicated (for me) and probably drops performance.
Bootcamp is supposed to take the Win ISO and just install Win normally on a partition.
My biggest challenge is getting the right file from Microsoft.
Last time I just messed around in Disk Utility and somehow got it to work.
13:11
I try not to have 2 OS on 1 machine. If you have to shutdown the computer and restart it to access the other OS, it's not really different from having a separate computer, eh? Except now you can't run both simultaneously
@JimsBond Some of us can't afford two computers.
And the combined size of two computers.
@0celo7 Neither can I :( I make do with Mac at work and Windows at home. (The work computer isn't mine, btw)
JiK
JiK
At home I use Windows normally and Linux in a virtual machine (VirtualBox) for programming. The only problem I've encountered is that GPU computing won't work inside the virtual machine.
@JiK I've heard this as well from my brother and sister (programmers).
13:21
Yeah, but if you're using GPU programming you're probably in a position to care about the reduced performance of a VM.
@DavidZ Will a VM also decrease gaming performance?
Yes, as far as I know
JiK
JiK
@DavidZ Not if I'm using my home computer only for practicing and testing and not any serious computationally intensive tasks.
@DavidZ That rules out me using a VM then.
The decrease may or may not be significant, depending on your needs
@JiK true
13:23
I'm already maxing out my poor laptop GPU.
It depends on what kind of game and how powerful the host computer is. But for something resource-intensive, I wouldn't expect a VM to meet your needs.
I've tried playing Starcraft in a VirtualBox guest, and it worked, but I could tell it was stressing the computer even using the lowest settings.
@Gaurav Of course he (and obviously others like him) are cherry picking the "idiots." I'd also suggest that being able to read has little to do with one knowing what the hell is going on around you.
1
Q: Reset username for user

UniKittySo I found this user. His needs nuking. Can a mod do that?

13:47
@ChrisWhite I think that Griffiths is alright for an introductory course in E&M. One of the problems I have with it as a course book, though, is that his solutions manual is all over the internet & many/most students won't actually learn it b/c they'll find the manual and just copy (even the wrong answers)
@KyleKanos As an undergrad, I loved it when the solution manual was accessible. It meant I could teach myself the proper methods to answer questions. Now, I hate it because it means students don't need to hire a tutor as often
Why yes, I am sometimes a bit selfish. How did you know?
I was aware of PhysicsForums before the idea of searching for solution manuals
JiK
JiK
As a teacher I'd love to have solution manuals accessible. Then I could spend more time answering real questions regarding to understanding the concepts than answering simple questions about some mathematical details in the solutions.
Another chatroom fight...WTH man
can't we all just get along?
13:57
@JimsBond Reformatting my partitions. See you on the other side.
@0celo7 yes, come to the dark side
@JimsBond (I'm just expanding my Windows partition size, should be painless.)
okay then, embrace the light side
JiK
JiK
@0celo7 "should be painless" are a good choice for last words
@JiK Last time I tried installing Windows on a Mac, it took 5 hours.
It should take less than that this time.
14:03
I have come to the conclusion that Data Scientists are really Psychohistorians.
14:15
Also: there's a lot to data that I had no idea could be there
@KyleKanos does that mean you made it into that course/program thing?
No, I think the registration period is going on still
yesterday, by Kyle Kanos
So a company I applied to (data mining) is testing me to see if I really know how to do the job. Kinda smart on them b/c it weeds out all the people who know nothing.
^That's what I'm talking about now
Ah I see.
I was given 15 days to review data & write a report on it. So I'm totally learning R and data mining on the fly for this
And it's actually pretty cool
I believe you
I'm doing the same thing right now with risk management for banking
14:19
Sadly, though, the log-in on the test site said test-takers had until 15 Aug to register and then a pair of test (one 15 days, the other 30), so I'd probably not hear back until October if I were to get the job (which there's obviously no guarantee that I'll even finish part 1)
Yep. But it's still a prospect
I'm currently trying to see if there are "users" on this fake data that have moved countries (and then cities and then IP addresses)
::2 months from now we see Kyle Kanos on the street holding a sign: "Will do physics for food"::
5
Two months from now, if I don't have a job, I'll probably be moving (wife & kids as well) back in with my parents to save some money
Again, same with me (minus the wife and kids part)
On the other hand, without the wife and kids, I could just get an old refrigerator box.....
14:49
-2
Q: Where will a sparkling (CO$_2$) water bottle have more bubbles when opened

user28533If you take an unopened sparkling water bottle to higher altitude (7000 feet) or under sea level (-8 feet), and then open it, in which location will it bubble more?

Reopenable?
I'd say yes
But that's why we have a voting system
because I can't be trusted on my own
15:03
I concur.
^ see, told you I can't be trusted
We gain trust the old fashioned way, we earn it :P
15:45
@DavidZ Why... was that ever closed?
Not enough input from the asker?
@DanielSank The original was (probably) closed as homework
So it needs more "concept"?
Rick's edit (which I disapproved of b/c it invalidates Jerry's answer) changed the question
Yeah, I'd call that a radical change
The original was about pressure, not bubbles
@DanielSank Actually, it seems it was a custom reason, but since it was accepted and closed, I'm not sure that we can determine it
@JimsBond I concur, but OP did mention the bubbles in a now-deleted comment to Jerry's answer
15:49
That edit is pretty bogus.
I rolled it back because it invalidates an already present answer
I considered rolling it back when I saw it went through
@JimsBond Good move.
Hola from 0celo7's PC 2.0
@JiK Worked beautifully.
I wonder if it's as simple as that answer says...
The pressure in the bottle depends on things like temperature because the solubility of gas in the liquid is temperature dependent.
I wonder if there's also some effect from external pressure in a nontrivial way.
15:54
WTH....
-2
Q: What happens to sound at speeds greater than mach 1?

user1179554So what we know about the Doppler effect is that if the origin of a sound is moving, the sound waves will be closer together in-front of the origin, and farther apart behind it. This creates a difference in pitch. Knowing that I am going to try an work through a problem and would love to know if...

-1
Q: Would you hear a sound in reverse when its source travels with twice the speed of sound?

MysteryAs I already said in the title, I wondered, whether a stationary listener would hear the sound of an airplane traveling with twice the speed of sound in reverse due to the doppler effect. (of course, he wouldn't hear anything at all before the airplane passed by and the sound reaches him) ~Mystery

Is that really two different users asking the same question about Mach 2+ sounds?
16:06
That's a lot of users with only 1 rep >8-/
Did high school just get out for summer?
Wow, this isn't 4chan.
It could be someday!
Are you Sofia?
(For those who don't know, she said this place is doomed to become a porn site.)
I think high school let out last week
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos I don't quite understand your comment "The animation at the bottom of the page you linked and the link I provided should tell you what the M>2 sound would be." Doesn't the animation show that the circle that's emitted first is the last one to reach an observer at the right end?
16:16
So summer school has started?
@JimsBond I graduated 3 weeks ago.
@KyleKanos Steam is downloading at 21 Mbps now.
Sofia is a well intentioned enough pal @0celo7
@0celo7 Yeah, but around here the graduating students get out of school a bit earlier than the rest. Or maybe it's just the different systems. All I know is our schools let out on June 25
I thought for sure our site would have a go-to "Are we sure the universe is actually expanding?" question. But I can't find a decent one that discusses if there are possible alternatives OR why we are sure it is expanding. It's got to be here somewhere. Anyone want to help me find it?
yeah, those are really good. But they just deal with redshift.
I'm pretty sure we should already have a question I can mark this as a duplicate of
0
Q: Why is universe expanding?

Shing LauOkay, this question may sound silly: base on the observation Besides an expanding universe, would there be other possibilities? Would it be possible, say, there exists a fundamental repelling interaction among all partices, which is proportional to distance (e.g. $Ae^{ar}$, where $A$ extremely s...

And if we don't, I'd be kind of ashamed. I really should have noticed that earlier
16:33
Some people might appreciate this: reddit.com/r/WritingPrompts/comments/3bzs0u/…
2
@DanielSank It was closed as homework-like, though I'm not sure offhand why the reason doesn't show up anymore
@DavidZ It was good, well written, and creative at first
but it got lazy and sloppy and the end was the worst
16:52
@KyleKanos Indeed, the comment intended instead to question the relation between literacy and general awareness, since it is still the indicator of societal awareness is many countries.
@0celo7 Did Sofia really say that ? She had nothing more than mild disagreements about homework questions at the time I had to take break a few months ago.
@JiK Not exactly. An observer would have all the waves reach him first then shifted sounds reach him. Is this "reversed" as the way OP thinks it to be? Definitely not.
@Gaurav Eh, I'm still not sure that I'd correlate literacy and general awareness. Literacy, I think if anything, is a general "rule of thumb" that your education system is functioning.
@0celo7 Sofia said a lot of things, dude.
@DavidZ That post :D. The rest of reddit today >:(
New rule: starting a post with the words "Okay" or "OK" is against intergalactic law.
What say you?
17:11
Would "Alright" be a caveat or acceptable?
@DanielSank Please tell me how the hell you manage to be up to date on affairs of multiple physics sites.
It's going to be pretty hard to make a law against the most used word in the English language.
@DavidZ ah I see now why editing is a bad idea. Why isn't the spam detector also applied to usernames? Can't it detect and flag particular words (and variations e.g. w0rdz) that suggest someone is here to cause trouble?
@DanielSank I'd probably be exhausted by the time I get over the politics of the day on PSE. I'd happily give reddit a skip.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos In any case neither the animation nor the Mach wave Wikipedia page that you link to give any hint that the wave of the sound emitted at the beginning of the animation would reach the observer at the same time as the emitter.
17:19
Er, the text right next to the image contains the following statement:
> The shock wave advances at the speed of sound v, and since it is built up from all of the combined wave fronts, the sound heard by an observer will be quite intense
JiK
JiK
"The shock wave advances at the speed of sound $v$"
Kinda hard to interpret that to mean "it comes at different times!"
JiK
JiK
The plane advances at the speed $2v$
JiK
JiK
So how does the sound from the beginning reach the observer at the same time as the plane?
17:21
Uh, what?
@Gaurav Uh, I went to reddit/askscience to see if anything interesting was going on and the top post is an explanation of why half the site is closed down. Didn't exactly go out of my way to find out about it.
@Gaurav I've mostly given up on posting to r/askscience. Stack Exchange's system is so much better that there's just not much point.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos (Let $v=0$) At $t=0$ the plane is at $x=0$ and emits a sound A. At $t=1$ the plane is at $x=2$ and emits a sound B. The observer is at $x=3$. When does he hear the sound waves of A and B?
@skillpatrol We're making a law against "Sorry"?
No wait, that's only most used in Canadian English. Sorry
@JiK Is v the plane's speed or speed of sound? Because either way, your question makes little sense as written.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos $v$ is the speed of sound
17:25
Okay, a zero speed of sound makes little sense
@DanielSank Unless, you're looking for a site to ask 'homework-related questions' of course. :D
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos What... I meant $v=1$...
Well you wrote 0
But 1 makes more sense
I always thought it was "eh" @JimsBond :P
@innisfree you'd have to ask the SE team, but you can't tell for sure whether an account is legitimate or not based on its username
@Gaurav well, /r/askscience isn't for homework help, but yeah, the threaded discussion model is generally better for that sort of thing
17:28
@skillpatrol I think they're tied. Especially because they occur so frequently together with "sorry, eh?"
Since the plane's supersonic, the observer at 3 would hear both sounds simultaneously. That's the whole idea of the Mach cone
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos Yet you quoted that the shock wave travels at the speed of sound, not at the speed of the plane.
@JiK Uh, because it does travel at the speed of sound
I'm not sure what you're not getting here
JiK
JiK
Then isn't the plane faster than the shock wave?
17:30
Sound waves travel at the speed of sound.
@JiK Yes...that is possible, you know
JiK
JiK
So... At what point does the observer hear the shock wave?
Sometime after the object at M>1 passes by
Did you look at the videos I linked at the end there?
JiK
JiK
What is "some time"
If $t=1.5$, the plane passes $x=3$. Observer at $x=3$ would hear the sonic boom at $t>1.5$
JiK
JiK
So would that sonic boom contain components that were emitted at $t=-100,x=-200$?
17:33
Depends on the positions of the two objects moving and such
@JiK That is what a sonic boom is.
I mean, obviously the sounds would be damped by normal inverse-square laws
JiK
JiK
And because the shockwave travels at the speed of sound, that would mean that the sonic boom is heard after $t>203$
So the bulk of what you hear is things closer in time/space to you
Not sure where 203 is coming from, but the sound from the shockwave would come after the object passes you, yes
I think the video I mention shows this way more effectively than the words are describing here
JiK
JiK
err, I mean 103
Fallout NV decided to break itself.
17:35
It won't load saves anymore.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos How should that video show anything?
Because it shows pretty clearly real-world examples of supersonic jets producing sounds as I'm trying to describe
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos You're saying that the components emitted at $(t,x=2t)$, no matter what $t$ is, reach the observer at $x=3$ at the same time.
For an object that is (a) moving towards you and (b) sufficiently close, yes. That's what the Mach cone depicts (because it's what happens)
Due to the irrational diversity of proper nouns in English vocabulary, I propose we purge all of them except Jim, which henceforth will serve as a synonym of the rest, which removes the need to produce new proper nouns at all. What say ?
JiK
JiK
17:41
@KyleKanos If the time of the shockwave is $T$, then I can't see how the component emitted at $(-T,x=-2T)$ would reach the observer at time $T$ as it has distance $2T+3$ to travel in time $2T$.
@Gaurav Jim Jim Jim Jim Jim
Jim, Jim ?
Jim..... Jim Jim
JIM JIM JIM JIIIIIIIIIM
@0celo7 Why are you shouting my name? I'm right here. I can hear you
17:44
@JimsBond Jim'm Jim...Jim.
Ah, okay. That makes sense
@0celo7 I'm pretty sure it's Snake? Snake? SNAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAKKKKE
@JimsBond Is somebody there?
-2
A: Correlation between speed, distance, mass, etc between a planet and a star (or moon and planet)?

vishakhThe time diffrence caused by gravity according to me is due to its rotation. since motion affects the rate at which time flows according to theory of relativity. as we know the time near a black hole flows really slow also its rotational speed is close to half of the speed of light. since time fl...

17:47
@JiK That's why the Mach cone pictures can be helpful, as can the video I linked above
I have no mercy
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos But it isn't for me. I can only understand that there is a shock wave, not that the shockwave contains every sound the moving object has ever emitted and there is never absolutely nothing else heard and can't be.
What is a shock wave then?
@JimsBond #rekt
17:49
What the J*m, Jim ?
I probably made him cry. But he'll learn and become a more humble physicist for it eventually
@DanielSank Hmm, might be a bit arrogant of us to declare ourselves Makers of Rules of intergalactic space here. There could be dragons out there in the Galaxy.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos Apparently something that travels at the speed of sound, and yet contains signals from events that occured at locations and times from where a signal traveling at the speed of sound couldn't yet have arrived. I'm having a hard time grasping the idea just by looking at Youtube videos that say BANG.
The email address should be removed
The whole thing will be deleted anyway
17:51
@JimsBond He's an actual physicist?
@JiK Sound is a compression wave (p-wave or pressure wave) that has a characteristic speed. When you push a bunch of these compressions together (due to supersonic speeds), the amplitude increases
But it still travels at that characteristic speed
Alright guys, it's morning and I need to go to the Jim.
@0celo7 I doubt it. But I imagine he's a prospective one. Wants to be, probably
Probably younger than you right now
@Gaurav +5
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos Yes, that's how I understood shockwaves until todeay.
Well that's all that's happening here. The sound waves are being compressed (amplitude increases) and travelling together at the same speed; as a stationary observer you'd hear the compressed sound (the shock wave) at once, and then the Doppler shifted sounds afterwards
JiK
JiK
17:58
I still don't understand what happens to a sound that's emitted at a time and place from where it can't have reached the observer by the time the observer hears the sonic boom.
18:14
@JiK I'm currently editing an animated gif of a supersonic wave right now. Hopefully it will work & help
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos Thank you!
JiK
JiK
18:35
Hmm, also a comment to this answer of the duplicate question and this paper (Sec. 2.2) linked in the what-if seem to agree with me.
...that there is a time-reversed signal after the sonic boom (obviously dominated by the signal the plane emits after it has passed) but they don't give any reasoning
18:49
Red it obviously first sound
Black is supersonic sound-producer
If you put your finger somewhere below the moving object you'll see all the sounds hit you at once (shock wave)
@JimsBond Sorry to play spoiler, who's the physicist guy you guys were talking about ?
Then you'll notice that all the subsequent sound waves are actually in sequence.
JiK
JiK
I see plenty of waves between the shock wave and the red wave.
Sure, the object is still producing sound
But put your finger somewhere and you'll see that all the waves hit your finger at the same time
Unless you're right next to it
JiK
JiK
No, the red wave doesn't hit my finger at the same time
If I put my finger close to the right end of the picture and some distance down from the object's path, I first see the shock wave, then some other waves, then the red wave, and then some waves that are emitted after the object has passed.
18:55
Then you're putting your finger too close
:D
JiK
JiK
The question didn't specify that the observer's distance from the object isn't small compared to the distance the object has travelled.
Well it didn't specify anything except M>2 and reversed sounds
JiK
JiK
Yes, and if you paint the second circle blue, there'd be a significant portion of area where the blue wave hits before the red wave.
Took me 45 minutes to do that one! Not sure I want to spend another 45 min getting the second wave
JiK
JiK
:D
18:58
I probably should figure out how they made the gif and just color it from the start
I mean, it's just expanding waves at some speed, shouldn't be too hard to program :/
And I think this image is kinda misleading/incorrect:
If the boombox is supersonic, then those sound waves should be making a Mach cone and it doesn't really look like one
JiK
JiK
The intersection points of the circles are sort of making a Mach cone, but the discretization interval is too long for it to look like a cone.
@Gaurav Oh, just some new user that posted a "my theory is that time dilation is not due to gravity but is actually......" answer
Wow, someone calling David Z out in the form of an edit
19:25
haha, just saw that. David Z, your work is appreciated, and fortunately that kind of behaviour is rare here and quickly removed.
19:54
0
Q: Identifying Metals at Home

PipperChipI'm posting this on meta because I'm not entirely sure if this is the site for it. The sidebar suggested I that this was the place to put it, so I'm doing here. Is this question appropriate for this stack exchange? If not, where ought this question go? Mouse over to see the questionable question ...

@KyleKanos I like dragons.
We're buddies. Nothing to worry about. They'll understand.
JiK
JiK
@KyleKanos Remember, you made me do this:
http://i.imgur.com/izad0kE.gif
Needs a new line:
Also: source code?
Or was that gif editing?
JiK
JiK
Source: pastebin.com/D4MsBftY Disclaimer: This is just trial&error, I don't have any idea what some of the commands do.
Next idea would be continuous colormap for all circles, so one can see that the old circles are time-reversed but the new circles are in original order and that the new circles are smaller = larger intensity = you maybe can't hear the time-reversed part even if they are real.
00:00 - 21:0022:00 - 00:00

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