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00:01
@0celo7 It's because helicity is the eigenvalue of an operator that squares to (a multiple of) the identity, so the only possible eigenvalues for that operator are +1 and -1.
obe
obe
@skillpatrol It's fine.
@DanielSank that quote is still accurate
8 mins after I get close votes again. 9 things in the queue. ::sigh::
@ACuriousMind it squares to a multiple of the identity? I'm missing something...
probably the "why" type question is not for concrete Q&A site like this sites.
00:13
@0celo7 No, I spoke too soon, it doesn't
the "why" type question seems to fit discussion site like forum quite well.
@ACuriousMind I await your correct explanation with baited breath
the particle physicist @DavidZ is welcome to chime in
@0celo7 It squares to 1 :D Write out $(\frac{1}{2}\vec p \cdot \vec \sigma)^2$ and use that the anticommutator of Pauli matrices is $\{\sigma_a,\sigma_b\} = 2\delta_{ab}\mathrm{Id}$.
pauli matrices? I want general stuff
huh? That's general - the anticommutator of the Lie algebra elements is not dependent on the chosen realization.
00:20
(or does that hold for all spin matrices)
@ACuriousMind ok
@0celo7 What do you mean? For 3D and 4D, Pauli matrices are sufficient. I'm not sure how/if one defines helicity in higher dimensions.
@ACuriousMind you're going to laugh but I thought the pauli matrices were for spin 1/2
what would the spin operator for a vector be, for instance
@0celo7 Ah, that - yes, they are, but they are also the actual Lie algebra $\mathfrak{su}(2)$, so their relations are, up to scaling, preserved in all representations.
@0celo7 See here.
@ACuriousMind ok but ... I see a link
@ACuriousMind cool
@ACuriousMind you might have convinced me, but the one who matters is still suspicious of your witchcraftery
oh, Shankar has a section on how to construct high spin matrices
forgot :P
@0celo7 Nah, he's smug because he knew that without asking me ;)
00:32
@DavidZ Doesn't that mean that I can ask crappy questions just because I'm doing research instead of taking a course?
00:50
@DanielSank Are you getting at that the researcher might say that in their case the value lies in actually getting the answer? And that questions should be off-topic for just asking for the results of calculations, no matter the intended goal or "value"?
@ACuriousMind More or less, yes.
The wording of the policy is a bit weird in that respect, I would agree.
Given a problem P, whether the answer to P or pedagogical value of solving P is the goal of the poster's pre-post activity seems to have absolutely no bearing on the quality of that poster's post about P.
Is that confusingly worded enough?
The P-ness of that wording seems quite large. :P
:P
@KyleKanos this book is really good.
01:14
After reading G. t'Hooft's question, I have just found a way to pick a side when I am not sure about the answer,
1.)I do not know
in case I have to get an answer (someone point a gun to my head?)
2.) never pick the side of fundamentalism
if there is no fundamentalist, then
3.) pick the big names
question?
not sure if it is rational enough
@DanielSank the quote is about homework-like questions, not about crappy questions
01:29
@Huy oh my god Winston's mother...
02:02
@DavidZ Uh, yeah, I know. Did you see what @ACuriousMind said a few comments up?
 
2 hours later…
04:00
Yes, I did
Hm, I can't properly reply now since I'm on mobile. I'll get back to you later
 
1 hour later…
05:31
0
Q: What would be the best and worst time to ask questions on Physics Stack Exchange?

Neil GrahamPerhaps somebody of more authority may know the time (of a specific timezone) where most people are online and offline.

@Huy Jackie did not deserve that
holy shit this is gruesome
Huy
Huy
05:47
@0celo7: Life's a bitch huh. After all your mission is to work against all those nice guys. :(
@0celo7: Do you like the game so far?
(I don't remember exactly how far in the storyline you must be by now, it's been too long)
some of the melee parts are frustrating because there's so many dudes
Huy
Huy
Shouldn't be too challenging though no?
and they inflate the difficulty by throwing in kinfe people
Huy
Huy
Hm.
I'm not good at PC controls
I can't do these quick time events
Huy
Huy
05:50
I didn't find it too challenging, but I already played Arkham City before and the melee fights are similar.
I see.
I can imagine it being challenging then.
this is a very bloody game
Wei Shen should take up a career of infiltrating hostile fortifications and killing everyone inside with his hands...he's a god
Huy
Huy
Pretty much.
Off to uni for some studying. Laters!
06:06
oh my god Wei is more resilient than master chief
@Huy Pendrew got fucked.
@Huy Good game.
 
1 hour later…
07:40
@DanielSank OK now that I'm on a computer: there are questions that would qualify as homework-like in one context (e.g. if assigned as a homework problem) but not in another context (e.g. if part of a research project). We can't tell whether those questions are supposed to get the tag without extra information about the context. But presumably those questions are a small minority.
And ideally, the issue of whether a question should be closed would be decided independently of whether it is a homework-like question (in the sense of the quote you posted earlier) or not.
Now, in practice we tend to apply a slightly different set of criteria to homework-like questions than to other questions. Specifically, if we (the community) decide that a question is homework-like (again in the sense of the quote), we require evidence of effort to narrow the problem down to a specific conceptual issue. If we decide it's not homework-like, we're somewhat less strict about that requirement.
So our criterion for closing a particular type of bad question is one thing for clearly homework-like questions, a different thing for clearly non-homework-like questions, and interpolates between them for questions which are ambiguous.
(this is my impression of the way things actually work, I'm not saying this is or isn't the way they should work)
Hopefully the two things (i.e. the two versions of the closing criteria, for homework-like and non-homework-like questions) are not too different. Again, ideally they'd be the same, and then the issue of whether to close a question decouples from the issue of whether it counts as homework-like. But in practice the decoupling is only approximate.
I know this is a messy situation but it emerged as a compromise of sorts between people who wanted to allow homework-like questions and people who didn't, or who did only under certain conditions. It's something I would like the community to revisit someday, but it will take a lot of effort to restructure the homework policy properly.
08:24
> there are questions that would qualify as homework-like in one context (e.g. if assigned as a homework problem) but not in another context (e.g. if part of a research project).
I'm not a huge fan of that.
I thought we say "homework-like" to indicate that whether or not the problem is actually from a homework assignment is irrelevant.
> We can't tell whether those questions are supposed to get the homework-and-exercises tag without extra information about the context. But presumably those questions are a small minority.
We can't tell, so why try? Why not just hold all questions to the same standards of quality?
@DavidZ This poses a problem. There are specific rules for "homework-like" questions. Therefore, under the site rules, whether or not a question is closed surely depends on whether or not it is homework-like.
Here's what the homework-like close reason says:
> Homework-like questions should ask about a specific physics concept and show some effort to work through the problem. We want our questions to be useful to the broader community, and to future users. See our meta site for more guidance on how to edit your question to make it better
This has nothing to do with whether or not the question is actually motivated by a homework assignment.
@DavidZ I think I can illustrate the heart of my concern with a simple example.
Consider the following question:
Consider a conducting cube with a charge $q$ on it.
a. Find the potential at all points on a line which passes through the centers of two parallel faces of the cube.
b. Find the electric field near the faces of the cube. An infinite sum representation is acceptable.
That's a homework-like problem. It's bad and should be closed because there's no indication of a conceptual question or any show of effort.
Now consider the same question re-worded:
I work at CERN and do experiments wherein high energy charged particles are deflected by electrodes of peculiar shape. We have an experiment involving deflection by a charged cube. What is the potential along an axis passing through two parallel faces of a conducting cube with charge $q$ on it, and what are the surface fields?
That question sucks as much as the first and should be closed.
I think the site meta should reflect this (assuming others agree). It also seems kind of weird that the definitive source for the homework policy is that meta post and the close reason.
Interested in others' thoughts on this.
08:43
@DanielSank well, yeah, but in this case I think it'd be fairly obvious that the question is a homework question in disguise
@DanielSank setting aside the point from my previous message, consider this: how does the site meta not reflect this? Sure, there is the lack of a specific rule equivalent to the homework policy for non-homework-like questions, but does it say anywhere that questions like this example (assuming we accept it as non-homework-like) should not be closed?
@DanielSank BTW we say "homework-like" because the category also includes things like contest questions, self-study questions, review problems, puzzles, and so on.
My future vision for the homework policy is that it will no longer be a homework policy, but rather a policy applying to all questions. But as I said, it's going to be a complicated process to develop a consensus on that.
09:09
@DavidZ Ok, but this is missing the point. Let's try a better example, something I would actually ask as related to my research:
Suppose I have a 2-level quantum system subjected to a Hamiltonian $H = I(t)\sigma_x + Q(t) \sigma_y$ where $I$ and $Q$ are stochastic and independent. What is the probability versus time for finding the system in $|0\rangle$ given that it started in $|1\rangle$?
That's not from a homework assignment, but it's a crummy question.
@DavidZ If that's your vision then we're of a like mind.
I don't see any reason at all that questions generated in a research environment should be considered acceptable if they suffer the same quality problems which happen to be most common in questions coming from homework assignments.
 
2 hours later…
11:09
Hi I know this might sound a dumb question but how do i find the absoulte error of this data
TRIAL | 1 2 3
Time(s) | 13.6 13.9 14.4
 
2 hours later…
13:05
@the133448 Don't make it sound dumb by not showing what you've actually attempted.
does anyone know what generalised Riemann invariants are?
13:22
@DavidZ @DanielSank: I agree with DanielSank that the wording of the policy should better reflect that the reasons for asking a homework-like question are irrelevant. The current blurb seems to indicate that questions where the actual purpose is just getting the answer are not homework-like if OP is not actually interested in the method of finding it (which may even be true for actual homework questions :P)
13:38
As I see & act, the HW policy applies to any question asking for help on "doing the math" of anything, be it an actual HW question, a research project or a derivation of a line in a textbook
Users who get their questions closed tend to argue on the "I've shown work!" phrase in the close reason
I personally think that "showing your work" probably isn't necessary if the point is we don't solve homework problems
@ACuriousMind Which means to say in effect that the homework policy is to go ? What's the use of changing the wording of the policy if in effect it negates the policy itself by allowing any type of homework question on the site by not questioning it's intent ?
@KyleKanos I've done this. It's very confusing.
Or at least not needed in the close reason, especially since the HW policy summary starts off with, It's not enough to just show your work and ask where you went wrong
@Gaurav Strange, I read it completely the other way: that the policy is strengthened, not removed
Well, I think the following is necessary for something "homeowork-like", i.e. asking about the result of a calculation, what I would not close:
1. Ask about a derivation *not* found in standard material (and reasonably demonstrate that it cannot be found by googling).
2. Show your work, explain at which point you are stuck.
3. Ask a *specific* question about the point at which you are stuck. Not "how to proceed?". If you can't ask such a specific question, don't ask the question at all.
@Gaurav I want to disallow any kind of homework question by not caring about their intent, not allow them!
@ACuriousMind So you mean we should close any homework question irrespective of its intent ?
13:50
@KyleKanos The fact that they often argue is indicative of one fo two things (not exclusive): The wording of the policy is unclear, so they think showing work is sufficient, or they just try to argue with anything they see because they're desperate.
@ACuriousMind Then what is the key identifier of a homework question ?
@Gaurav If it does not ask a conceptual question, but merely asks for the result of a calculation, then yes, I think that's the point @DanielSank also was making above - your intention shouldn't matter, asking "Given X, what is the value of the quantity Y?" is just not a good question
@Gaurav They are identified by asking for the result of a calculation without asking about any specific physical (theoretical or experimental) concept.
@ACuriousMind I could consider being more lenient on #1. I think #2 is too related to #3 to really be separate and both are bad reasons for leaving open
@ACuriousMind I'm more worried about the first case than the latter
@KyleKanos I'd not close things because the solution is in some book. But if it is found e.g. on Wikipedia (as it quite often is the case!), then it should be closed. But yeah, I don't mean to be draconian about 1., and you're probably right that 2. and 3. are a single thing.
See I tend to view those types of questions as "I can't do math" which really isn't a physics question
14:01
I'm moving tomorrow.
That came quick.
@ACuriousMind Thanks for clarifying.
I never understand those who ask homework.... on the one hand, most of the homework is easy (I am not talking about homework in schools like Caltech)
on the second hand, homework is extremely ineffective way to learn,if you don't figure it out on your own.
(of course, comparing your way with others' way is effective)
what's on their mind to ask homework online?
@Shing Well, the wrath of their instructor ?
@Gaurav probably. I think asking homework here kind of making this site less interesting and inspiring.
plus: there are always available problem set provided with excellent detailed solutions. (e.g. David Morin's Mechanics)
@Shing I feel quite to the contrary that it creates a unique atmosphere for commoners to freely interact with experts on any given physical topic.
14:16
"commoners"
@Gaurav I am glad to hear a different voice, but that was my personal thought. maybe I enjoy too much problem solving on my own?
0
Q: Would this question be allowed to migrate to Physics.Main?

MalandyWould this question be allowed to migrate to Physics.Main? What are the specs of the components I would need to make a 1050 kph, non-rocket-propelled motorbike? If I'm allowed to migrate, would/could I get answers like this? Keeping in mind that this is the kind of answer that I want...: As...

@Gaurav "commoners" are called laymen. "commoner" sounds quite pejorative.
In a second thought, some problems are extremely challenging (e.g. Jackson)
then it should be good to ask those questions here (?)
@ACuriousMind Probably yes. Thanks for the correction.
14:20
@Shing No, the difficulty of the problem must not influence the policy, since difficulty is subjective.
@ACuriousMind yeah, you have a point, I agree.
@0celo7 How far are you moving, by the way?
Damn it, already out of close votes. This is a bad day
@ACuriousMind 467 miles
@0celo7 ::lets Google convert that into proper units:: Ah, a bit more than twice as far as I did.
@ACuriousMind Apparently I've done 20 reviews already :/
14:31
I found it kind of wired.... I asked question quite specific in other sites of SE, but I usually asked question too board in Physics SE, I wonder why. Maybe it takes some more practice in asking well posed physics questions.
@Shing (ref my prev comments) Moreover, I think the problem is more of there being not much questions of a high level physics than there being many homework questions per se.
@ACuriousMind What? It's 467 in proper units...
@0celo7 You are aware that you'll have to use SI units as an engineer (I hope)?
@ACuriousMind Blasphemy.
@ACuriousMind SI != proper units...
Just because I know the SI units does not mean I have to prefer them...you Euros have some strange ideas.
I'll try to introduce $c=G=\hbar=k_B=1$ units in my field...wish me luck.
@0celo7 I don't think $G$ will play much of a role in your field :P
14:39
@0celo7 with all due respect, I think units depend on some long dead kings' arm or leg is a much more stranger idea
@Gaurav Probably yes. I wonder why.
@ACuriousMind ::sigh:: You're showing your quantum ignorance.
@ACuriousMind Since the Einstein equations are a ToE, nuclear fusion is a solution to the Einstein equations, which involve $G$.
@0celo7 Theories of Exile won't help you.
@ACuriousMind lol
You really like that game
Maybe my roommate plays it and can show me the ropes
@0celo7 Heh, yes, but I mainly found nothing else silly to retort with :D
14:58
No offensive meant, but does the whole "question-closing", "upvote, downvote" things work exactly like training pet dogs? If the users behave themselves, then give him some upvotes, if they don't, close their post.
I forget the name for the famous experiment, sorry.
@Shing The SE model is called gamification. It's meant to reward people (with imaginary internet points) for doing things others consider worthwhile - what's wrong with that?
2
And the experiment with the dogs you're probably thinking of is Pavlov and his dogs, although the point of that one was different
@ACuriousMind Nothing wrong, it just reminds me of the neuroscience I have learned, and not sure if I get it right.
what's the difference?
@Shing iirc, the Pavlovian dog experiment shows that, if a bell was rung during feeding every time, the dogs begun to associate the bell with food, and began to produce saliva (a reaction to getting food, normally) even if no food was presented to them and only the bell was rung
It shows that it is possible to transfer reactions to certain things by association to other things, to which the reaction might not make sense.
The way votes and closure would condition the behaviour of users is closer to the operant conditioning of behaviorism, championed by Skinner, than to Pavlovian conditioning.
@ACuriousMind Yes.
My 5 in AP Psych confirms.
@ACuriousMind thanks. that's exactly what I want to know. I have never heard of The Gamification, I am checking it out.
sorry for that may sound a bit offensive, but I was figuring why I inclined ask less specific question in physics SE than other SE sites.
15:14
That doesn't sound offensive at all to me, but I can't say why you might ask broader physics questions than about other things
It might also be, though, that we are a bit more strict in closing questions for being to broad than other sites.
@0celo7 Sometimes I miss being in school and having to do other things besides physics and math
ha ha is that typical german? in my hometown, people will usually get pissed off.
@ACuriousMind I'm taking a psych class in college too.
nope, most of the rules in Physics SE seems reasonable to me. one reason is probably I want discussion in physics more badly than just an answer.
@0celo7 It's quite difficult here to fit other courses into one's schedule, and I usually have enough other things to do so that I have no time for non-physics, non-math courses.
obe
obe
@0celo7 There is always this.
15:20
@Shing Well, good answers should discuss more than just giving a one-line answer in most cases, but they won't discuss with you, if that's what you want.
@ACuriousMind You mean editing answer to improve in response to the OP's further question?
I don't quite understand "good answers should discuss more" sorry, would you mind explaining it further?
@ACuriousMind I won't have time for such classes past my second year either.
@Shing No, I mean that good answers should do more than just literally answer the question (which could, in most cases, be done in very few sentences)- they should give background, perhaps refer to other questions one might think of, and thoroughly explain why the answer they give is correct.
OP should not pose further questions as comments in the same question, unless they are very closely related - it's preferable to ask a new, follow-up question.
@ACuriousMind I see, it is kind of an art to answer as well as to ask. I still need more practice. I am so glad to talk with you, but I am sorry I have to leave now. see you :)
Thanks for the explaining
@Shing No problem, cya!
15:33
Hey @ACuriousMind
If the orthonormal frame bundle is SO(3,1)
Is the basic frame bundle just GL(4)
yes
Does it have a particular connection or is it just the same thing
@Slereah I think the connection on both comes by considering the tangent bundle as an associated SO or GL bundle, respectively, and then choosing the connection on the frame bundles that is compatible with the Levi-Civita connection on the tangent bundle
Also how do you adapt connections to different bundles
Like, the connection isn't use the same way in the tangent bundle and the Dirac bundle
There's the theory of associated bundles to principal bundles. You should properly have the "actual" connection living on the principal bundle and induce the connections on all other bundles through the "association process".
I'm afraid I've not seen this actually explicitly done, but that may well be because I haven't actually learned this systematically. Maybe @Danu knows more/other things?
15:41
@ACuriousMind Problem 2.5 in Weinberg...oO
@Danu, do you know things
I can't into spin in 2 dimensions
Spin in 2D is pretty easy
Lefthanded spinors go left
Righthanded spinors go right
Literaly
2 spatial dimensions
2 and 1 of time or just 2
15:42
2+1
Spin(2, 1) = SL(2, R)
apparently
"How would you describe the spin states of a single massive particle?"
do I have to find representations of $\mathrm{SO}(2)$ or something?
halp
I think you have to find representations of $\mathrm{SO}(2,1)$ - the 2+1 dimensional Lorentz group, no?
Reps of $\mathrm{SO}(2)$ are boring because it's just $\mathrm{U}(1)$.
you wouldn't be alive without U(1)!
@ACuriousMind yes
ugh, I'm bad at this
wat do
15:49
that's fun, you get anyons :D
I knew that
oh right
that fucked up thing
@ACuriousMind do I have to find the little group?
@0celo7 Ehhh...I guess, but I honestly never actually understood what this "little group" business is about.
it's just $\mathrm{SO}(2)$
15:53
Physicists can't explain group theory.
@0celo7 Might be enough, now find the irreps of that (I think this already gives anyons)!
@ACuriousMind for massive particles the little group is $\mathrm{SO}(3)$ because it leaves $(m,0,0,0)$ invariant
the idea is that you work out the reps of the little group
so you can import all the spin stuff from regular QM because that's just $\mathrm{SO}(3)$
SO(2) for null particles, no?
And SO(2,1) for tachyons
IIRC
@ACuriousMind the relevant equation in Weinberg is (2.5.11) if you're interested
he shows you need the reps of the little group to find the transformation rules
@Slereah $\mathrm{ISO}(2)$
@ACuriousMind ok well I'll only get one spin matrix
there's no commutation relations, I don't know what to do
@0celo7 Correct, $\mathrm{SO}(2)\cong\mathrm{U}(1)$ only has one generator, after all
the usual procedure of "use the commutation relations to find the spectrum" does not work here
@ACuriousMind since there are no commutation relations...we cannot quantize spin
nor can we raise and lower
16:05
We can't raise/lower, correct. There's still a restriction on the $\mathrm{U}(1)$ charge, though
I'll return after the lawn.
16:34
::sweats::
@ACuriousMind the number of times it wraps the circle around itself?
@0celo7 Exactly!
you seem awfully peppy today
@ACuriousMind I don't see what restriction this places on spin
I thought anyons could have any spin
@0celo7 Nah, anyons are things with fractional statistics, you'd see that only if you consider multi-particle spaces and ask yourself what exchanging two particles does
In higher dimensions, there's only two possibilities - either the sign stays the same, or it changes, because the universal cover is only a double cover. In this case, the universal cover is a countably infinite cover, and so one gets more possibilities in which the exchange of two particles can act.
16:41
ok well back to the U(1) charge
You don't see the anyonic character if you're only examining a single particle
Ah, wait, we see that spin is not quantized, though! We need now projective reps of $\mathrm{U}(1)$ - and what's the universal cover of $\mathrm{U}(1)$?
Huy
Huy
@ACuriousMind: My combinatorics skills are terrible. How do I quickly verify that the Riemannian curvature tensor has $\frac{n^2(n^2-1)}{12}$ independent components using the skew and interchange symmetry and Bianchi 1?
wince I do not know.
@0celo7 $\mathbb{R}$. (Better convince yourself of this)
@Huy lol, why do you think my combinatorics are better? :D
Huy
Huy
@ACuriousMind: I just figured you probably made this calculation already earlier at some point, so you'd know. :D
I hate when even wiki is giving me a "simple calculations show that ..."
16:44
Nope, never actually calculated a Riemann tensor, I think, I'm not a GR guy :D
Huy
Huy
Okies.
@ACuriousMind curves which are not homotopic to a point in $S^1$ can be "unwraped" in $\mathbb{R}$ and they define equivalence classes by the wrapping number...maybe
@0celo7 Why ISO(2)
@0celo7: Alternatively, you might just observe that you can choose the charge even not integer, and all you get is that $\mathrm{e}^{2\pi e}$ for $e$ the charge/spin differs by a phase from the identity, so it's an allowed projective representation
(also what is ISO)
Huy
Huy
16:50
I hope that's not isometries.
@Slereah Weinberg determines it explicitly on page 69
I don't have a quick explanation
(lol 69)
@0celo7 Yeah, that's possible. I'd have said that $\mathbb{R}$ is simply connected and that $\mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}/[0,1]$ is a covering map onto the circle. By uniqueness of the universal cover, $\mathbb{R}$ is the universal cover.
But my Weinberg is in the bathroom :(
I'll have to go down the stairs!
@Slereah rotations + translations in the plane
16:50
I won't ask what Weinberg is doing in the bathroom...
Why translations too?
Isn't it a restriction of SO(3,1)
@ACuriousMind I used the definition given in HE that the cover is a set $(p,[\lambda])$, with the equivalence class of homotopic curves and the only homotopic curves on $S^1$ are the ones with equal wrapping number (this sounds wrong)
Ah, you're using the explicit construction of the universal cover. That's fine, but one need not always do it this way - it's often easier to take something simply-connected and show it covers the space instead of constructing the cover in terms of the curves.
well did I at least do it correctly?
@ACuriousMind ok but that's cheating and I could have done that
$\mathbb{R}$ is the cover of $S^1$, so?
@0celo7 I said "Yeah, that's possible.", so yes
@0celo7 linear complex irreducible reps of $\mathbb{R}$ are just given by a sending $1$ to some phase $\mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\theta}$ with $\theta\in[0,2\pi)$ arbitrary.
Hmm...looking at that, it seems that there are no non-trivial projective reps at all.
Since a phase is irrelevant.
16:59
ok but what does this have to do with spin again
Why are we searching for reps of the little group again?
lol
mom
$$U(\Lambda)\Psi_{p,\sigma}=N\sum_{\sigma'}D_{\sigma'\sigma}(W(\Lambda,p))\Psi_{‌​\Lambda p,\sigma'}$$
that's the general transformation rule
$W$ is the little group element
so finding reps $D$ of $W$ is equivalent to classifying the Lorentz transformation rules of $\Psi$
group theory for physicists - now with 75% less group theory
@0celo7 idk wtf this is
See, this is why I don't like Weinberg :D
@ACuriousMind do you know the solution to this exercise already?
i.e. via different method?
user54412
@Huy Start at "Given these relationships" on page 25/79 of Carroll's notes. Though it's not particularly quick.
17:12
@0celo7 Not exactly, but looking at the little group again, I think we're doing nothing wrong - indeed, we need to find projective reps of $\mathrm{SO}(2)$. There's only the trivial projective rep. There's no such thing as "spin" in 2 dimensions...
(Why there is classical angular momentum is related to the fact that the 2D reps of $\mathrm{SO}(2)$ are ot reducible as real representations, only as complex ones
user54412
@Huy Note also "These twenty functions are precisely the 20 degrees of freedom in the second derivatives of the metric which we could not set to zero by a clever choice of coordinates." There is a more geometric way (probably best done in Riemann normal coordinates) at arriving at the same answer.
Hmmmmm
This should be well-known if it's the answer
Huy
Huy
@ChrisWhite: Thanks, but I've found a site with a rather simple combinatoric argument.
@0celo7: I think the proper answer is this: The concept of spin is meaningless in 2D, there are no non-trivial representations of the rotation group upon the projective space of states. The concept of statistics is not meaningless, because it relies on the actual linear representation of the universal cover that gives the projective representation, this is where anyons come from.
Oddly enough, I cannot find anything that actually discusses what the actual notion of "spin" is supposed to be in 2D, it seems mostly they just take the 3D system and confine it to 2D, so that there's still the notion of spin from 3D.
17:27
@ACuriousMind the reason for the existence of homework in the first place is to help students understand methods. It doesn't matter that the student may only care about the answer; the important fact is that the reason the question was assigned as homework was to help them learn something about the process for doing the question.
@DavidZ But we already extend the policy to act on questions which weren't assigned at all, so how is this relevant?
That reasoning also applies to self-study problems and the like. The value of them lies in learning the method, not getting the answer.
@ACuriousMind sorry, what does there are no non-trivial representations of the rotation group upon the projective space of states mean
@0celo7 Any unitary representation is only ever a phase, and phases are irrelevant, so all projective representations are trivial.
@DavidZ So a problem where it's actually the answer that's needed for something is not homework-like, even if it could be homework or self-study in other contexts? (I think this is also what @DanielSank was talking about=
@ACuriousMind yeah. But it's probably harder than you'd think to come up with an example that's truly ambiguous. They're out there, sure, but they're rare.
17:36
I guess we close most cases of these also as engineering, anyway.
I think the issue here are exactly these edge cases, though. The correct answer is "we handle them case-by-case"?
Yeah. We've always known that there are some edge cases where the policy is unclear.
(and I think that will be the case no matter what sort of policy we come up with)
@ACuriousMind ok, is there some deep reason why this is not the case in 3 dimensions?
@0celo7 Because the rotation group in higher dimensions is not Abelian.
oh, of course
@ACuriousMind so you're saying the question is essentially ill-posed because spin in 2 dimensions is just an irrelevant phase?
@0celo7 Yes. I'm a bit unsettled though that I can neither find something backing that up nor something explicitly contradicting it.
17:42
my own research did not return anything fruitful
but my searches are notoriously poor :/
I'm usually good at finding stuff, but here there's so much stuff about spin systems in two dimensions that are irrelevant to what we are trying to do that it drowns out anything I could use
user54412
17:57
@ACuriousMind Are you saying in a truly 2D universe electrons wouldn't have spin? But in a 3D universe electrons confined to a 2D surface obviously do?
@ChrisWhite Yes, I think that's what I'm saying

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