« first day (1797 days earlier)      last day (3430 days later) » 

14:04
@0celo7 the pdf math.harvard.edu/~canzani/math253/Lecture11.pdf I linked to yesterday explains why they are the same norm also
@Secret there are a few issues with your calculation above, e.g. the domain is $Q$, the L.H.S. behaves differently on different parts of the domain unlike the r.h.s., the explicit statement of the norm is missing terms
I have suspected I have made mistakes somewhere, given I am trying to self learn sobolev space from online lecture notes from scratch
Sobolev spaces are not a standard topic, you only need them if you do math i.e. advanced pde's which, in physics, almost never come up, this is definitely not stuff you should learn until you get your basics down in (a lot of) other areas
agreed
@bolbteppa They're like... super standard in mathematical quantum mechanics :P
Yeah but mathematical quantum mechanics is not standard (and it's a waste of time? :p)
14:08
well yes, but how many physicists really study math :p
If I need to learn them, I believe I will came across them in my quanutm text readings
@bolbteppa Very much agreed :D
Quantum mechanics can be done in Hilbert spaces, for the life of me I have no idea where to invoke Sobolev spaces but if I wanted to be pedantic I'm sure I could sneak them in non-stop
@bolbteppa Sobolev spaces are Hilbert spaces
@bolbteppa They're the largest spaces that allow for differentiation if I recall correctly
14:10
@slereah (don't worry, the answer has nothing to do with the conspiracy) do you think I have the ability to do maths (cause this will be important in years to come when I continue to read my QFT text and raising questions here and elsewhere)?
@yuggib Also that
dunno
@yuggib I explained that last night, you said you read the discussion?
You do seem to try to use a lot of diagrams rather than getting down and dirty with the math
14:11
@bolbteppa What did you explain?
@Slereah Well, I have done that, the electromagnetism exercise is an example that filled in part fo the chat yesterday
btw @Secret the game has much more recent discoveries than the Higgs
@Secret don't let anyone tell you you can or can't do math, you are an evolutionary being, we're not built for this stuff, you should do all of electromagnetism with pictures (via differential forms em.groups.et.byu.net/pdfs/publications/formsj.pdf haha)
@danu, cool, I am currently just reached gluons
Sobolev spaces are useful in many areas of QM
14:13
@yuggib But let's face it, very few people are interested in that stuff
e.g. non-linear effective evolutions, spectral theory, scattering theory, ....
@Danu :-D not so few...
Sobolev spaces in general are useful for DE
@yuggib Come on :P
@bolbteppa MTW also have an eggcrate full of these pics, they literally draw the electromagnetic field tensor as an eggcrate and then step their shoes on it so it get squashed
@Slereah Actually, for everything that has to do with the Laplacian operator :P
@Danu define few :P
14:17
More recently, in an attempt to do 0celo7 question, because I have no idea what sobolev space is (thus obviously cannot visualise it) I just start with what we know and then bang through the algebra to hoepfully get the equality 0celo7 want

(that mistake in writing the sobloev norm aside, I am not sure if you will consider I am actually going algebra as I go from step to step)
Sobolev space is a function space
probably not best to try visualizing it
Indeed, analysis itself gave me enough headaches. I prefer abstracrt algebra, at least thigns changes one step at a time
@yuggib Trying to think of a "norm" ;)
@Danu the set of people interested in QM is not a vector space...and probably not metrizable either :P
@yuggib That's what you think!
14:20
Well it's a discrete set
@Slereah every set is discrete :D
$$\int g \phi d\mu=(-1)^{|\alpha|}\int fD^{\alpha}\phi d\mu$$
Well at least all is not wasted effort
Because of today's event, I have learnt what a weak derivative is

While I cannot visualise the above equation, it at least make intuitive math sense to me

Because given a functional acting on some function with compact support $\phi$, $g$ play its intuitve role as a kind of "derivative" because it's action on $\phi$ is the same as if you try to differentiate the distribution $f$ which then scale within the domain of $\phi$
in the sense that it is a collection of elements
@yuggib what about R!
@Slereah R, as a set, is just a collection of objects
the real numbers
14:24
no nitpicking allowed :p
@yuggib Very lame interpretation :P
@Danu well, you can give the discrete topology on R, where each subset is an open set
In the context of physics, one major reason why I tend to visualise maths and try to solve things with diagrams (even though in preactice, I am often the guy in the class that did like 10 pages of algebra in an assignment) is because I am trying to use the maths to teach me the intuition
@yuggib Very lame topology :P
lame discussion is more like it
14:27
@Secret the motivation for weak derivatives is that, in measure theory, you find you can integrate functions over sets even after you chop out some points which lead to discontinuities (i.e. sets of measure zero). An obvious problem with derivatives is that, at the boundary, you don't have a derivative, thus why can't we set up the notion of a derivative on a set of measure zero? The desire for things to play nice with sets of measure zero means we should use integration to take derivatives,
indeed, and the equation told me it played its intended role as a derivative looking object
That's why it's defined that way
https://landonkavlie.wordpress.com/2013/04/06/the-weak-derivative/
http://www.quora.com/Functions-mathematics/What-is-an-intuitive-explanation-of-the-weak-derivative
@Danu Why? It is even $T_6$
@yuggib Exactly: Too simple :P
Simple is nice
14:33
@Danu nothing can be too simple
for instance, quantum fields are not simple
photon going around a Dirac belt is very simple
guess which one is correct
The Dirac belt
duh
I don't think the Dirac belt thing is simple because it's a word salad
I learnt from spring school that our current best understanding of quantum fields is kinda like a fractal, where for each line you zoom into in the feymann diagram you get another feymann diagram

The professors use this to illustrate the complex virtual gluon sturcture that confines the quarks together within a proton
One QFT book even has its cover designed this way illustrating the fractal like structure
I definitely would not describe that as our best current understanding of quantum fields
As has been discussed here many times, the Feynman diagrams have little to do with reality, and more with efficient calculations.
you killed ACM
idk where he is, but he's dead
http://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Quantum-Theory-Frontiers-Physics/dp/0201503972

@Danu, I'll keep that in mind
14:37
RIP Quantum King
@0celo7 TL;DR: Semester.
oh, school started?
@Secret Everybody knows that book, @Secret :P
@0celo7 For him, yes.
Not yet for me
@Secret that book is also heresy
to me that book is quite new
14:38
it's like 500 pages of Feynman diagrams
and a few hundred of other stuff
what QFT text you guys will recommend if I am a freshman in QFT
and want to go highly theoretical and rigorous?
Next post contains picture alert, (screenies of my past assignments)
classic QFT book is usually like
Peskin Schroeder
Or Quarks and Leptons
how much rigorous?
if you want highly theoretical and rigorous, try Weinberg
14:40
Rigous enough to not be like schurtz
I would not recommend making drawings for Weinberg
Weinberg is not rigorous for mathematical standards...
There exists no really rigorous way anyways
but for physical ones is probably ok
14:42
The closest you can get to rigorous is
But it will put you completely out of touch with "real physics"
>Haag
No you fool
As in, nobody willl understand what you're on about, and you won't understand any normal research
This way madness lies
14:42
@Slereah My QED course followed it :( So sad...
That is just a type of approach
Is it the C* algebra method?
the algebraic one
@yuggib he is pedantic
you can get rigorous also in other ways
14:43
that is not a very good idea for an introduction
@yuggib I don't think there are textbooks on other ways, no?
Introductions usually are like
@Danu yes there are
"Hey let's replace E with $d/dt$"
yes!
14:44
@yuggib links plz
that's how QM works
AND THEN TAKE THE SQUARE ROOT OF KG TO GET DIRAC
Also oh no negative probabilities
mb do something
infinite oscillators -> QFT
that's how they introduce us in the spring school
14:45
also, for QFT in statistical mechanics
Springs do love oscillators
@yuggib Does this actually do any real theory?
Like, at least QED?
Schrodinger wavefunctionals are best
interacting bosonic theory
damn mathematicians have invaded again
14:46
Here's the detail of the spring school I attended:
https://www.physics.unsw.edu.au/events/spring-school-particle-physics-and-cosmology
@Danu no rigorous book can do that
without cheating
rigor is so highly overrated
why bother
@yuggib Sure, a little cheating
all that matters are the experimental results
You have to learn QED at some point
14:47
QED who needs it
@Danu if you want to do perturbation theory, then you are very far from rigorous things
The point is that you need to learn QFT at some point, not rigorous-model-that-gets-close-to-QFT
that's why I said "how much rigorous" in the first place
But thanks for the reference anyways :D
I should get Haag's book
14:49
@Danu QFT is fully rigorous, as long as you do consider only some type of dynamics
That way maybe I can read Wald's book on QFT :p
that, alas, are not the interesting ones
QFT in one dimension
QFT in 0 dimensions
that is mostly ok
qft on a point :O
14:50
QFT in 0.5 dimensions
what does 1/2 a dimension even mean
Also (in case you are bothered enough to look at it), the official logical flow of the marking scheme is like this:
1. First, let's assume x >0, therefore we can ignore the absolute sign
2. Next use heisenberg uncertianty principle and do the substitution $x \rightarrow \Delta x and p \rightarrow \Delta p$
3. Then find H when $\Delta x$ vanishes
Hausdorff dimension 1/2?
what if $\mathbb{R}=V\oplus V$
According to Falconer, one of the essential features of a fractal is that its Hausdorff dimension strictly exceeds its topological dimension. Presented here is a list of fractals ordered by increasing Hausdorff dimension, with the purpose of visualizing what it means for a fractal to have a low or a high dimension. == Deterministic fractals == == Random and natural fractals == == See also == Fractal dimension Hausdorff dimension Scale invariance == Notes and references == == Further reading == Benoît Mandelbrot, The Fractal Geometry of Nature, W. H. Freeman & Co; ISBN 0-7167-1186-...
Hm
14:52
then $\operatorname{dim}V=0.5$
nothing as low as 0.5
@yuggib Nonexistent QFT is rigorous :D
@Slereah Then why I end up having more than 1 page of algebra?

Because in step 1, I felt cheating by ignoring the absolute sign like this, thus I use what I learn in distributions and simply bang through the expression as if it is a maths problem and not dared to make any assumption on the absolute value sign
@Danu :D It is a matter of point of view. If you are ok with brutal calculations, you do not need any rigor
and then you get QED, QCD and so on....effectively
14:54
and luckily, because the $|\Delta x|^n$ term is even, it simplifies nicely without any extra assumpetion put in
Btw guys
but what is really happening is still a mystery
Just in case some of you missed it: The Physics Nobel 2015 is going to Kajita & McDonald for the discovery of neutrino oscillations. It was announced today‌​.
2
WHEN DO I GET ONE UH?
The above two screenie is showing when I am getting really dirty with the maths, I just ignore whatever diagram is behind it, bang through the algebra until a sensible result pops up. Only then I start to interpet it
14:55
SUPERKAMIOKANDEEEE
:D
This is very different from the picture approach I demonstrate early on in my history on this chat
@Slereah get a PhD
Has anyone ever gotten a Nobel in physics who wasn't a PhD
Who knows
@0celo7 The PhD system is fairly recent.
As a famous example (non-Nobel, though), Dyson doesn't have a PhD.
15:01
Well the PhD system dates back to the medieval era
but maybe it wasn't quite as systematic until recently
@Slereah The PhD system being widely used, then, is much more recent.
according to this site, someone got his nobel with the PhD work
I only consider Nobel winning physicists to be real physicists
@yuggib 't Hooft
Weren't the people who got the nobel for the CMB just radiodetection operators
15:02
(not on the site)
@Slereah No, Penzias & Wilson were radio astronomers
Radio astronomers?
both had PhD's, too.
hm
Maybe we need to look at the most ancient ones
Thankfully Einstein is a real physicist
15:05
they seem to all have one
So get one and publish a monumental paper
(cont.)
So I can get really dirty with the maths, but nobody is bother to read it because like most of my posts, it's TOO LONG
In fact, a lot of my posts are too long either literally or metaphorically, which is why it is often being ignored
That's the case.
such scenario rarely happens face to face, because there is no "higher reality" they can escape to
Well I want a PhD
It's other people who do not want :V
15:08
Get your company to pay
Apparently "Supersymmetric quantum mechanics an Kahlerian manifolds" was not lucrative enough for my lab to fund
Agreed
Do something that increases GDP :)
But @0celo7
It was about your favorite theorem
The ATIYAH SINGER Theorem
While I can think of a way to make my posts shorter literally, I have no control on how to metaphorically make them shorter
Otherwise people won't be overlooking my questiosn that often
@Slereah I know people that work on that...but I think they are very few
you should have gone ask them for a PhD ;)
15:13
I did but France is pretty shit for theoretical physics
you have to think internationally
Well yes, I just have to leave my home and country!
as at least two of the people chatting now have done :P
and many many others
also I graduated like 5 years ago
Not sure they would still want me :(
:(
discrimination against age
funny story: I have been told that professors in the US cannot be forced to retire at a certain age (as happens instead in all the other countries I know) because that would be a discrimination against age :-D
15:17
@Danu Currently on B oscillations
@Secret I think I've completed the game (up to 2 useless upgrades)
ok
Higgs boson discovered
Again?
did we lose it
Talking about the particle clicker game
Nice, so they have updated since 2012
wonder what lies beyond...
@Secret One more thing ;)
15:28
ok
what game is this
Is it true that the color of objects is mostly due to the first excitation-ground state transition?
Danu : It's complicated
actually that's a dumb question
nvm it
I can assume it is for this answer (I'm writing an answer to the nanoparticle question)
you cannot have a bare color charge, the strong interaction is TOO STRONG
I wonder if the strong interaction is weaker, what kind of phenomenon can color charges introduce...
15:37
The same.
most of the weirdness from the strong interaction stem from the fact that it's non-abelian
0
A: How is colour difference of CdS nano-particles related to 'Particle in A Box' problem of Quantum Mechanics?

DanuWe assume that the reader knows, from elementary quantum mechanics, that the allowed energy levels of a particle of mass $m$ in an infinite potential well (a.k.a. particle in a box) of width $a$: $$ V(x)=\begin{cases}0\hspace{1cm} &0\leq x\leq a\\ \infty &\mathrm{otherwise} \end{cases} $$ are giv...

I'm so tantalizingly close to the Generalist badge
15+ score in 20 of the top-40 tags: I have 15 in 19 of them and 14 in 4 more :P
0
Q: Flag to post (finally deleted) deemed disputed

AniketRecently I flagged 2 posts by an user named Harsh Raj (a new user, could not find his profile) as one was a spam and the other was of poor quality (includes poor grammar and bad spelling and irrelevant points). The posts were in reply to an answer to this question. Now the first post was flagge...

chat session coming up! I think I'll be here this time
@DavidZ Woopwoop! :D
No pentaquark?
15:49
@Secret As long as the strong interaction had the same form it would confine at any strength. It gets stronger as distances increase.
@Secret Sadly, not
I won't for a bit because it's time to go home!
@dmckee Hey, didn't you have something to do with Superkamiokande at some point?
No. But I did work "just down the mine" from them. KamLAND is in the old Kamiokande facility.
15:50
@dmckee Okay :)
What is the physics chat about?
You did work on neutrino oscillations though
Any way, time to earn my keep. Modern physics is in the house.
So yay for the Nobel :D
Also @Danu How is HSMSE?
15:51
@Danu Yeah. KamLAND, Double Chooz, and some of the build on microBooNE.
@Danu I didn't look at it for a very long time, only when it first started.
@Alizter Time to return? ;)
@dmckee, btw is my qualitative picture/understanding of neutrino oscillation (mentioned yesterday) accurate enough?
While my professor said I can think of it that way, I still felt I am missing out some subtleties
Activity is picking up a little bit, I think :)
15:52
It should get better soon
Good thing I elected you
@Alizter You did? :P
@Danu Yesss
Is there any specific topic for the chat today
@Alizter Thanks for the support, then ;)
@Alizter Maybe the Nobel prize? :P
@Danu Whens that?
Who of you agree that it's a more exciting one than blue LEDs? :D
@Alizter Announced today
15:54
Oh
What happened
59 mins ago, by Danu
Just in case some of you missed it: The Physics Nobel 2015 is going to Kajita & McDonald for the discovery of neutrino oscillations. It was announced today‌​.
Nice
Who won Chemistry?
Question got ignored again...
@Alizter Announced tomorrow
@Secret Don't be sad :P
@Danu OK thanks
So can the Schrödinger equation be thought of as the diffusion equation with an imaginary diffusion coefficient?
Lets discuss
15:57
@Danu I know that question sounded really stupid, but I really want to check whether I am just overexicted or it is real. Because that professor said this is a valid way to "visualise" quantum mechanical phenomeon
@Secret I don't know what your visualization was like
Neutrino oscillations are, in some sense, just a linear algebra problem
Just about trying to simultaneously diagonalize two matrices
So I assume it should fit into your visualization program easily
although I've said before that I don't think it's a great program :P
@danu Below is the "visualisation"
In the spring school, I had a chat with a particle physicists on whether the following way to *qualitatively* think about neutrino oscillation is accurate enough, after being recalled about how the hamitonian evolve state vectors of a state (mixed or pure) in time as it changes the distribution of the observables:

*Picture*
Let’s just for simplicity, assume the three mass states (1, 2, 3) “look” black, white and purple respectively.
Now suppose I have a neutrino source, that fires out a neutrino that initially look whitish. As the neutrino propagate freely away from the source as time prog

« first day (1797 days earlier)      last day (3430 days later) »