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00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 23:00

00:00
@Slereah Well, the conical singularity has a local atlas with a coordinate $r$ such that the singularity is at $r=0$ and the metric is $\mathrm{d}s^2 = \mathrm{d}r^2 + r^2\mathrm{d}\Omega^2$ where $\mathrm{d}\Omega^2$ is any $n-1$ dimensional metric.
This gives an isometry to a space that is exactly a cone over the $n-1$-dimensional manifold with metric $\mathrm{d}\Omega^2$
But I don't think you can make that $n-1$ -dimensional manifold into $\mathbb{R}^n$ - just think of the actual 2D cone:
No matter how close you get to the singularity, you always still see that the base was a circle.
true
hm
There is no neighbourhood that includes the tip of the cone where you would lose that information about the circle.
How does GR deal with conical singularities
A few metrics have them
are there any serious treatment of those?N
Or are they treated like other singularities
just removed from the manifold
@Slereah I think nothing really blows up at the singularity, so you are probably fine to just ignore it.
Not exactly
2D black holes have a conical singularity
you still get interactions if you send something at it
00:08
Yeah, but I think you don't need to remove the point since all invariants are finite in the limit $r\to 0$.
It's an allowed point, it's just not very manifoldy there :P
Well yes but that's my point
Does it work in basic GR or do you need to extend it to conifolds
So it's quite unlike the singularity inside an 4D black hole, where curvature blows up
@Slereah Do you mean spatial 2D or spacetime 2D?
(only one correct answer :P)
2+1D
@Slereah I think that depends on how you defined "basic GR" in the first place. Strictly speaking, you can't even say "my manifold has a conical singularity", you'd have to say "Oh shit, this isn't a manifold".
That is kind of my point, yes
00:11
And then you have to define a metric tensor on things that aren't everywhere locally $\mathbb{R}^n$, and so on, and so forth
So, no, rigorously, this doesn't work at all
I mean while the curvature doesn't blow up at the singularity
Is it even defined
Since the conical singularity is a kink
@Slereah Well, you define it by the limit ;)
Probably not differentiable
I guess the most straightforward way is to just allow that isolated points have neighbourhood like cones, and then you define any quantity you can't define at the tip due to non-smoothness just by the limit of that quantity towards that point.
I'm not even sure there's anything about that
Most conifold papers are string theory
00:13
Yeah, I'm coming up with nothing trying to search for a rigorous definition
Those filthy physicists just say "look, it's a cone" and then act as if it was no big deal :D
basically
hm
I think looking at 2+1D black holes is not gonna work, since nobody cares
but cosmic strings also have conical singularities
Well better go to bed
busy day tomorrow
Ha! The math term for what conifolds are is a pseudomanifold, which is really just a regular manifold together with a singular set of points around which it looks weird.
Does anybody here know much about the Kozai mechanism?
@HDE226868 Classical celestial mechanics? I don't think we have someone for that :/
I thought perhaps Chris White would know about it.
I know his specialty is astrophysics, but you have to study celestial mechanics to get there (I think).
Not that it's a common topic, but still.
00:20
Have a star, maybe someone comes by who knows
@ACuriousMind Thanks.
@ACuriousMind I've got my eye on you, Astronomer Candidate 2...
@0celo7 Do you still think "the astronomer" is a single person?
Poor lad.
You're in on the conspiracy??
I didn't say nuthin'
00:30
right...
(I think he's on to us, guys)
Yeah, you bullies!
What is your motive for starring my stuff? Answer me!
3
Astronomeeeeeeeeeeeeeer!!
@ACuriousMind You know, Weinberg defines the momentum as the variation derivative wrt. the time derivative of the field of the Lagrangian. (Not to be confused with the Lagrangian density.) Is that ill-defined as well? Sect. 7.2 in QTF 1.
00:54
@0celo7 If "variation derivative" is the same as functional derivative, then yes.
Typo, should be variational, but yes.
Ok.
I think this area is also a bit muddy because it is not guaranteed that the physicists really mean the mathematical functional derivative when they write it
Just like they don't mean $\otimes$ when they take the product of groups :P
What happens if you ask an algebrist what $\mathrm{SU}(3)\otimes\mathrm{SU}(2)\otimes\mathrm{U}(1)$ means?
Does the average mathematician know what is meant by that?
@0celo7 They will try to define a tensor product for non-abelian groups, and then ask you in what situation you would possibly encounter that object.
that is why the standard model is awkward pasting many isolated bits together
01:00
Is ST really less awkward? There's like 10^500 ways of doing it.
It's not very natural to think about the tensor product of group because the usual universal property is "twisted".
I know so little about ST to even able to comment about ST awkwardness
Also no ST books that I know of actually mention the standard model.
@Secret No. Physicists don't mean the tensor product when they write $\mathrm{U}(1)\otimes\mathrm{SU}(2)$. They just for some reason use the wrong symbol.
They actually mean the direct product $\times$, which is much more natural
Like, how on Earth do we get electrons from superstrings?
01:02
Ah, that cleared a lot of confusion, because I often confuse the direct product with the tensor product
How on Earth does stuff like annihilation work on the string level?
How do fermionic strings get mass?
@ACuriousMind Can you answer?
Whenever I saw $\otimes$ in physics I always thought: What is a tensor producing doing in here

and then over time I am mislead to believe that the tensor product is the direct product
@0celo7 No, I couldn't when you last asked me that question, remember?
@ACuriousMind I don't remember.
But I probably asked you long ago, you've gotten smarter since then.
I think I only get more knowledgeable, not smarter at this point.
01:05
Same thing. I seem to get less of each.
And you know I didn't learn string theory :P
I know you now have a stylish paperweight :D
I use my $200 mechanics book as a laptop stand :D
Figured you could do a similar thing with BBS
I have a desktop computer here, no stand required
It currently just lies in the corner accusingly.
This summer, the 0celo7 desktop will happen
@0celo7 But before that, winter is coming.
01:11
@ACuriousMind Ok, I need the magic pedagogy for: "Find the orthogonal projection of the matrix [[3,6][1,7]] onto the space of anti-symmetric 2x2 matrices. "
Do you have Christmas markets in the US?
@ACuriousMind I'm gonna be in K town...you should come and we can hang out!
What is K town?
@ACuriousMind We defined the norm on the space of matrices as the dot product of the entries of the matrices regarded as vectors.
@ACuriousMind Kaiserslautern
Yes, the Amis call it K town
@0celo7 Just write it as the sum of an undetermined symmetric matrix and an antisymmetric matrix and solve the equations you get
01:16
I am wondering, would we ever had the concept of vectors in $\mathbb{R}^n$ as arrows if we only have the concept of 1 dimension? (but not 2 dimensions or 3 etc.?)
Wait, is the orthogonal projection here a symmetric matrix?
@0celo7 I think you're asked to calculate the image of that projection, which is the antisymmetric matrix
@ACuriousMind Ok, that's what I thought. Problem is, I got 0 for the off-diagonal entries.
Which is a wrong answer.
Direction, seemed to me is just how the components are related to each other, and unlike magnitude, cannot be written in some sort of explicit formula
If $A$ is the projection into the subspace, I minimized $|M-A|$.
Isn't that a definition of the projection?
01:21
@0celo7 That is correct
Problem is, $|M-A|^2=(3-a)^2+(6-c)^2+(1+c)^2+(7-b)^2$. Here $a,b$ are diagonal elements and $c$ is the off-diagonal one. Taking the partial wrt. $c$ gives 0 $c$ falls out.
And $a=3$ and $b=7$.
@0celo7 Wait. $a=b=0$ for antisymmetric matrices anyway
Uh
fml
ok
Matrices as elements in a vector space seemed to have some kind of ordered structure since
$$\begin{pmatrix}a & b \\ c & d\end{pmatrix}\neq\begin{pmatrix}c & d \\ a & b\end{pmatrix}\neq \begin{pmatrix}b & a \\ d & c\end{pmatrix}$$

If we don't think of matrices as made of column vectors, then how mathematically is this order structure is being introduced?
ok big fail
01:25
And $c$ doesn't drop out, that polynomial is quadratic in $c$
@ACuriousMind when I take the partial wrt. c it does
You have to minimize, right?
@0celo7 We have: $\lvert M-A \rvert^2 = 2c^2 -10 c + \text{const}$.
sigh
just ignore this
I did the chain rule wrong...
see, I really am regressing
Why were you doing the chain rule?
derivative of $(6-c)^2$ is not $2(6-c)$
forgot the extra minus
01:29
Ah. Well, sometimes it is better to do stuff explicitly instead of trying shortcuts
indeed
01:46
> Find the orthogonal projection of the matrix [[5,7, 6][2,6, 1][2,1, 5]] onto the space of anti-symmetric 3x3 matrices.
Oh you have got to be kidding me.
 
1 hour later…
03:58
Does $\sum_{n\in \Bbb Z}a_n\left(-n\epsilon_{jkl}q_kq_l^{n-1}\right)=0$ for some reason?
Sorry ignore the $a_n$
Amazon is out of stock of the GSW anniversary edition
well, I probably don't need to get more books anway
@0celo7 Buy me some ;)
D&F's abstract algebra & A&M commutative algebra for starters
how about no
I need to get...
how about I finish Arnold
How about no, you do buy me the texts
And I give you <3
I have a lot of physics books
but no math books
I should get...something that doesn't need analysis
04:03
That sounds like a sad life :(
indeed, considering I'm a math major
so I need more math books!
Oh wow yes then
Do you want actual recommendations? Are you doing any algebra?
not yet
dunno when I will
pretty sure the first course uses Artin
I doubt I'll get further than one or two semesters of undergraduate stuff
Group theory -> ring theory -> field theory -> galois theory

Use D&F for exercises, and Artin for learning on the first pass, and A&M when you get through the intro stuff
Algebra = life
04:08
But you haven't done any ':<
because it's boring
Do you know any?
no, it's boring
Do you know what an algebra is?
You think an associative $R$-algebra is boring?
Exactly! Googler!
@GaloisintheField yes
04:10
@0celo7 What is it concisely
@GaloisintheField yes
@GaloisintheField vector space with a map
@0celo7 NOOOOOOOO
Generally its base 'field' is a ring
module with a map then
same thing
Not the same thing :P
either way
boring
04:11
:'( my life is boring :''(
yeah
probably
still dunno what I want to do math-wise
Have you done any functional analysis?
TIL algebraic geometry has applications in engineering
no, I don't know any analysis
04:13
Algebraic geometry is pretty heavy. You have to do A&M's commutative algebra :P
well, I'm a double major
so I have to pick one branch
What are the options?
I don't really want to spread out too much
pretty much everything besides graph theory
unless the combinatorics classes do that
I don't know what everything is sorry
but I have no desire to do graph theory
04:14
Algebraic geometry is a path for some reason?
algebraic geometry is a class at the end of the algebra path
graduate
I could get to it in my...5th?
But algebra is boring :''''(
I could do it in the 4th if I didn't do anything but math
04:16
Algebraic geometry is really hard honestly, and unless you are planning on doing pure fields, I don't see how useful it would be
I was thinking of going the PDE/functional analysis route
That would make much more sense
indeed
but I also want to learn algebraic topology
dunno if I have time for that
Why the heck do you want to learn algebraic topology lol
K theory is cool
number theory is boring
04:20
@0celo7 I think so too
But any deep subject is interesting if you work on it enough tbh
ehhhh
not sure if I'd ever find bridges interesting
or robots
robots are booooooooring
Robots are boring?
Surely there are interesting robots?
...
Did you delete that or reported lol
deleted
Oh haha, I have to go now, best of luck :P
I'm only in my first semester
I have like a year before I have to choose
everything until then is just analysis, algebra and topolgoy
all required
@GaloisintheField I do have Hatcher (Algebraic Topology) next to me
just...not motivated to read it
not really prepared for it
@GaloisintheField you should find me a nice book on Springer on...GR or some applied diff geo
maybe Morse theory?
dunno
@ACuriousMind @Slereah Do you know of any Springer books that are applied differential geometry?
Hmm!
04:46
@0celo7 what ever happened to that Fed guy with the guitars avatar?
The GR room you guys opened "spacetime has curves?" is frozen
05:15
0
Q: Propogation of error using Euler's first order method

John dooreI was estimating a falling object's position versus time by using a simple first order step function, where for i=2:length(t) % We're using Euler, so we need an initial previous point to start t=t(i); V=V+dv; rho_i= % Calculate our height and then pull rho from data K=(m/(mg-.5*C_d*A*...

off topic? I'm not sure, since it's asking about error propagation instead of implementation details... but I tend to think of error propagation in numerical algorithms as a computing question, not a physics one
05:42
Indeed, there is very little Physics there.
 
2 hours later…
07:25
0
Q: Relation between Quantum Field Theory and consciousness

Žarko TomičićQuestion is simple...are there any interesting theories on this topic? Is there anything to it? After all, brain is some sort of solid state, and there are many theories based on QFT that explain properties of some solids, like BCS theory of superconductivity.

quantum mysticism seems a recurring topic on phys SE
 
1 hour later…
08:55
One thing I wonder is
Are not all manifolds triangulable?
What's an example of a non-triangulable manifold
 
1 hour later…
user116211
10:15
Quantum entanglement is proved again; sorry Einstein :P nytimes.com/2015/10/22/science/…
You can't deny Einstein and the Evidence
10:30
thE Evidence
or
thĒ Evidence
and Einstein
@user36790 no apology necessary pal :P
@Slereah "In dimension 4, however, the E8 manifold does not admit a triangulation, and some compact 4-manifolds have an infinite number of triangulations"
from wikipedia...
In mathematics, topology generalizes the notion of triangulation in a natural way as follows: A triangulation of a topological space X is a simplicial complex K, homeomorphic to X, together with a homeomorphism h : K → X. Triangulation is useful in determining the properties of a topological space. For example, one can compute homology and cohomology groups of a triangulated space using simplicial homology and cohomology theories instead of more complicated homology and cohomology theories. == Piecewise linear structures == For topological manifolds, there is a slightly stronger notion o...
obviously I do not know anything about that...just pointing out
 
2 hours later…
12:21
@yuggib What exactly do you know about, then?
nothing...
apart from the fact of knowing nothing
therefore I know something
damn Russell's paradox
:-D
12:36
That's more Socrates than Russell :P
@yuggib You're not surprised about that, are you?
@ACuriousMind No, actually not so surprised
@ACuriousMind Saying that I know of being ignorant is socrates; but saying I know nothing is paradoxical...
@yuggib The usual phrase attributed to Socrates is "I know that I know nothing", though.
@skullpetrol No clue, he hasn't been on Skype or anything :(
We were supposed to mod Skyrim :(
His addiction to insomnia cookies finally got him
RIP
@ACuriousMind Hey, that's me!
@ACuriousMind What are some esoteric applications of DiffGeo?
12:51
@0celo7 Huh?
Arnold got my geometric juices flowing.
Is "Geoemetrothermodynamics" a serious thing?
I seem to recall it is
Huy
Huy
wat do u mean by esoteric
12:53
@ACuriousMind No, I think he was better in logic than that...with a web search I found the english form "I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance"
Huy
Huy
does not wat
and in italian is quite similar
not allowed to say
Huy
Huy
wat
;-)
12:53
@yuggib For some reason I think you're from Yugoslavia
Maybe the username?
@yuggib Well, the statement is apocryphal anyways (it does not appear in Plato's works)
@0celo7 Don't know...but I have no Yugoslavian relatives
@ACuriousMind :-D agreed
@Huy don't want to anger him
@0celo7 and btw Yugoslavia do not exist since 199- something
Huy
Huy
anger who
12:55
@yuggib really? never woulda guessed
at the very best you have a former yugoslavian republic
@Huy the one with long hair
@Huy I told him I found his repeated talk about the GDP annoying, so now he's trying not to talk about it.
esoteric = useless but interesting
Huy
Huy
I'm confused
you guys are weird
3
12:57
no, ACM is weird
seriously, what are some books on applications of geometry where it's unexpected?
that continuum mechanics book is intriguing
@ACuriousMind Do you know anything about ergodic theory?
Seems interesting if one is into dynamical systems
which would make sense for me to be into
I think
I dunno, apparently algebraic geometry has engineering applications
wonder if number theory has engineering applications
13:28
apparently one needs measure theory and functional analysis for ergodic theory
@0celo7 Cryptography is always used as a practical justification for number theory. But I suspect that it may be considered a separate branch...pure number theorists have higher problems to worry about
Huy
Huy
13:48
my prof is boz in ergodic theory
I need to learn functional anylsis
Huy
Huy
told you son
dude
What
Huy
Huy
told you dude
son
But I also need measure theory
Huy
Huy
13:56
then study some
easy peasy
Why is useful math so boring
Huy
Huy
ur boring
(wasn't me)
I'll shi your pie
Huy
Huy
nap
l2p
I'll napalm your pie then
Works for me
00:00 - 14:0014:00 - 23:00

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