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20:00
There are worries that the professor teaching differential geometry here next quarter is just going to teach Chern-Weil theory instead, since he does that for every course he teaches ever. I'm the TA and desperately hoping I don't just have to teach them differential geometry.
This happened to me :P
The course was "Riemannian geometry"
We just did two weeks of Riemannian geometry at the very end
Lol
As a "trivial application" of Chern-Weil theory
@Danu Squeezed in Hopf-Rinow and friends?
No.
20:02
@Danu What "trivial application" did you do, then?
Super-basics.
or link me your notes
Also Gauss-Bonnet and some small generalizations
@Danu Well, uh, you probably wanted to learn that anyway, so...
@MikeMiller ...but now I didn't learn Riemannian geometry.
20:04
what else do you need beyond what's covered in Carroll :P
lol
I don't need any of it.
I don't need any topology either
I want it.
@Danu rly
how do you do FA without topology
@0celo7 Lol
How do you do QM without understanding Hilbert spaces?
@Danu well you need operator topology and other things
Not really, unless you want to do research on that kind of stuff.
20:05
@Danu According to ACM: not well
And that's a pretty small niche.
@Danu It is my understanding that one needs some FA to do PDEs
@0celo7 Not stuff that requires a significant amount of topology. Maybe the fact that compact unit ball implies finite dimensional.
FA won't hurt you but I'm alsot pretty sure I won't need it anytime soon.
Definitely not the advanced topology stuff.
@MikeMiller oh
20:07
In any case, the things we're doing in my course are unrelated to FA.
At least, elliptic PDE. I don't know much about non-elliptic PDE. That's scary.
well I'm pretty sure I won't take anything beyond the standard two semester topology thingie
Your loss :)
But you'll be fine.
well we certainly don't do surgery in intro topology
LMU is nuts...I'm putting it on my list for summer schools -- need to find out what kind of programs they have
(summer programs)
@0celo7 It's a graduate course I'm taking.
20:11
@Danu yes, me too
Then I don't see why not!
maybe in the second semester
Surgery is not really a standard intro topology topic.
@Danu if they follow Munkres closely, then they won't
But we didn't really do it in any real detail. We just gave some basic constructions
20:12
You could cover it, but I'm not sure it's sexy enough to justify that when one could do more fun things.
I think surgery is pretty damn sexy.
(that came out wrong)
no it didn't
okay.
surgery is pretty damn sexy...open sets, maps...mmmm
...surgery things...
lol "open sets, maps"
surgery confirmed
20:15
I know nothing about surgery :P
what would you have known about it in your first semester?
is it possible to stop the feed item thing
@MikeMiller There will be a seminar on Lie groups next semester, and they're asking us to tell them what kind of topics we'd be interested in.
Do you have any cool suggestions?
I assume a lot of time will be spent on representations
prove that $\mathrm{SO}(3)$ embeds in $\mathbb{R}^9$
But I'd like to do something less.. linear :P
take detailed notes of that and post them here...
20:16
@0celo7 That doesn't really sound hard at all.
I don't know a lot about representation theory. It would be work, but you could learn Morse theory and the proof that $\pi_2 G = 0$.
Maybe it is? idk
@0celo7 $S^{2n}$ has no Lorentz metric
@Danu well I could not do it
@Slereah I KNOW
I totally forgot that was a thing in HE
WELL THEN SAY IT
20:17
but how does one prove that statement
I think Hirsch has the proof...
@MikeMiller Our TA (who is close to the professor) said today, during the same announcement, that Morse theory is "probably too trivial"
@Danu is Doner to trivial for your taste buds
A Lorentz metric gives you a 1-dimensional subbundle of the tangent bundle. Prove using Euler classes that that's not possible for $S^{2n}$.
@0celo7 Yes.
@Danu Did they give any suggested topics so I know what's not trivial?
20:19
@MikeMiller Hawking-Ellis uses Poincare-Hopf
@MikeMiller Nothing concrete, just "Lie groups" or "Geometric group theory"
and sub-topics in those are up to us; or we can come up with other suggestions
They show that you simply can't get a Lorentz metric because there's no line element.
they said Mathematical Gauge Theory was too hard :(
More like gauche theory
@MikeMiller in any case, "Prove using Euler classes" is too vague and beyond me
20:20
@0celo7 Sure, that also sort of generalizes. On any manifold with $H^1(X;\Bbb Z/2)$ trivial, like the sphere, line bundles are trivial and have a nonvanishing section, so you just produced a nonvanishing section of $S^{2n}$.
Bad, as $\chi(S^{2n}) \neq 0$, as you said.
@MikeMiller I believe you ;)
Ok, I guess I won't bother.
Huh?
you damn dirty ape
I think I understand what you're saying.
I just don't have the slightest clue how to prove it...
therefore I believe you
20:22
the proof is in Steenrod, remember :V
@MikeMiller you mean $S^{2n+1}$?
@Slereah it's also in Hirsch
@MikeMiller but $S^{2n}$ does not have a nonvanishing section
That's the whole point of what I said, yes.
> so you just produced a nonvanishing section of $S^{2n}.$
20:24
sigh :P
@Danu no reason to sigh my child
Getting a bit tired of this.
huh?
-1
Q: How do theoretical physicists work?

Dirk BruereHow do they spend their day? Looking out the window trying to think up something new? Learning new maths? Reading other people's papers? And how is their productivity measured beyond churning out papers?

Too bad it's closed
I would have liked to recount my days in the lab
Step 1 : write the relevant equations on paper
Step 2 : Go from there
Step 3 : Get stuck
@Danu it's clear you have to tell me what you're getting tired of
20:33
Step 4 : Look intently at the piece of paper
Step 5 : Take a new piece of paper, back to step 1
seems like doing an exercise
great, 4chin is full of star wars spoilers
I know who dies
:(
That is basically research
Also lots of bibliography
20:59
@Slereah That step seem to be common to every interesting human endeavor.
@dmckee also uninteresting ones
Yeah, but those are uninteresting.
Also quite a lot of research endeavours involve tracking down sign errors and factors of 1/2
> Mathematicians are like Frenchmen: whatever you say to them they translate into their own language and forthwith it is something completely different.
21:36
mathematicians $\simeq$ frenchmen
well, france is the country of mathematics
@ACuriousMind : Ah, you are right. They are not using (4.3) to prove an off-shell symmetry. They assume that the off-shell symmetry has been established by other means. Then (4.3) becomes the corresponding on-shell conservation law.
Could someone please explain what that diagram is saying.
Maybe link to a video about the mechanism, perhaps.
21:54
Does anyone know anything about the "bump" in the data at CERN that's made the news recently (e.g. nytimes.com/2015/12/16/science/…)?
I've only heard sensationalism, hype, cautious scientists, and champagne jokes so far.
vzn
vzn
@HDE226868 its a good summary at this pt, what more could you ask for? this also showed up in here
yesterday, by Slereah
http://resonaances.blogspot.fr/2015/12/a-new-boson-at-750-gev.html
@vzn Cool article; thanks. cc @Slereah
22:11
It's a somewhat exciting bump
https://i.sstatic.net/LSLyZ.jpg

@Qmechanic @Acuriousmind @HDE226868 @Slereah
Q1. The author said the internal conversion (laballed IC in that energy level diagram) is isoenergetic, which means there is no energy change in that transition

a. If we use what we have discussed earlier (with Acuriousmind, 0celo7, Slereah) that a state can be changed by a measurement (i.e. a suitable operator acting on the state which changes it), and energy does not necessary change in the process

how does the molecule knows it has to transit to a lower electronic state (but vibrationally excited) as after
22:26
@Danu Can you help me on the above conceptual question on spectroscopy?
22:45
@ Skill Patrol I have reasons that the two are ignoring me. Ever since that unexpectedly violent reaction of them towards that integral space filler, I know something went very wrong
I cannot believe I accidentally robbed myself of access to GR because of a space filler
23:16
@ChrisWhite do you know spectroscopy?
23:37
@secret . . . what is the question again?
@secret ok just read the question, took me a while to locate it lol
I was going to venture an answer to do with probability and iS in the path integral but let me just see what others come up with first
@0celo7 Engineering can be rigorous.
ok well, kind of?
@0537 lol
saw the paper
looks really cool.

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