There's an imaginary $i$ in the Schrödinger equation, which I guess is to define the position of the particle in a space-time involving a complex function. But what is the real physical significance of $i$ in the equation?
I am currently trying to follow Leonard Susskind's "Theoretical Minimum" lecture series on quantum mechanics. (I know a bit of linear algebra and calculus, so far it seems definitely enough to follow this course, though I have no university physics education.)
In general, I find these lectures f...
Uh, yes. I think he has too, but can't really help it. (I think most of these comments start as a one-liner and then he adds things without realizing that could be an answer)
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@ACuriousMind I always point at that to turn these to answer, but of no avail.
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I like this character though; his general comments are blunt but correct ;)
Well, if you think it's an answer and he refuses to make it one, you can always write the answer yourself.
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@ACuriousMind Nooooooooo
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One of his amazing comments I liked the most but seemed a little harsh:
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If you think that you have a wiring problem CALL AN ELECTRICIAN! We can not (neither technically nor legally!) solve this for you. Anybody can guess their way around your problem, only you and the people in that room can get hurt or die from it. — CuriousOne9 hours ago
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11:21
And then his VTC reason:
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I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the community here can not and should not try to debug serious electrical wiring problems over the internet. — CuriousOne9 hours ago
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Damn true but really quite blunt ;/
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@ACuriousMind: I know you are asked by many which sometimes lead to annoyance.
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So, may I ask when I should ask you about something?
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@ACuriousMind: You helped me earlier also at ergodicity, thermodynamics; stat mech; QM; degrees of freedom etcetera.
You see, what I get annoyed with is not people asking questions. It's asking the question specifically to me when there is nothing that indicates I'm somehow the best to address the question to.
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@ACuriousMind: But I want to know at what topics specifically which you'd feel comfortable....
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@ACuriousMind Yes, that's a point; but that is true also, you are next to an AI ;)
This is a chat, not my office. So unless we've talked about the specific issue before, or you think I would find the question really interesting, don't ping me with your question. Just ask it. If I want to answer a question, I will answer it even when it's not addressed to me.
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@ACuriousMind That's it. Thanks! But you seemed to answer even the dumbest question of mine ;)
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@ACuriousMind We didn't talk about thermo or ergodicity earlier either; I just asked you whether you'd like to answer; you did.
@dmckee : I've never said an electron is a spinning ball of charge. I said you take a field variation and wrap it into a Möbius strip like the spinor depiction, and then you've got what looks like a standing field. Try it.
Re questioning:we are saying particles are created by field disturbance. on the other, we say fields are excited by the presence particle. so it’s a bit chicken and egg. which comes to being first then?
"Well does it make sense to you? Standing next to yourself with the arrow of time going in the opposite direction for your Doppelganger would be pretty weird … probably impossible but that depends how you view the nature of time (is it relative to surfaces, or relative to timelike lines)?
No, they induce one through their Jacobian, but the diffeomorphism itself acts on the manifold, which has no notion of "GL", since it has no linear structure
I'm reading Edward M. Purcell's Electricity and Magnetism.
I'm having trouble in conceiving his derivation:
The vector potential is $$\mathbf A(0,y_1,z_1)= \frac{\mu_0I}{4\pi}\int \frac{\mathrm d\mathbf l_2}{r_{12}}\;.$$
He then wrote about the
variation in the denominator $r_{12...
So I am trying to solve a problem similar to that of how Jackson(and many other books) do the corner. My geometry is shown in the picture. But I have a line charge near a corner with a slab of dielectric material ($\epsilon$).
My concern is with boundary conditions. I expand my potential (i...
Scenario: Deadly virus wiped out 80 - 90% world population and it did it pretty quickly (in 2 months)
Although it is plausible that among these 10 - 20% of survivors will be people who actually know how to run nuclear power plant, it's safe to assume that they will have different tasks to solve ...
@BernardMeurer People actually think nuclear power plants are some sort of risk.
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Decent answer, but see Fukushima. While the circumstances differ (natural disaster vs. lack of manpower), part of the problem was that much of the redundancy was defeated by concurrent failures with local infrastructure (plausible in a manpower scenario as well). Also, the effects from just that one incident have been felt globally (certainly far more than "the nearest few km"!), so you might want to consider revising the impact portion of your answer. Finally, atomic bombs are certainly not pressure containers, either! :-) — type_outcast4 hours ago
@ChrisWhite Oh, but they are! If they blow up like that xernobil it'll make us grow new limbs and stuff
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16:30
@ChrisWhite Not all are aware; many are ignorant. But I hate such questions, unresearched....
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@ChrisWhite Worldbuilding!
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Most of the wrong Physics come there.
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I still don't get how people think anything went wrong at Fukushima. I'm exposed to more background radiation in New Jersey than anyone there received.
I can't think of any other system that would do as well as a nuclear plant in that condition
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Nuclear power: the only feasible power source that won't add greenhouse gasses to the atmosphere. Also causes fewer deaths per unit energy than anything else.
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Physics gave the world a magic, essentially side-effect-free solution to its most pressing problems, and people choose to go around being afraid of it.
@ChrisWhite Well...at least in Europe, the authorities have proven to be not diligent in the disposal/storage of the waste. That doesn't exactly inspire people to believe the plants themselves are safe.
@Slereah : "Standing next to yourself with the arrow of time going in the opposite direction for your Doppelganger would be pretty weird … probably impossible but that depends how you view the nature of time". Tsk. Somebody is lost in maths. The nature of time is straightforward.
Htrae is a planet with an abnormally strong gravity. In Htrae, the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light. Suppose a civilization like humans (call them snamuhs) evolves, with the unique ability to withstand Htrae's abnormal gravity. If the snamuhs have the ability to become as techno...
Nine answers for a question that amounts to "Can I leave a black hole?"
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@0celo7: Just saw JD's layman explanation of wave-particle duality:
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@Jan : it's like Chinatown: She’s my sister. Slap. She’s my daughter. Slap. She’s my sister and my daughter. The electron is a particle, but that particle isn't some billiard ball, it's a wave. This is best appreciated with the photon, see Wikipedia. Look at the first line: A photon is an elementary particle. Then see this: the energy and momentum of a photon depend only on its frequency (ν) or inversely, its wavelength (λ). And that wavelength can be tens of metres. It isn't necessarily microscopic. — John DuffieldNov 14 '15 at 18:42