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13:00
@ChrisWhite I need TeX help!
@ChrisWhite ack, it says this is chapter zero
that's not what I want
Dang, proof is wrong.
13:17
0
Q: What is a good mentality about casting votes responsibly?

NumrokI find myself casting quite a lot of up-votes on questions, usually reaching the daily limit and was wondering if I might be polluting the site with that. What are other people's mindsets about casting votes? Do you have a certain criterion other than that the question has to fulfill the rules o...

@Slereah you around
@Slereah I need help fixing Lemma 7
I know it's true
I'm trying to "average" the velocity vector along the spacelike curve to get a single vector
And the exponential map of this should be the endpoint
but I'm having a hard time proving the average should be spacelike (I know it has to be)
Ah @ACuriousMind would you happen to know how to remove the 0. in front of the theorem numbers?
13:34
Remove the [section] that is presumably behind your \newtheorem line.
That wasn't it, but it was a good hint, danke
Is the lemma basically "if p and q are spacelike related, there's a spacelike geodesic between them"
Special relativity is too hard
@Slereah Iff.
The iff is the hard part.
Well one is trivial
Correct
13:39
So only one part is hard
That's why I said "the converse is obvious"
How do we know this is true btw?
And I'm pretty sure you need iff for Theorem 8's proof to work
@Slereah Draw it
Did you check the proof that all null-related points are joined by null geodesics
Maybe this will help
Where is that proof?
That would be helpful, yeah
13:40
It is in Penrose, IIRC
Page?
I have Penrose with me
At work m80
me too :P
It's in chapter 2
Dunno the page
2.19?
13:42
I dunno man
Don't have it on me
let me get my legal copy...
It is by the way what convinced me that you can't get around chronology protection easily
Seems like it yeah
Causal non-timelike null related points have a geodesic between 'em
Ok, will have to read later
@Slereah but isn't it true
the thing I'm trying to prove
if you have an everywhere spacelike curve
then the end point has to be spatially related to the start
in Minkowsi
Oh in Minkowski certainly
so what I need to show is that $-(q^0)^2+\sum (q^i)^2>0$
but this seems nontrivial.
13:48
In Minkowski can't you just prove that from a point, a null geodesic reaches every other point
I mean those are just straight lines
the fuck do null geodesics have to do with anything
Errr
Spacelike
Yes, that is trivial
But what I have is $p\asymp q$
And from this I need to show that there's a spacelike geodesic connecting them
This is hard.
(yes, I made up that notation)
Are we proving it only for Minkowski or in general
Just Minkowski for now
13:49
Because doing it in coordinates probably works fine
No, it's hard!
Did you not read my thing
you get an integral over a unit square
at first I thought the integral had to be positive
but then I realized we're taking derivatives at different points of the curve
Maybe there's some continuity argument
Maybe we can bound the integral from below.
Maybe I need a bump function, lol
Somehow get rid of the parts where the inner product is negative
...that's not even that bad of an idea
Aren't all geodesics in Minkowski space just a straight line
Yes, but who gives a shit
Stop proving the converse, that's trivial
Can't you check that a straight line coming from one point will intersect another
What?
13:59
Iunno m80
this seems like a really easy special relativity problem
why is it so hard
Fuck it, let's do what physicists to best. TAYLOR EXPAND
14:21
@JohnRennie : I know why. It's really simple.
@JohnDuffield enlighten us
Not here
lol
14:37
@DavidZ : please explain why not here to the other posters.
@JohnDuffield because he's tired of our back and forth
@JohnDuffield In this case, because you've already been told not to have physics discussions here.
-1
Q: Is there a proven formula (or pathway) which can curb chronic poverty in inner cities?

BringItWhen you have rats in the neighborhood you want them eliminated. You don't go to your Legislator again and again for more money to throw at the problem again and again because we still have rats. Therefore, this question is not to encourage discussion, but to identify the proven elements in a for...

@JohnRennie The entire concept doesn't make sense in Newtonian gravity
What is the lagrangian of the inner city
@Danu Huh? Having a body that has a certain escape velocity makes sense
@Slereah you joke, but I once tried to do this
14:47
@0celo7 But infinite velocities are possible so there are no "black holes" in the GR sense.
Well there is econophysics
It had a lot of terms
But it's not really Lagrangian related
it's more stochastic equations
@Danu Ah, ok, but if we say that there's something that light can't escape, I think that's valid
Unless it's aided, ofc
You should "slingshot" it since velocities add.
@Slereah I tried to do the path integral
Ehh yeah... $c$ is not independent of frame in this context
14:49
This one?
@Danu That's what I just said
I think it's definitely nonsensical to talk about black holes
@Danu : But the frame of the source mass is the important part
@0celo7 Note "ehh yeah"
Well they were not called black holes back then
They were called
Astre occulté
14:50
haha
I forget the english translation
Hidden star?
kinda
@Slereah Very encouraging prospects ;)
@Danu oh, I didn't read that as agreement
14:52
Yeah I think he had some pretty poor idea of the phase of good prospects versus bad ones
What if I use the mean value theorem
Remember the rule @0celo7
Be nice
Pick the nice value theorem
lol
@Slereah Especially the "post doc post doc post doc" lol
$$\int_0^1 c'^\mu(s)\,\mathrm{d}s=c'^\mu(k)$$ for some $k\in[0,1]$.
HA
I think that's it
@Slereah good job
@Slereah nooo it's wrong
@Slereah The problem is that the $k$ need not be the same for all $\mu$.
15:24
@Slereah What if I do Morse theory on the space of spacelike paths
Whatever that means.
I don't know Morse theory
Maybe just a variational method then
I have an idea.
Aren't there no smallest path for spacelike curves?
There is a smallest!
The geodesic!
Well geodesics and shortest path aren't the same
Can't you make the path arbitrarily small by getting closer and closer to a null curve?
15:34
Can you do that with a spacelike curve
I think so?
I dunno
I vaguely recall that point
Back to the drawing board then
5
A: How does one measure space-like geodesics? Or: What is the physical interpretation of space-like geodesics?

Valter MorettiIf you have two points $p,q$ spacelike separated in a spacetime $M$ there is not anything like the shortest spacelike curve joining them! Any spacelike curve joining them can be continuously deformed closer and closer to a lightlike curve joining the same points. So the $inf$ of the set of the le...

Bah
@Slereah You can approximate every timelike path arbitrarily well by null curves in any case
15:45
Yeah I remember that
By null curves?
Zigzagging
(just zig-zag)
Never heard that one
@0celo7 lolwut
Null curves are already null curves
15:46
Nevermind
I misunderstood you
And you misunderstood me
And the phone doubled my message and only let me edit one.
@Danu it isn't that I expect the exercise to have any physical significance, because of course it doesn't. But in the way that people will waste their time doing crossword puzzles or Sudoku it might be interesting to waste my time looking at this.
I appreciate it's a form of numerology and devoid of meaningful content, but I'm just curious why the two approaches give the same result.
OK
BTW did you read the Ohanian book?
No, sorry. I'm quite busy with all kinds of other stuff
Isn't Newtonian gravity basically just Schwarzschild metric with $g_{rr}$ set to 1?
15:49
My girl is moving---lots of work to do---and other than that I'm reading a book on Riemann Surfaces at the moment
So Danu is capable of being nice, presumably.
Or $g_{tt}$ set to one depending on your choice of signature. I'll have a think about that when time permits. Right now I'm writing corrosion modelling software for the nuclear industry (EDF).
Phone, please fix autocorrect.
If you live near a nuclear power station now is a good time to consider moving :-)
Are you in France or just subcontracted
15:52
I'm a subbie. I contract for National Nuclear Labs in the UK, who run the project for EDF.
It is surprisingly good fun :-)
@JohnRennie About 45 minutes from one.
But it's a DOE research reactor, doubtful you're working on it.
(My university maintains it.)
@JohnRennie Somehow I thought you're retired... :P
With y'know... So many answers on this site and all
Maybe he's just a quicker typist than you.
15:55
@Danu I quit regular 9-5 work about 8 years ago, but I started doing small coding jobs for friends and word got round.
how do you "quit regular work"
How old are you?
@0celo7 55. I can answer but it's kind of real world boring stuff. However I'll answer if you want ...
Maybe you haven't heard, but real world is what's important to me
@JohnRennie Oh, that young still?
The words "Semi retired old time computer nerd" made me picture someone ~70+
70 is more retired than semiretired
16:00
@0celo7 start saving regularly and put the money into a unit trust or some other stockmarket related fund that it ins't easy to get the money out of. Do this for 30 years. Retire. Simple as that.
Can't I just buy candy instead
and eat it
and somehow retire
@Slereah Yes, that'll work :-)
Currently i wouldn't mind investing in a house
Rent is bloody expensive and not building much equity
If you're in the UK I'd be inclined to wait and what effect the tax changes on buy to let properties will have. I'd say there's a fair chance they will depress prices a bit.
Assuming I get my parent's house one day I'll have a very nice investment. The area is exploding, housing will go through the roof.
But I plan to marry rich anyway
That's a good plan, right
16:06
Not in the UK tho
And I'm not buying it now anyway
@Danu old time computer nerd - I started programming on an IBM 370 mainframe in OS360 assembler. It's astonishing, and I mean that literally, how much being a computer nerd has changed in forty years.
Won't be getting a loan with my current job
@JohnRennie Yeah I kinda wish it was still like that
I really hate programming high level
I'm not sure I miss programming in assembler. My favourite language remains C++, which isn't that much different to assembler.
Yeah but I'm doing Javascript :(
@JohnRennie probably the first time I've ever heard that said
16:09
I hate Javascript.
I mean, I get it, but it's a very rare sentiment
Then you are a wise old man
That's why I don't have JS
@DavidZ C++ is such a clean language.
I prefer C#
C# is much cleaner
16:10
@JohnRennie That is the opposite of my impression of it
granted, "clean" in the context of programming languages can mean very different things to different people
When I write C++ I have a pretty good idea of the compiled machine code is going to look like.
When I write C# I have absolutely no idea of what's going on under the hood.
@JohnRennie Ah, yeah, that I get
Oh yeah
The C# compiler is fuck huge
C# is the future though
I have done C# work and it is easy to code in because the standard libraries are so good.
And you don't have to be careful with pointers :-)
What are you people talking about?
16:13
$C\#$
What's that
A programming language
Is that some weird differentiability criterion
@0celo7 :: John faints away in horror ::
Nerds just aren't what they used to be
Not a nerd.
16:14
When my C# professor described it a bit I said to him like
Only nerds know about computers
"Oh you mean those things that Lisp could do in the 60's"
@0celo7 Guilty as charged
I'm not a nerd, so I don't know about them
@Slereah I remember Lisp. I write a program to calculate pi to 500 decimal places in Lisp just to prove it could be done.
16:15
@JohnRennie I would imagine the stereotypical nerd as a language purist in some sense - they'd probably code in C and Lisp and honestly not have any idea about newer languages like C# or even Java
@JohnRennie Well you can obviously
I don't know about execution speed tho
That being said I'm not overly happy with the whole idea of this being a chat room for nerds anyway, but whatever
@Slereah it was slow :-)
I'll bet
Slow?
Like a few seconds?
16:17
machine steams for 20 minutes
$3.$ displays on screen
Wtf
My phone could probably do that instantly
your phone isn't an old timey tincans computer
I can't remember, but in those days you ran anything big as an off-line task. So you started the job, went off for a coffee then came back to what creative way it had crashed in this time.
heheh
I had programs like that when I worked in big data machine learning things
Sounds like when I try to write stuff in TeX
16:19
I think an IBM System 370 was about 1Mip
What
@JohnRennie I need SR help
@0celo7 ?
...will you ever be able to do anything without soliciting help from everyone appearing in this chatroom
No.
(spoiler: Nope)
16:22
Oh fuck it, damn phone
@0celo7 you will buy an iPhone
No, I will not "fuck off", @0celo7 :P
@JohnRennie I have an iPhone
It's no longer autocorrecting
@Danu sadly I think that's the case
I have a zPhone
@0celo7 my point exacty. You should get a phone that works.
16:24
Proudly made in Moldova
Anyway, what did you want to know about SR
I can explain anything except for geodesics in Rindler coordinates
@JohnRennie no, I don't want to give certain assholes the satisfaction of me asking you
So I'll just waste more time, whatever
I think you underestimate the good nature of the banter hereabouts
^that
Or pretend to do so for unclear reasons
16:26
No, I overestimate it.
Why do you mainland Europeans all like Eurodisco?
Do you think anyone actually likes that?
Someone buys it
Not me, or anyone in this room for that matter :P
(I hope)
Let me listen to it
I'm pretty open minded
Not bad.
16:32
Obvious troll is obvious
Whatever.
The sound effects are annoying, but the actual song isn't bad
Actually I'd say it was inoffensive enough. If it was on in the background I wouldn't run away screaming.
@JohnRennie is there offensive eurodance
Hardcore?
Not a lot of people like that
There is some cheesy Europop around. Very cheesy.
I think that's pretty good, don't know exactly what it sounds like off the top of my head though
16:35
@JohnRennie that's a low bar
Actually that song sucks
@DavidZ when you hear a single on the radio it can often sound quite good, but if you are foolish enough to sit down and try and listen to a whole album it rapidly sears you.
Sure, if the other songs on the album are bad
Singers like Taylor Swift and Katy Perry are like that. You catch the song on the radio and think it's quite catchy. But I defy you to listen to a whole Katy Perry album
I tried and failed.
@JohnRennie I'd probably enjoy it
I can't do large amounts of heavy metal
The growling gets old really quickly
16:38
I have some data processing procedure which results in a bunch of random numbers. I have computed an analytic expression for what I expect the probability distribution of those numbers to be.
How do I check it?
I had a conversation over at Cross-Validated, but I get the feeling that guy was going into more detail than I need.
Surely someone here has done this. Astro people use probability a lot, right?
@0celo7 that's death metal. If you listen to some of the early Black Sabbath or Led Zeppelin albums I think you be surprised how unlike the current HM bands they are.
Ok, death metal
I can enjoy one of those songs here and there
@DanielSank I've done that. I think I even asked a question about it. I've never found a fully satisfactory answer.
I can listen to hardstyle/any hard dance for hours on end
@DavidZ Wow, really?
16:40
Well, I've had the same problem. I think so, anyway, based on how you're describing it
How about a broke-ass answer?
hm. Similar, not really the same I guess. See this:
3
Q: Is there a way to test a probabilistic prediction for an uncontrollable experiment?

David ZThis is something that I've wondered about mostly in connection with weather forecasting, but I would like to ask the general question because it comes up from time to time in other contexts. Suppose I have a process, denoted $F$, which, given some initial state $x$, produces an outcome $y$ from...

Why not just plot it a bunch of times and see if it fits?
@0celo7 Very scientific :P
Ho boy.
Shouldn't I be able to ask the question "does my numerical data set with a million trials reasonably well match the cdf I computed?"?
(I actually computed the pdf, but whatever)
16:44
Yeah, you should. I'm fairly sure there's a known way to do that, but I don't know my way around the applicable math.
Let me put it like this: I can plot a historgram of the data against the computed pdf and visually see that they match really well. What's the computer version of that?
It might be one of the things linked in my question.
Oh maybe this is the one to go for:
Pearson's chi-squared test (χ2) is a statistical test applied to sets of categorical data to evaluate how likely it is that any observed difference between the sets arose by chance. It is suitable for unpaired data from large samples. It is the most widely used of many chi-squared tests (e.g., Yates, likelihood ratio, portmanteau test in time series, etc.) – statistical procedures whose results are evaluated by reference to the chi-squared distribution. Its properties were first investigated by Karl Pearson in 1900. In contexts where it is important to improve a distinction between the test statistic...
> It tests a null hypothesis stating that the frequency distribution of certain events observed in a sample is consistent with a particular theoretical distribution.
What's with this phrase "null hypothesis"?
@DavidZ This looks relevant, thank you.
np
@DanielSank seriously?
@DavidZ ...yes?
16:48
you never know here
Am I being dumb?
I have something else that might help you
Lol
this is from my blog, back in the day:
@DanielSank I thought you were doing stuff that involved data
16:48
@ACuriousMind I've given up being thorough
How have you not heard of the chi-squared test :P
I can prove anything
I think somewhere in that post it explains about null hypotheses
@DanielSank has never taken a stats class?
@Danu I never said I hadn't heard of a chi-squared test. Don't give me that bs attitude "how have you never heard of xyz...?". It's not helpful.
16:49
Me neither, but those concepts are hard to avoid in a physics BSc
@DanielSank Sorry if I offended you...
I kind of get it. I never had to learn anything about statistics as an undergrad.
From what I've heard, it's frequently not a required part of a physics education.
@DavidZ Everything I know about statistics I learned myself, totally outside of school.
@Danu oh screw you
@0celo7 I don't think that was really necessary
You're never sorry when you offend me
How about he show some decency then
16:58
@DavidZ reading the wiki article on Pearson chi-square, it's what I thought "chi-square" meant in the first place.
@0celo7 Danu isn't trying to offend anyone. Any offense you've taken is unintentional.
@0celo7 wtf are you talking about
I computed the "statistic" and got 0.0008
To be specific, I computed (1/N) \sum(O_i - E_i)^2 / E_i
@DanielSank yeah, I think Pearson's test is the "standard" chi-square test that always gets used for these sorts of things
Where O_i are the observed counts in bin i and E_i are the expected counts in that bin.
16:59
Well, if that's not right, I'm not the one to tell you. I'm not an expert on it or anything.
@DavidZ Right so isn't this somehow appropriate for the case that I expect the distribution of counts in a given bin to be Gaussian?
I would think so

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