So I have a question about power spectral densities and correlations of noise. I know that there is the Wiener–Khinchin theorem that can connect the two with a Fourier transform, and that a white noise process (flat power spectral density) has no correlations between the points; the correlation function is a delta function. But what if we now take a white noise process with a cutoff? Say it is white from 0 to 200 MHz, with some amplitude A, but after that it is 0
You can think of the cutoff as a fermi dirac type of cutoff if you will; it just goes from A to 0 very rapidly after 200 MHz. What kind of correlations does this noise have? It is no longer a delta function, but what is it
You're describing Vantablack, not something invisible. I'm not sure what exactly the question is here, as the basic understanding of how "seeing" an object works is already wrong. — ACuriousMindyesterday
user54412
And now I'm convinced ACM has the full text of Wikipedia memorized.
If the four velocity of a photon is undefined, what can we say about the velocity of a photon? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-velocity
Can we say that the photon is moving at c?
Can we say that the photon is moving at c through the three spatial dimensions?
Can we say that the if the photo...
It's really sad watching the evolution of a crackpot.
He started out sound reasonable but slightly rude. Then more rude. Now his theory has a name, "Dynamic Dimensions Theory", and he's writing long rants about it.
@0celo7 I don't know what you meant by unity. If you meant zero, then zero will not generate the whole group, because 0+0=0. If you meant one, well one isn't always in the group. For example, one is not in 3Z. The answer should be yes since the subgroup containing just the identity has finite size. If you exclude this case, then the answer should be no because any infinite cyclic group is isomorphic to Z and if n is in a subgroup of Z, then so must all of nZ, which has infinite size.