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17:02
@vzn See:
Aug 11 at 10:45, by ACuriousMind
@JohnRennie I'm afraid I don't get you - there are no creation/annihilation operators for interacting fields. We have to stipulate that the particle come/go to the asymptotic past/future, and that in those asymptotic times, the fields can be treated as free. Then we compute the overlap of the in-state $\langle A,B\vert = \langle 0\rvert a_A a_B$ with the overlap of the out-state $\vert C,D\rangle = a_C^\dagger a_D^\dagger$ where we first evolve the past in-state into a future state.
Understand how the evolution of the asymptotic past state to the asymptotic future state is done and you understand what virtual particles are. And that's my goal.
Or of course you could not bother to make that effort and fill the chat room with misconceived notions that owe little to rational thought.
Sometimes, I really don't understand worldbuilding.SE. Case in point: How to realistically explain a creature that eats dreams and nightmares? What does the story gain from explaining this "realistically"? What kind of audience are you writing for that is incapable of a simple suspension of disbelief for the sake of a fantasy story?
Damn, I can't find the chat flag for sense of humour failure :-)
I don't even know what worldbuilding.SE is all about.
vzn
vzn
@JohnRennie [heresy alert!] to me virtual particles are a strong indication of the existence of the spacetime fabric. there are agreed on understandings, but think (like photons) they are not fully understood. would make excellent blog topic. see eg scientificamerican.com/article/are-virtual-particles-rea scientificamerican.com/article/… discovermagazine.com/2008/may/…
@ACuriousMind I'm currently reading Infernal by Mark de Jager, and while it's the most dreadful tosh (highly entertaining tosh though :-) it does make the effort to make the magic rational and that does improve the story.
17:09
@JohnRennie We're following your advice and moving the XRD to the microscope PC
if something breaks we will bill you
@0celo7 Put it on my tab - I have your bank details.
@vzn if you're saying that there are aspects of QFT that we don't fully understand I will rush to shake your hand. If you are just saying we don't understant what virtual particles are then you are just adding to the ill informed debate. They are what QFT defines them to be. They are a computational device.
vzn
vzn
@JohnRennie virtual particles have a definition/ usage according to conventional wisdom. we can probably agree on at least that much.
@0celo7 How easy is it to buy stuff these days i.e. what funding is available. In situations like this my immediate reaction is to go looking on ebay for another Dell PC just to run the XRD and your analysis software. You'd get one for $200 - maybe $250.
One of these days someone ought to explain in detail why interacting fields don't have creation ops.
If I have a field interacting with a zero dimensional thingy, I still have those ops.
Where does it all fall apart with interacting fields?
@DanielSank Some interacting fields do have creation operators
17:16
@DanielSank I would love to understand QFT well enough to understand that, but I fear your request to explain in detail is incompatible with briefly and comprehensible to non-QFT heads.
Sine Gordon has them
I suspect that explain in detail = read a book on QFT
@JohnRennie Oh, we could afford another PC, but then we'd need a screen, keyboard and all that other bullshit. Also there's no room.
And all PCs have to get checked by IT and it's a pain
The reason is basically just that you can't have a Fourier transform of a non-linear equation?
Well you can, but it won't do much to help you solve the field
@0celo7 Ah, true. But then you could run it headless and connect using RDP or TeamViewer. I take your point though, sometimes yet another PC is more hassle than it's worth.
17:18
@JohnRennie Speaking of "briefly in detail," I am considering writing my senior thesis (in 2-3 years) on cohomology.
@JohnRennie In my experience, that's usually not true.
Brevity isn't the thing I'd want anyway.
@0celo7 If it's fun I'd say go for it! You'll always do best what you enjoy most.
@JohnRennie I would expect you to read it ;)
@0celo7 Read \ne understand. Anyway i may have died of old age by then.
You're what, 70? You've got a few left
17:20
death or reading about cohomology - that's a tough call.
@0celo7 55 - I only feel like 70
correct to within an order of magnitude.
Now lets assume I'm spherical and moving in a vacuum
hey, you're not a cow
vzn
vzn
@0celo7 still have no idea why you dont switch to a math major
@vzn I don't want to be useless
vzn
vzn
17:22
@0celo7 would a sr thesis on cohomology be "useless"? :P
@vzn My other will be on fuel cells or something
crap this measurement will take 45 minutes
Oh, I've noticed the troll orc has gone!
time to do some cohomology
oh dear god @ACuriousMind what happened to you
I should change my avatar
17:24
Whatever did we do in the days before Google image search?
vzn
vzn
@JohnRennie sounds like virtual particles :P
Actually I might do it on diff topology @JohnRennie
I want to learn about surgery
and you probably need cohomology for that
@0celo7 maybe I should change my avatar. How about this one:
you should
who is that
17:30
the hell
something's wrong with your eyebrow...
and you look green
sorry
good god man
It was from a pantomime I was in many, many years ago :-)
I was the bad guy. It was enormous fun :-)
Please don't
I feel molested just looking at it
The very devil getting the make-up off though. It left me with an increased sympathy for the ordeal women have to go though every day.
17:32
AMS TEXTBOOK SALE
YEEEEEES
TIME TO SPEND MY PAYCHECK
Don't you think I make a good villain? :-)
you look sick, not evil
pls see a doctor
vzn
vzn
lol maybe mimes will help us understand virtual particles :P
@0celo7 I am a doctor
vzn
vzn
@JohnRennie you could be cast as JD in a physics play :P
17:35
a real doctor, not a PhD doctor
vzn
vzn
@0celo7 like a "useless" math phd
@vzn He doesn't look anything like me. You can see him on YouTube if you're curious - from about 03:30 IIRC.
oooo
I hate when problems get harder unexpectedly
@vzn : I'm not some "my theory" guy. I don't have a model.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield (a candid admission!) wondering, why do you feel so strongly over certain physics issues? (you might find some support in those virtual particle refs above)
17:47
@JohnRennie Programming can be learned from the internet, physics requires full-time effort around a decade long
@JohnRennie A physicist can go anywhere to find a programming job, the opposite is chanceless.
@JohnRennie Writing HQ programs is not so simple, but in the daily practice I never found such tasks where the real quality of the code had been more important as, for example, the communication/teamwork skills.
@vzn : it's like the future isn't what it used to be. Once upon a time there was so much promise, and so much hope. But now we're into the nightmare scenario wherein there's been no scientific progress for forty years. I feel strongly about this. I'm going to do something about this.
You're not doing anything tbh besides annoying a bunch of people on the internet.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield lol so now you quote hossenfelder (nice find! reminds me of the "desert" discussed awhile back in here!). bought woits book ~1 decade ago, need to read it sometime, think hes a rare/ valuable iconoclast. anyway what do you mean youre going to do something? what? does it involve something outside of answering Physics questions?
18:03
@vzn : yeah, I'm writing a physics book.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield wondering, do you have an undergrad degree? did you say once you worked in software? cant remember
@vzn : I have a BSc honours degree in Computer Science. There's a lot of analysis and logic in computing.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield (cool) so can you say anything about your book? whats the main theme? any math? etc
@0celo7 lol "annoying..."
18:18
My working title is The Physics Detective. The chapters so far are 1) the future isn't what it used to be 2) the nature of time 3) the speed of light, 4) how gravity works 4) what is a photon? and 5) what happens in gamma-gamma pair production? There's bits of maths like √(1-v²/c²) and ds² = -cdt² + dx² + dy² + dz² and E=hf. But not much.
lol
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield that reminds me, there is an old legend/ folklore (maybe true? told by hawking? told to me by HS CS teacher) that a publisher told hawking re bestselling "brief history of time" that he would have ~½ the readers for every eqn he put in his book... book became rare bestseller popsci written by hardcore scientist (1980s)... (gives new meaning to "½ life decay"...)
@vzn : I don't think that's really true. IMHO the odd equation doesn't do any harm. IMHO the problem comes when people start slipping into mathematical handwaving as a substitute for evidence and explanation.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield have some )( sympathy for that pov. arguably that has been going on ~1century or more re copenhagen interpretation... institutionalized. many topnotch physicists have questioned/ challenged it. the arguments are mostly swept under the rug. black sheep of physics. "omerta" etc
@vzn : I'm not a fan of the Copenhagen interpretation.
18:25
of course not
@0celo7 : do you want a real LOL?
1) Who was Feynman's supervisor?
No? OK. Maybe some other time then.
vzn
vzn
wheeler (coincidentally am in middle of feynmans bio right now... written by physicist) amazon.com/Quantum-Man-Richard-Feynmans-Discoveries/dp/…
2) Who proposed the geon?
vzn
vzn
(clicking on the link) wheeler
(sounds a lot like solitons...)
3) Who didn't know the difference between curved space and curved spacetime?
vzn
vzn
18:39
(again clicking on the link, this is all very socratic...) youre a wheeler fan or antifan or something?
4) Who else didn't know the difference between curved space and curved spacetime?
5) What did Percy Hammond say just before the end-note here?
@JohnDuffield Wheeler?
@JohnDuffield You
3
Q: Sum of reciprocal of primes

ChangIf $p_n$ is the nth prime, then prove that:$$\frac1p_1+\frac1p_2+....+\frac1p_n$$ is not an integer. Since $p_1 ,p_2,..., p_n$ are all prime their reciprocal is not an integer so the sum should not be an integer. But I am not sure.

Well, I admit the mean level of quality of the MathSE is maybe lower as of the PSE, but I think this communication style, in this question, should be also on the PSE followed. The question is high school level, but has a high quality and the answers, and mainly: the typical attitude, is simply wonderful.
@vzn : not a fan. Sorry, I have to go I'm afraid. Good night.
vzn
vzn
@JohnDuffield ok/ why not? you think he misinterprets GR somehow? etc?
18:53
@JohnDuffield I remember around the "first year"of the LHC, I predicted: it will find the Higgs, but no more. And so has it happened. I think this is sad, but I don't think I would be a vizier. It was predictable not to me.
19:07
Hi again
@peterh: It's the toleration of questions like that that keeps me off MSE.
I don't see what's so wrong with that question.
First, it's not a question; it's an order.
Second, it shows absolutely no effort.
Third, it's almost surely a homework assignment
Fourth, the suggestion that since no summand is an integer, the sum should not be an integer, betrays the fact that the questioner didn't giive this a second's thought.
First is acceptable. For the second: it does show some effort (although that line of thought is completely useless), but I guess that depends on your defn of effort.
Yeah, homework questions are very well-accepted in MSE. I guess SE culture varies sitewise.
It shows absolutely no effort. If your idea is that no sum of egyptian fractions with prime denominators can be an integer, and if you haven't doodled enough to notice that 1/3+1/3+1/3 is a counterexample, you've made absolutely no effort.
19:17
I did say it depends on your definition of effort :)
19:36
for some reason I'm drawing pis with three legs
wtf is wrong with me
@WillO But if this person is a newbie, maybe they just don't know HOW to think, and so, therefore, don't know how to make the effort. Perhaps they think that mathematical reasoning is like that. I am kind of curious about why they are asking this question in the first place. Are they taking a basic number theory course? Though, I suppose this could be a question asked in a Discrete Mathematics course, which lots of non-mathy people are forced to take...
@BalarkaSen I'm dumb.
If I have a basis $v_i$ and a dual basis $\omega^i$, how do I represent a trace using them
$\mathrm{tr}(f)=\sum_i\omega^i(f(v_i))$?
19:55
@0celo7 : The trace is the evaluation map $V^* \otimes V \rightarrow k$. The choice of basis gives you an isomorphism $Hom(V,V)\approx V^*\otimes V$.
Hey guys. Has anyone of you ever heard of "Skyrmions" ?
@WillO It was simply fun to read the question, think on it, and then read the answers. Similarly interesting and useful questions on the PSE are downvoted, closed and deleted.
@WillO I don't know what that means
@peterh Why do you complain about that all the time ? I read interesting questions all the time, and they are not downvoted at all, the question just shouldn't consist of bullsh*t ;)
@PhysicsGuy And what do think about this MSE question? Don't you find it interesting?
@PhysicsGuy I don't complain always, but now I've checked a little bit of MSE and I think, this question - and the answers, and the general attitude - is an example to follow.
20:09
@peterh It's a serious question about maths.
Nothing more
So if I were to approach any type of black hole, and I somehow wasn't killed by the heat of accreting matter or its magnetic fields, I would inevitably be ripped apart by tidal forces, right?
No matter the size of the black hole?
The size does matter.
@PhysicsGuy See the crystall clear logic of the answers! See their perfection! The MathSE is a wonder!
@PhysicsGuy Very funny
No but seriously, it really shouldn't
It does.
20:11
Why's that?
Or, wait....
@PhysicsGuy You are in denial. The sad truth is, that the PSE simply isn't on this level, the mean quality of the PSE is very far from the level of this question, and it is mainly because the analog questions on the PSE are downvoted, closed and deleted regularly, and their OPs are expelled.
@SirCumference If you have a supermassive black hole, then you wouldn't be ripped apart immediately, it would take time, but if you have a smaller black hole it would take less time.
@PhysicsGuy But no matter what, you'd be torn apart by a black hole, regardless of size
Right?
20:14
@SirCumference And, if the supermassive black hole rotates enough fast, and all of them rotates at least a little bit, then the Kerr-metric has a very interesting prediction.
@SirCumference And it that in a rotating black hole, the singularity is not point-like, but it is ring. And, if you falls through this ring, you falls out from a white hole, possibly in another Minkowski-universe.
@peterh No. You can't fall through that ring.
@SirCumference It's very presumably. It isn't well known what exactly happens in a black hole. We just have mathematical formulations that can show us the rough structure of Spacetime inside the BH (see Kruskal-metric)
@peterh You're not right this time.
Time dilation would increase as you approach the event horizon. As far as I know, that means the black hole should evaporate from Hawking radiation before you realize it.
Meaning no more black hole.
Or at least it should continue shrinking, until tidal forces can rip you apart
@SirCumference Unfortunately, the only experimental evidence about the black holes are the spectrum of the infalling interstellar gas. It seems currently totally impossible to send a probe into such a ring.
@SirCumference Why you can't?
@peterh What are you responding to?
20:19
@SirCumference The Hawking-radiation is a QG thing, and no QG has any experimental evidence until now. It is speculation, just as the internal structure of the Kerr black holes.
@SirCumference Nah, you would reach the singularity right in time, it's hard to explain, but you should think of Hawking radiation as a result of formulating a QFT in curved space near the event horizon. That (easily said) causes the shrinking of the BH. Now we have the information loss problem.
If you want to understand the shrinking of the BH, you should be familiar with the thermodynamics (entropy) of black holes.
@SirCumference Well, I admit, a considerable proof against the possibility of this "inter-universal travel", that nobody has seen a white hole until now.
@PhysicsGuy The Hawking radiation hasn't any experimental proof. Nothing. It is a theory, a hiphotese.
@peterh If black holes exist, then HR exists, too.
That is very presumable.
20:24
@PhysicsGuy Do you admit that there is no experimental evidence showing the HR?
@peterh There isn't yet. As I said, it's very presumable.
@peterh It astounds me that you're criticizing Hawking radiation for a lack of experimental evidence, yet you just brought up white holes a second ago. If you think the latter is plausible, you shouldn't have any problem with us bringing up Hawking radiation.
@SirCumference ;)
@PhysicsGuy Yes, also I admit it is very presumable, but I also admit there is no experimental evidence, and even the predicted HR is with tens of orders below any measurement possibility.
Really if we are only talking about what's proven, we can't have much of a discussion about black holes.
20:26
@SirCumference Exactly. I say, there is no experimental for any of them, as I did some minutes earliy here.
@peterh I read what you said. But if you think that white holes are plausible, you shouldn't be criticizing HR for its lack of evidence.
@Sir Nothing is proven. The existence of the black is proven, not because we had seen them, but because the infalling interstellar gas has a characteristic spectrum, which can't be explained by other processes. It was looked for objects with this spectra, and they were found. Thus, we can say, BHs exist.
@SirCumference I didn't say the WHs are plausible, I only said, that the Kerr-metric has an interesting prediction.
@SirCumference As the HR is also an interesting prediction.
@peterh But yo misinterpreted that prediction.
@PhysicsGuy It surprises me, first I've heard it from a prof. Well, he was a QM prof and GR prof, but he was a prof. I.e. a full-time teacher on a university, as I can remember, in docent rank (maybe I didn't translate well the exact status). I think it is much more probable that I misunderstood him as that he had said some silly.
@PhysicsGuy "...it was found that in addition to the black hole interior region (region II) which particles enter when they fall through the event horizon from the exterior (region I), there has to be a separate white hole interior region (region IV) which allows us to extend the trajectories of particles which an outside observer sees rising up away from the event horizon,
@PhysicsGuy along with a separate exterior region (region III) which allows us to extend some possible particle trajectories in the two interior regions." <- He explained some similar. Unfortunately, I am only an avid enhusiast and maybe I misunderstood, but this wiki fragment seems to me quite similar as I've heard.
@SirCumference No, I think thinking on things is very useful!
@SirCumference But it is important to know, what is really proven and what is only widely accepted. For example, it is nearly surely accepted, that the antimatter interacts exactly as the normal one, but unfortunately it couldn't be measured until now. Or, there is also a strong believe that the protons decay with a very long half life.
@SirCumference fix: "antimatter interacts gravitationally exactly as the normal one...
20:48
@peterh you're saying it doesn't have negative mass?
@0celo7 You're saying it does have negative mass?
Yep
Care to explain?
no, currently doing some math
Okay, last I checked, positrons and such have + masses
Hell
The antiproton, p, (pronounced p-bar) is the antiparticle of the proton. Antiprotons are stable, but they are typically short-lived since any collision with a proton will cause both particles to be annihilated in a burst of energy. The existence of the antiproton with −1 electric charge, opposite to the +1 electric charge of the proton, was predicted by Paul Dirac in his 1933 Nobel Prize lecture. Dirac received the Nobel Prize for his previous 1928 publication of his Dirac Equation that predicted the existence of positive and negative solutions to the Energy Equation ( E...
Unless you're pulling my leg
20:54
lol
Ffs the definition of a positron in the dictionary is "a subatomic particle with the same mass as an electron and a numerically equal but positive charge."
same absolute value mass, sure
No, it clearly distinguished "same" from "numerically equal"
That's a typo then
I think you're confused
20:56
anti means you flip everything
I think you're REALLY confused
But I know you're not someone who would be that confused
I dunno what you're trying to do
@SirCumference I would like to point you to John Rennies wonderful answer:
23
Q: Has the gravitational interaction of antimatter ever been examined experimentally?

peterhI know that the gravitational interaction of antimatter is expected to be the same as normal matter. But my question is, has it ever been experimentally validated? I think it would not be a trivial experiment, because electromagnetic effects have to be eliminated, so neutral particles would be ...

@SirCumference Citate from John Rennie: The error bounds are huge - all the team were able to say is that the upper limit for the gravitational mass of antihydrogen is no greater than 75 times its inertial mass!
And?
That has nothing to do with what we were talking about
@SirCumference I only said, that the gravitational behavior of the antimatter isn't measured until now, although it is widely accepted that it would behave as the ordinary one. What is not clear?
@SirCumference I based this statement on the citated answer.
@peterh Mass isn't just a measure of gravity, nor is gravity only dependent on mass
21:00
@SirCumference It is not clear to me, could you make it more clear?
@peterh Which part?
@SirCumference It looks to me some like an ungrounded phylosophical statement.
Which part?
@SirCumference Your this sentence: "Mass isn't just a measure of gravity, nor is gravity only dependent on mass."
Massless particles can certainly have gravity
Hell, photons interact gravitationally with black holes
Gravity is dependent on a lot of things, including pressure, mass, energy, and momentum
21:02
@SirCumference Yes, although a significantly different one. For example, enough strong parallel laser beams can completely ignore eachother, or even distract eachother. Of course, this happens only in extreme cases (the energy density of the laser beams should be enough strong to produce measurable GR effects)
Please actually respond to me using the link button, not by writing my name
It makes it harder to know what you're responding to
@SirCumference ok
@peterh How is this relevant? All I said was that gravity is dependent on more than just mass. Other properties of matter can curve spacetime.
In the case of neutron stars, too much pressure can cause one to collapse into a black hole
@SirCumference Yes, but the widely accepted view about the gravitational behavior of the antimatter isn't a tricky GR thing. It is simply widely accepted that it has a positive energy, i.e. an 1kg anti-iron ball would exactly so fall, as an 1kg massive normal one.
The overwhelming consensus among physicists is that antimatter has positive mass.
21:06
@SirCumference Well, it wasn't thought always so sure, but not it is.
I don't see your point.
@0celo7 Back to you, what are you trying to do?
@SirCumference Yes, and this is also what I think, I only mentioned that it is not measured experimentally, just as the proton decay.
You know that's not true
@SirCumference Or the Hawking-radiation.
@SirCumference What?
@peterh That was towards 0celo
21:07
@SirCumference Currently trying to prove intersection theory is consistent with (co)homology.
You?
@0celo7 I mean regarding the whole "antimatter has negative mass"
@SirCumference I have the feeling that you are continously trying to disprove something for me, what I never stated.
You know that's not true
@SirCumference I never said this!
@peterh Oh my christ, I'm responding to 0celo
You clearly posted an instant before I could
:31732783 It's like when atheists say "Oh God"
Anyways
@0celo7 Again, what are you talking about with the whole antimatter thing?
21:10
shrug
Goddammit man
You're screwing with my mind
@SirCumference So, I never stated that HR doesn't exist (I believe: yes, it exists), I never stated that falling through the ring singularity would lead to a different Universe (although I think it is a very interesting possibility), I never stated that the antimatter had negative mass (I think it is quite improbable). These statements exist only in your view. May I ask you, what produces this view for you?
@peterh Certainly for the third one, you entered into a discussion and I assumed you were posting something relevant
As in, actually related to what we were discussing
I see I was wrong
Nobody was discussing gravitational interactions with antimatter.
@SirCumference ...and, what you didn't try to disprove: I think, the proton decay may not exist, but I think it is more probable that the protons decay.
@peterh What are you talking about now?
@peterh For the second one, you indeed said "And it that in a rotating black hole, the singularity is not point-like, but it is ring. And, if you falls through this ring, you falls out from a white hole, possibly in another Minkowski-universe."
When I was talking about approaching a black hole
You seemed to sound certain at first, that's all
21:14
@SirCumference My previous sentence was that it is a prediction of the Kerr-metric!
@peterh Dude, you keep bringing up random points in the middle of discussions
I was obviously talking about black holes and tidal forces, yet you suddenly bring up "And, if the supermassive black hole rotates enough fast, and all of them rotates at least a little bit, then the Kerr-metric has a very interesting prediction."
@SirCumference Ok, no prob. I think only the experimental results are very important.
@SirCumference Yes.
I don't even know when we're discussing the same thing
It's like if you were talking about GR, and I suddenly brought up plate tectonics
@SirCumference I ask on the site many questions about the experimental validation of the theoretical results. I think they are very important and interesting.
@SirCumference I think how the experimental validations are going, makes a very clear distinction, what we know, and what we think. And the difference is very important.
@peterh Dude, we're not even talking about that now
We were only talking about how you interrupt with random points
21:23
@SirCumference I didn't interrupted anything, and honestly I would like much more to talk about the experimental results as that why do you think that I state things surely what I mentioned only as hyphotheses.
@SirCumference I don't think this discourse could lead to any interesting from now. Maybe you should read some interesting, highly upvoted posts on the main site and then initiate interesting talks about them.
@SirCumference If you are searching for them enough well, you can find a lot, mainly between 2013-2014.
@Danu If/when you get to the Euler characteristic in GP, try proving that their definition is equal to the alternating sum of Betti numbers. I know of three proofs. Using Poincare duality, using Morse theory, and using geometric analysis. I can't follow the last one, of course.
I just worked out the first one, and the second one is a one-liner.
How do you define Euler characteristic? I'd have defined it as alternating sum of Betti numbers.
@WillO The self-intersection number of the diagonal with itself.
Okay.
It's highly nontrivial to prove it's equal to the Betti number one.
Unless I'm missing something super obvious.
There might also be an involved argument using triangulations.
@WillO Do you want to hear the proofs?
21:35
Okay.
The Morse theory one is easy.
I don't offhand see any proof.
Well, "easy."
You need the fact that both definitions of the Euler char give rise to the Poincare-Hopf theorem.
To get it via Betti numbers, you need Morse theory. There might be an algebraic topological way to do it without Morse theory, but I dunno. I'm a geometer.
When you say "Poincare-Hopf theorem" do you mean what I would call the Hopf index theorem?
21:38
Yes.
So, you get $I(\Delta,\Delta)=\mathrm{ind}(v)=\sum(-1)^ib_i$.
QED.
Wait, you don't even need Morse theory.
You can use Morse theory.
@dmckee @DavidZ @Danu I'm going to start flagging chat messages that would be considered "shitposts" in our chatroom's parallel universe incarnation as a subreddit.
If you'd like me to stop, please just let me know and I will stop immediately.
Wait. What is v?
But there's another proof of Poincare-Hopf without it that uses de Rham cohomology.
@WillO vector field.
An arbitrary vector field?
The index sum of any vector field, yeah
21:40
It's independent of the vector field.
@BalarkaSen I told you that ;)
okay. yes.
Yes, indeed.
Ok, so in GP they show that the index is equal to $I(\Delta,\Delta)$.
In Bott & Tu or Milnor they show it's equal to $\sum(-1)^ib_i$.
Presumably you need some condition on the zeros of this vector field?
For example, I don't think the zero vector field will work.
21:41
They should be isolated, yes.
@WillO Finitely many, but you can always find such a vector field.
Right. Okay.
So the index equals both $I(\Delta,\Delta)$ and $\sum(-1)^ib_i$.
That's actually a much easier and better proof than what I was thinking about earlier.
@0celo7 (in fact such vector fields are generic in the space of all vector fields on compact manifolds)
Dense you mean?
21:44
Yes.
@BalarkaSen See Hirsch?
22:05
@BalarkaSen I'm ever more convinced GP is an amazing book
It makes the top 5 on my list
What is GP?
Guillemin & Pollack
ah.
Hey guys.
Aaah, talking about Euler-characteristics.
22:20
@DanielSank if half a dozen mods from other sites show up and tell you to stop, you should stop.
I see fast and significant changes on the right side in the starred messages, maybe it is a previously unknown mod/CM effect?
We clear out starred messages sometimes
@DavidZ You deleted them?
Oh, no, sorry - I just meant clearing the stars. The messages are still there.
@DavidZ Ok-ok.
22:41
@JohnRennie indeed it is, although I prefer her as Kreia
@DanielSank What are you flagging them as? Keep in mind that ordinary "spam/offensive" flags are seen by users across the SE chat network without context
Kotor 2 as a whole is an interesting commentary both on the binary Jedi/Sith morality and on the almost Nietzschean morality Kreia follows
Of course, as with all great RPGs, it was never finished and plagued by terrible bugs at release.
22:56
-2
Q: Hurling questions

Dennis Stevens Consider a rigid rod of length $R$, inserted through a central hole in a projectile. There is a small gap between the rod and the projectile, so that the projectile is free to slide along the length of the rod with negligible friction. The rod is caused to rotate about one of its ends wi...

CV it with fire?
@EmilioPisanty If I had any close votes left I would do something :P
@ACuriousMind ah
I wondered
@ACuriousMind In any case, why edit the tags and LEAVE THE ALL CAPS?!?
=P
@EmilioPisanty Yeah, I concede that was a bad/incomplete edit by me

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