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02:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

5:00 PM
not something I'm exactly proud of, but it's a job
 
hmmm
Why not "Lecturer" at least?
 
because that's not what they had
 
@enumaris Sir Amune
@Semiclassical Lacis Salcimes
 
@Semiclassical Is this USA university system? I don't remember calling anyone a TA in UK
 
USA, yes
 
5:12 PM
@Semiclassical In the UK you have to PhD atleast .. I don't think u can do the role of "TA" otherwise
 
at my uni it goes like this: If you're a grad student, then half your time is supposed to be TA or RA (unless you're on a fellowship) and the other half spent on your student work
so typically a new grad student will be assigned 20 hours of TA work a week
(that's really more like an average across the entire semester: very non-uniform)
 
Fanta
Coca-Cola
Sprite
Iced tea
Schweppes
Cocktail
Cider
Beer
 
@MoreAnonymous there were some previous comments on the subject, which I thought were on this chat, but it turns out they're in comments under a deleted answer
 
Jun 2 at 23:31, by Emilio Pisanty
I imagine that's the reason my TA jobs in the UK carried the clunkier title of Post-Graduate Assistant
TA and RA (Teaching & resp. Research Assistant) are terms in very wide currency in worldwide academia, i.e. academics speaking in English, not necessarily in the US
in the UK TA tends to be called PGA (in my experience)
@MoreAnonymous and no, this is inaccurate (again, in my experience) -- the bulk of the TA-equivalent work in the UK is performed by PhD students who have yet to earn their PhD degree
 
5:25 PM
Today I realized that the condition of the vertical bundle is just "The projection is constant"
I am dumb
that is fairly obvious in retrospect
 
@Slereah never write anything on hbar that you'd be unwilling to see on the star board
 
I am the dumbest person in the whole wide universe
 
@EmilioPisanty I read that already,
 
@EmilioPisanty I have a feeling Slereah is long past the point of caring about that :P
Exhibit A (3 stars):
Feb 24 '18 at 10:53, by Slereah
I'm dumb
 
5:28 PM
@EmilioPisanty I just said hi to rennie sir
 
Jul 21 at 7:34, by Slereah
Look at all those dumb ass problems
this at least looks perfectly legitimate
somebody seems to have a bunch of ass problems which appear to be dumb
I imagine they probably relate to donkeys
 
I know him,
 
@yuvrajsingh I'm fairly skeptical given your recent history, but sure.
 
@EmilioPisanty donkey keepers probably have a lot of time to think about physics problems
 
Seriously
 
5:35 PM
 
Basically I am a high school student, and learning some good facts about physics problem I have no intention to hurt anyone by my words, I just thought that it is normal ask a doubt, but I think I was wrong, and humiliating a school going student, I think is not the good thing, any way I apologize for coming in chat room Har bar sorry sorry sorry
 
@EmilioPisanty Is it ethical to tell me what they were (in any way)? (to be fair Im glad it means my question-framing has some kind of relevance)
 
@MoreAnonymous ¬¬
I've already cited them
 
@yuvrajsingh We can do without such not-really-an-apologies here. You have simply been told clearly what not to do here. If you find that humiliating, that is entirely on you.
@Loong Well...clearly should've spent more time contemplating the laws of levers!
 
vzn
@Loong lol! caption for that picture Exactly Whos the Dumbass? :P
 
5:43 PM
@ACuriousMind However, new technology doesn't protect you from old problems:
 
At least no donkey is suffering there!
 
The donkey looks like it's not the first time that this is happening.
 
@ACuriousMind what
@Loong oh
 
Scroll up for context before you "what" me :P
3
 
Impossible sorry
 
5:49 PM
@ACuriousMind thanks again for your answer!
 
@Rudi_Birnbaum curious what is the question?
 
@ACuriousMind but another thing: the one particle Hamiltonians DO NOT add up to the n parti
cle Hamiltonian, due to the V term, that eg. contains the interelectronic repulsions
is that of relevance?
@MoreAnonymous cant link it am on phone here.
check out my latest question on pse
 
Hmm ... PSE or chat where is this question?
@Rudi_Birnbaum Ah ohk
 
6:08 PM
Imagine there is no heaven
it's actually pretty easy if you try
 
Even in the 21st century, it can be a tough life for a donkey. Eg, mygreecetravelblog.com/2013/04/12/… Things have improved quite a bit since that article, but it took a lot of pressure. See thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk/news/…
 
@Rudi_Birnbaum Sure
 
@Loong well, at least it's a DC-10
 
The momentum term in the Hamiltonian is the sum of the individual momentum terms. You're completely correct that the potential won't be.
 
old plane, no big shame if it gets busted =P
 
6:12 PM
Difficulty Class 10?
 
@ACuriousMind hell no
 
Would've been a low DC to fly a plane :P
 
@Rudi_Birnbaum Generically, energy cannot be assigned to individual parts of a system when they're interacting
energy is a global property
the cases where it can be subdivided into per-particle energies are exceptions rather than generic cases
@ACuriousMind I think that it's a Europe vs US thing ─ you see a hell of a lot more DC-10s in cargo roles taxiing around airports in the US than you do in Europe, I think
 
Oh, I think that has more to do with me having no clue at all about planes :P
 
@ACuriousMind also no googling skills
very distinctive tail sections
basically the only large jet airliner with an engine on the tail that you're likely to see in an airport nowadays
previously very common on passenger service
nowadays completely displaced from the passenger market by oceangoing twin jets
forget Concorde
forget double Jumbos
 
6:22 PM
Easy, I hardly knew them!
 
the real innovation in airline planes is jet engines that are reliable enough that you can fly for multiple hours after an engine failure without fearing for the other one
@ACuriousMind seriously?
these guys?
recently on the news because they've just been put on the chopping block?
 
I repeat, I don't know anything about planes :P
 
@Rudi_Birnbaum u can edit an entire question on ur phone? Kudos to that ... I remember it was a nightmare on my phone
I'm sure that for EmilioPisanty some aeronautical engineers would love ur enthusiasm :P
 
@MoreAnonymous I don't think the folks behind the A380 would much appreciate how I see aviation
 
@EmilioPisanty is there a hidden joke about u disliking A380 ??
 
6:30 PM
no
it's just that I think it's over-rated when it is placed as a pinnacle of aeronautical engineering
 
@EmilioPisanty Yea ... Thats what many people feel about my dating life :P
 
@MoreAnonymous have a good night.
 
@EmilioPisanty I know very little about aircraft... but that seems like a really crappy claim to me. Wouldn't a modern fighter jet be a lot more of a pinnacle than a friggin double decker passenger plane lmao
 
@EmilioPisanty Strictly, it's an MD-11; however, that's a DC-10 derivative.
 
@Loong how can you tell?
 
6:35 PM
@Loong $\mathrm{d}(\mathrm{DC}-10) = \mathrm{MD}-11$? I've heard of "engineering math", but this is ridiculous.
 
@JMac That position looks pretty short-sighted to me, but opinions are opinions.
 
@EmilioPisanty I checked where I found the picture. ;-)
 
@Loong ah. winglets.
 
@EmilioPisanty I just can't imagine that the technology in large commercial passenger aircraft would be innovative enough to represent the pinnacle when compared to military aircraft. I guess it depends on what people look for, and what they are actually comparing.
 
@JMac note the language: "a" pinnacle, not "the" pinnacle
aeronautical engineering can have multiple pinnacles, each representing a different direction of things you might want
the passenger capacity of a military fighter jet is pretty lousy
the A380 is definitely a triumph of engineering
if you're going to argue otherwise, I'd suggest trying to design such a plane first
 
6:41 PM
@MoreAnonymous yes I can, but I cant copy links and stuff like that(yet).
 
@EmilioPisanty Fair enough I guess. To me it just seems like the large planes have such gradual improvements model to model that I would have to dig into the history to see what makes any of them a clear "pinnacle". The fact that we can put any planes in the sky safely is enough of a pinnacle of engineering to still kinda blow my mind.
 
@JMac how is the A380 a "gradual" improvement in any sense?
how many other planes can you name with comparable passenger or cargo capacities?
 
@EmilioPisanty I'm curious did u do some aeronautical engineering optional modules?
@EmilioPisanty I'm gonna be counting planes instead of sheep tonight
 
6:59 PM
@EmilioPisanty Gradual because it's part of the process of continually making better aircraft with increased capacity and capabilities. Again, I don't know nearly enough about the specifics, but I assumed that the A380 was part of iterations in design where they were able to make planes larger safely over time. It's not like one day they were making propeller planes and the next day rolling out A380's.
I had assumed that they are still working on even better planes, but IDK enough about the industry.
 
@EmilioPisanty Yes I agree, I am just not sure what you are refering to.
 
@Rudi_Birnbaum then I didn't understand your question
 
 
1 hour later…
8:06 PM
@EmilioPisanty do you mean the one I posted some hours ago on the main page, or the one in the chat?
 
8:38 PM
@Rudi_Birnbaum ur on MSE too !! And u've answered(/commented with an answer ) one of my (re-edited) questions!!!

https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2888976/the-definite-integral-problem-with-a-twist
:))) Who knew we went to back :P
*Who knew we went waaaay back :P
 
hmmm
 
Paging toothpaste scientist @JohnRennie: A general question on toothpaste
 
@ACuriousMind what toothpaste does he use? My toothpaste doesn't go back it :O

Also why John a toothpaste scientist?
 
I don't know why, you'll have to ask him!
Nov 15 '18 at 10:23, by John Rennie
Close :-) I worked as a colloid scentist, which is on the boundary between physics and chemistry. I have indeed worked on toothpaste, as well as shampoo, washing powder and anti-perspirants.
 
9:13 PM
@MoreAnonymous "A method for obtaining free thermal antineutrons within the cage-like structure of a fullerene molecule comprising irradiating the fullerene molecule with free neutrons causing free neutrons to be trapped within the fullerene molecule wherein the trapped neutron oscillates between the neutron and antineutron states." Yeah, right. :rolls eyes:
 
@PM2Ring I'm curious how does the patent system work? Can anyone effectively patent bullcrap? (like what does it mean to patent say a perpetual motion machine?)
 
@MoreAnonymous I'm not sure, and the details vary a little from country to country (I'm in Australia).
 
@PM2Ring doesn't patent in country A mean patent in country B? Thought thats what the drug companies were doing
 
Remember, Einstein spent several years working in the Swiss patent office, assessing the validity of patent applications. I assume that modern patent assessors try to be thorough, but I assume that they aren't scientists of the calibre of Einstein. :) And he was still very young, fresh out of Uni. Also, they're mainly concerned about verifying that the application is legally sound and doesn't infringe an existing patent. They can't be expected to be experts on cutting edge science.
@MoreAnonymous Each country has its own laws. There are various conventions and agreements between countries, but we certainly don't have a unified international legal framework.
 
9:29 PM
@PM2Ring I see ... My general knowledge is usually quite poor :/
@Slereah are u any good with measure theory? (just curious wanted to ask u something regardless of a yes or no :P )
 
Eg, just because it's legal to sell some new drug X in the USA, it's not legal to sell it in Australia until it has been vetted by our system, although the fact that it has FDA approval will streamline that process. And since the big pharma companies are multi-national, they're (generally) unlikely to infringe on each other's patents.
@AaronStevens The term "Favorite" is probably rather misleading. Discussions on SO meta & chatrooms revealed that lots of regulars use Favorite to mark bad questions, especially deletion candidates. But plenty of people, especially newbies, think that when their question gets the Favorite star it must be a good thing. Little do they know... :evil grin:
 
@PM2Ring Oh of course. I know that this is what people use. I guess it is more of a personal issue. Although isn't there some badge if your question gets enough favorite markings? I guess if you question is that bad you deserve a badge :P
 
I do use Favorites to mark good questions as well, especially useful duplicate targets.
@AaronStevens "There's no such thing as bad publicity". Let's just say it's one of the components of the Stack Exchange system that has evolved away from the designers' original intentions.
 
Well, the reason it has evolved that way is clear: There's no other way to bookmark questions within the system.
 
@PM2Ring It would be interesting if there was a sort of "post bookmarking" feature in SE where you could tag your bookmark with relevant information for yourself. Such as "check if answer was edited", "go-to question for centripetal force", "read this interesting answer later" etc.
 
9:44 PM
I guess similar remarks could be made about the HNQ, for better or worse. Yes, HNQ questions attract attention, but they're often not the kind of question we want the site to be famous for, and the extra attention leads to low quality answers and inflated, distorted votes.
 
@PM2Ring Like operators acting on bras?
 
@AaronStevens Indeed! There might even be userscripts that do that sort of thing. But they'd have to store those comments on your device, not the site, which is less convenient if you access the site from multiple devices. I guess they could use cloud storage...
@AaronStevens Linear operator was an "answer song" to Sade's Smooth Operator, but it wasn't a hit. :)
 
@PM2Ring Finite Simple Group of Order Two is an actual song
 
@PM2Ring Interestingly, there are such things as "linear drum beats" where you only hit one thing at a time. i.e. you can't hit two or more things for one note
Although I have never heard the term "non-linear drumming", which is actually the norm
 
@ACuriousMind Very clever. I'm sure Tom Lehrer would approve.
@AaronStevens Kind of related to Serialism, where you use permutations of series of pitches, timbres, etc, so you can't reuse a note from the set until you complete the current permutation. Frank Zappa was a fan of that technique.
 
9:59 PM
@AaronStevens Are u a drummer?
 
10:17 PM
I don't like writing answers in comments, but does this question deserve a full answer?
Regardless of the process, conservation of energy implies that it takes at least as much energy to convert $\mathrm{CO_2}$ back into carbon & oxygen as you originally got from burning the carbon, so unless you have lots of cheap carbon-neutral energy at your disposal, this is a losing proposition. — PM 2Ring 2 mins ago
 
rob
10:31 PM
@PM2Ring If it doesn't deserve a full answer, vote to close it rather than answering it in the comments.
 
10:49 PM
@rob Yeah, ok. I'll transfer it to an answer, and see what happens.
 
rob
@PM2Ring Cool, thanks.
 
11:32 PM
Anyone aware of some useful techniques of fitting a model consisting of a system of non-linear, coupled differential equations to data? There are roughly 7 parameters to be determined, and there is not data for all of the dependent variables.
 
11:45 PM
Trying to hunt down what was likely a popular science physics book I consumed as a child; does anyone know any popular science books which made the claim that the interior space of an atomic nucleus might be a meter or more? Probably written in the 80's or very early 90's. Likely candidate authors include Sagan, Feynman, or Hawking, but I consumed pretty much anything I could get my hands on until I was twelve or thirteen.
 
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