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03:35
0
A: In adiabatic expansion does the internal energy of an ideal gas decrease?

Aaron Stevens Suppose that I have a perfectly-insulated syringe closed at one end and a frictionless piston on the other. The syringe initially contain ideal gas of volume V. So right now the gas is exerting a force on the piston and there is something (maybe even you) supplying an equal but opposite forc...

Is my answer really that bad?
@JohnRennie That's one great idea! It makes sense that the Current wouldn't be harmful. Glass is a great insulator let alone the 100,000 ohms of the human skin. (I've measured my skin before and got up to 980,000 ohms) so I wouldn't be surprised if the resistance could be greater. The idea that guy had in the video was the capacitance factor. The conductivity of the near vaccume and the insulation of the glass then the skin being a conductor. (Of course in relation to each other)
@JohnRennie Would the capacitor idea be a good idea as well?
@JohnRennie This is in response to your reaponse to @Akash.B . Lots of times we shouldn't rule out things that can be possible. Laws and rules of physics are set by people that have proof that has been proven over and over again. But not every possibility has been put through trials and tested for that. And as society gets smarter and begin to have greater ideas some laws of physics that great people have set can possibly be broken.
@JohnRennie We should always keep our minds open to every possibility that comes our way. That way great minds like yours, mine and everyones else's can make better and more efficient ideas and things. A lot of things that I've learned and taught and even seen have changed what I originally thought. And in some cases I thought some things were impossible. But I kept my mind open. The space time and dimensions ideas blew my mind. I still have lots to learn too.
 
2 hours later…
05:26
@Slereah Are you on physicsoverflow? If not I think this is the right stackexchange? physics.stackexchange.com/questions/511647/…
06:09
Declan Traill, the Energy Field Theory guy, has clarified his question a bit, and included the diagram and argument from his article; previously he just linked to the article. A couple of us have tried to encourage him to ask a clear focused question, and to not claim that SR is wrong, but he doesn't seem to get it.
However, I feel his question should be reopened so that a clear refutation can be posted. He wrote this question in response to Marco Ocram's suggestion in comments on a now-deleted answer that I linked here a couple of days ago.
07:08
@AaronStevens I guess who reads it? To a pro perhaps? He seems well versed in this stuff
07:41
hi, I have a question where I'm sure I'm overlooking something silly. We know $\psi_0^*\psi$ is the probability density of a state at time $t = 0$. In time $t$, the wave function evolves by a unitary operator $\psi_t = U_t \psi_0$. The new probability density at time $t$ is then $\psi_0^* U_t^* U \psi_0 = \psi_0^* \psi_0$. This says that the probability density is constant regardless of the state. But I know this can't be for non-stationary states..
 
2 hours later…
09:20
@AimanAl-Eryani You need to be more careful about what objects you write down. Use bras and kets to distinguish states from functions! For any state $\lvert \psi\rangle$, the probability density is $\psi^\ast(x)\psi(x) = \langle \psi \vert x \rangle \langle x \vert \psi\rangle$. You only evolve the $\lvert \psi\rangle$, not the $\lvert x\rangle$, so this is not invariant under unitary evolution.
09:34
@EmilioPisanty How do you feel about formulae vs. formulas - showing off or just personal preference?
2
@Slereah Sorry for the late answer - the (anti-)commutation relations define a (super-)algebra, and you're looking for its irreducible representations. Stone-von Neumann shows that the CCR are in the lucky case where they only have one irreducible representation.
09:49
@ACuriousMind ah! of course. That was silly, haha. Thanks a lot!
@ACuriousMind what is the usual wait time when you flag something for a mod? And how does the mod contact you?
@MoreAnonymous Depends on how difficult the flag is to handle. Some things will be dealt with as soon as any mod sees the flag, others will require that we first consult each other or do some investigation. The moderator will not usually contact the flagger unless it's necessary to resolve the flag.
@ACuriousMind Ah ... How does he contact?
(if he does)
@MoreAnonymous Main tools are 'moderator messages' (private messages sent on the main site, mainly intended for warnings or suspension messages) or creating a private chat room only visible to moderators and the user.
@ACuriousMind Also is this welcome for this physics stackexchange or stackoverflow

https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/511647/covariant-version-of-the-cosmological-principle
@ACuriousMind Thanks
09:53
@ACuriousMind how lucky are we in more general cases
@Slereah Unlucky, cf. Haag's theorem
Is there a unique rep for the Z2 sort of operators
And if operators commute, is the total hilbert space the product of those hilbert spaces
@MoreAnonymous What would it do on SO???
@ACuriousMind I mean I know, but I mean more simpler cases
I am wondering about the relativistic point particle case
The spooky ghost fields act on the Hilbert space Z2 it is claimed
@ACuriousMind Sorry it should have been physics overflow :P Also if we're on the same page on the physics overflow ... Maybe it has a better chance of being answered?
09:56
@MoreAnonymous PO is entirely unrelated to physics.SE.
@ACuriousMind Ah ... But is there a meta where someone asks for when to use which? In the comments I was recommended to go there
@ACuriousMind This means no cross posting violation?
@MoreAnonymous The canonical meta post for the difference between the two sites is physics.meta.stackexchange.com/q/6196/50583
@MoreAnonymous Whether you post on PO or not is completely irrelevant to anything you do on physics.SE. It is just important that you realize these are not "sister SE" sites like math.SE and MO or cs.SE and tcs.SE. PO is not an SE site at all.
@ACuriousMind Cool nice hack to know :P
I'm not sure what you mean by "hack".
@ACuriousMind Oh in the same sense of life-hack or bio-hack it's kind of a slang in this sense.
Don't worry I'll be more careful with this kind of english in this chatroom
10:09
I know what "hack" means!
I don't understand what's "hacky" about the existence of PO.
@ACuriousMind Oh for someone like me it's like acceptable "misuse" and of "a rebirth of the untimely passed away Theoretical Physics SE" . It's like wait I get to double the chances of getting a question answered and no price to be paid - This is an amazing hack!
@MoreAnonymous Maybe also read Emilio's answer there. You should also know that Dilaton is one of the founders of PO and therefore may not present an impartial view.
@ACuriousMind Seems to have a different value system and goal as opposed to PSE
 
2 hours later…
12:10
@ACuriousMind like any standard-but-slightly-fancy bit of language, there is a certain amount of showing off in 'formulae', but it's pretty minor
I mean
it's not like you're saying 'stadia'
@Slereah Wait, what? $\mathbb{Z}_2$ is not a Hilbert space. Do you mean $\mathbb{C}^2$?
but it's a bit worse that 'algae' or 'nuclei'
@ACuriousMind you sure?
$\mathbb Z_2$ is a vector field over $\mathbb Z_2$
@EmilioPisanty Hilbert spaces are by definition over $\mathbb{R}$ or $\mathbb{C}$.
12:48
@ACuriousMind I use other definitions =P
seriously, do you lose all that much by allowing finite characteristic?
I can see how the topological incompleteness of $\mathbb Q$ will be an issue in proving the topological aspects of Hilbert-space theory
but what results are true over $\mathbb R$ that break over $\mathbb Z_2$?
@EmilioPisanty Hilbert spaces are supposed to be complete normed spaces. You can't have complete spaces if the underlying field is not complete.
I do not this question is reasonable or not. But my firms ask that if we drop a photon, about 1km from Earth, under the earth gravitational field, what change will be in the frequency.. He said mass m =$hc/c^2$.i do not know wetter this question is correct or not.
@ACuriousMind is $\mathbb Z_2$ incomplete?
Ehhh...strike that
12:53
What I tried to say but horribly butchered is that completeness over finite fields is not interesting
that's true
but so what?
If you want to say that $\mathbb Z_2$ is not an interesting Hilbert space then I'm inclined to agree
but why can't it be a Hilbert space?
Ah, wait!
The definition of 'norm' already doesn't make sense for fields that are not subfields of the complex numbers
Because the norm is supposed to have $\lvert \lvert \alpha v\rvert\rvert = \lvert \alpha\rvert \cdot \lvert\lvert v\rvert\rvert$
@ACuriousMind ok. so?
@EmilioPisanty $\alpha$ is a scalar - so what is $\lvert \alpha\rvert$ here? The norm itself needs to be $\mathbb{R}_{\geq 0}$-valued.
@ACuriousMind does it?
12:59
@EmilioPisanty Sure, you want to be able to do inequalities with it.
eh
that's a bit of a cheap way out
but sure
I suppose you can define a "norm" that's valued in the underlying field instead, but what you then get is very unlike usual normed vector space theory
Consider that norms on complex vector spaces aren't complex-valued, either
@ACuriousMind no, the real problem is that the triangle inequality breaks
Because you don't have an order to do inequalities with to begin with if your field is finite!
when things are able to roll back into zero
OK, I'll take it
$\mathbb Z_2$ is out.
bring in the $p$-adic numbers =P
0
Q: What happens to the momenta of photons when light enters a medium

PatrickLight refracts as it enters a medium as the velocity decreases because the permittivity and permeability changes. So is there a change of momentum of a photon entering a refractive medium? And if there is a change of momentum, how is the instantaneous change of it justified? Also one more questi...

leading to
The Abraham–Minkowski controversy is a physics debate concerning electromagnetic momentum within dielectric media. Traditionally, it is argued that in the presence of matter the electromagnetic stress-energy tensor by itself is not conserved (divergenceless). Only the total stress-energy tensor carries unambiguous physical significance, and how one apportions it between an "electromagnetic" part and a "matter" part depends on context and convenience. In other words, the electromagnetic part and the matter part in the total momentum can be arbitrarily distributed as long as the total momentum...
oh, boy, that page has some issues
13:05
@EmilioPisanty There is actually "analysis" with p-adic numbers, but the p-adic norm is still real-valued :P
> For example, when there exist dielectric materials in space,
>
> - Is the principle of relativity still valid?
> Even in free space, still there are some basic concepts to be clarified. For example:
>
> - Is there any photon-rest frame in free space?[14]
Yeah, that's...not an open question.
Unless you're using a non-standard meaning of either "photon", "rest" or "frame".
And that many of the citations there point to recent papers by C. Wang seems a bit...biased.
Wait, all of these questions are cited with Wang's papers. And the page is largely the work of a single editor who hasn't contributed to anything else.
It would appear that Wiki page is more of a monograph than an encyclopedia entry :P
13:59
@ACuriousMind interestingly, it appears that it depends on the noun
cc @EmilioPisanty =P
14:14
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Q: Regarding asking a question

yuvraj singhActually when I was a new user to site I posted the homework type question. But as the time passes I learn, and understand how to ask a good question, as I learn a lot from the site. But now problem is that, if I have doubt, I can, t ask a new question, because the site banned from asking the ...

@yuvrajsingh You don't need to post your meta question here, there's a bot that periodically posts new meta posts to this room anyway.
Sorry @ACuriousMind I do not know, should I delete it.
No need to do anything, just for future reference.
0
Q: Regarding asking a question

yuvraj singhActually when I was a new user to site I posted the homework type question. But as the time passes I learn, and understand how to ask a good question, as I learn a lot from the site. But now problem is that, if I have doubt, I can, t ask a new question, because the site banned from asking the ...

14:23
Come on.... @skullpetrol
How are you my friend @yuvrajsingh
Today I gave the exam, so relaxing in room.
Good to hear. Try and get some well deserved sleep also.
Sure.
Have you read my meta question.
:-)
yes I have
14:30
What you think, I genuinely show, my problem but I do not know why @ACuriousMind straight away closes the question.
209
Q: What can I do when getting "We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account"?

ArjanDo not repost the question you were about to ask until you have READ EVERYTHING WE ARE ABOUT TO TELL YOU. While trying to ask a question, one could get: We are no longer accepting questions from this account. See the Help Center to learn more. Likewise, for answers: We are no longe...

@yuvrajsingh All the general advice we can give for people affected by the automatic question ban is in the meta post DavidZ links in the answer to the duplicate.
There's no point in letting someone post another answer to your question that just links to the same post.
"duplicate" closure doesn't mean "this is a bad question" but "we already have that question".
@ACuriousMind I agree with you, I understand, but if you carefully look at the question I don't think so I can do anything.
@yuvrajsingh I think you should carefully read the above post after you get some sleep pal.
@yuvrajsingh If you don't think you can do anything, then you can't do anything - and neither can we.
14:35
@yuvrajsingh You might not be able to do anything... but the point is that all the information is in DavidZ's post, the attached meta post, and any message you got when the question ban occured. There's not much a new meta question and answer would do to change that.
You have been through a lot and you must be tired @yuvrajsingh
13 mins ago, by skullpetrol
Good to hear. Try and get some well deserved sleep also.
The internet will still be here when you wake up :-)
JEEs are well known for burning students out @yuvrajsingh
14:51
damn it I have school tomorrow
how many classes do you have?
6 (which is good)
I usually have 7
@NovaliumCompany damn... me too.
15:06
just 1 more year and a half, I can do this
only 5 should have any real homework, right?
@NovaliumCompany just 1 month for me. I'll take a drop for JEE
@skullpetrol no all 6 subjects carry equal weightages
@skullpetrol I don't do my homework, I'm a gangsta. F*ck school.
@NovaliumCompany That kid is learning from me.
Our school teachers suck, both by manners and knowledge, the only thing they are good at is EGO
15:13
I don't even wanna talk about school honestly. It doesn't deserve my energy.
\o @JohnRennie how are you sir?
@skullpetrol Hi :-)
I'm about to start eating lunch, so I'm goooooooooooood! :-)
@JohnRennie what is today at lunch? ...
@AbhasKumarSinha quiche! :-)
pitty about your rugby team
15:17
@JohnRennie ah okay, never heard that before, would try once I'll travel to europe.
@skullpetrol it happens :-) They did really well to reach the final, but I'd have to concede that South Africa were the better side.
@AbhasKumarSinha I don't know of anything quite like it in Indian cooking.
I don't think Indian cooking uses shortcrust pastry much.
@JohnRennie yes, we don't use shortcrust pastry much here, most of the related dishes in India are french...
I defenestrated my girlfriend because she wouldn't cwtch me. Now all she does is floccinaucinihilipilification about our relationship, calling me agathokakological. Though I remain panglossian about it.
cwtch is a Welsh word, not English!
@JohnRennie well informally it's english, we use it here.
@AbhasKumarSinha Really? It's used in India? Does it have the same meaning i.e. a cuddle?
15:26
@JohnRennie yes, something like that.
@JohnRennie textbook type of word, rarely used in conversations.
@AbhasKumarSinha I wonder if it's in my English dictionary ...
@JohnRennie are you welsh?
is welsh inside UK or UK is inside welsh? google probably showing wrong map images.
Country of the United Kingdom ah, welsh is a country inside the UK.
@AbhasKumarSinha My mother's family were originally Welsh, though I think they left Wales around a hundred years ago. Wales is one of the four countries that make up the UK.
oh okay...
A lot of Brits have mixed blood. My father's family are from Northern Ireland and my mother also had a Scottish grandparent.
15:32
@JohnRennie oh okay... here too there are people with mixed languages, (1000+ languages in total), my mother and father both have different language.
If you'll come to India, you'll be amazed to see even 10-year-olds speaking more than 3-4 languages.
@JohnRennie so where you live? Welsh or Scotland or london?
@JohnRennie The only British famous here is Bear Grylls, everyone is his big fan here. Everyone knows him.
This is quiche:
Egg with ham and leeks in shortcrust pastry.
@JohnRennie woooooow! I like it...
QUICHE
It's one of my favourite meals.
Is it pronounced like QI-CHI or QUICK-E
15:41
@JohnRennie seems very good, especially the color variations tell, it's well made.
key as in the thing you use in locks, then sh
@JohnRennie oh okay...
@JohnRennie got it.
@JohnRennie I want to know how you were as a student? Were you a topper in your class to whom seniors came to ask doubts or a silent kind of student.?
At school, or college?
I was top of the class in school, but it was a small school. When I got to Cambridge I found I was no longer top of the class! :-)
15:45
@JohnRennie Did you always complete your homework regularly then?
@AbhasKumarSinha yes.
@JohnRennie You must be your teacher's favourite student then?
But studying for A levels in the UK is nothing like as intense as studying for the JEE in India.
Or at least it wasn't in 1977, and I'm fairly certain it still isn't.
@JohnRennie It's always funny that the proportion of adults claiming this is far higher than the proportion of students I knew doing it ;P
@JohnRennie But, the environment here is a bit ruined, British students are typically well mannered, good and disciplined ones.
@ACuriousMind How were you? 95% above bright student?
15:50
@ACuriousMind :-) Honestly, it was a small village in a small city in rural Somerset. There wasn't that much competition :-)
@JohnRennie I meant the "doing your homework" thing, not the "top of the class"!
@ACuriousMind ah :-) I don't remember getting that much homework.
@JohnRennie Sometimes people from small places do big works.
I don't think the school regarded homework as that useful a teaching device.
@JohnRennie sounds like a disciplined and well-mannered school too. :P
15:52
@AbhasKumarSinha I think we were pretty well behaved.
But then we had much less pressure than Indian students do.
@JohnRennie Yes, here students are well behaved too, but not of the type the teachers would prefer. Students always break rules, ask questions, very energetic and they dream to change the world.
@AbhasKumarSinha Basically the same as John - best in class at school, then good-but-not-best at uni. The former is less an indication of how smart I was and more of me not finding any of the subjects boring (in contrast to some other smart people who simply couldn't be bothered to do poetry or philosophy or whatever)
@ACuriousMind well I love literature... Sometimes I get fed up with science, I take up literature. You'll find me strange, but I like Shakespeare. My favourite ones include Leo Tolstoy.
@ACuriousMind do you like uni?
adios Amigos
@AbhasKumarSinha I guess I liked it well enough
@ACuriousMind ah okay...
16:01
@JohnRennie It's not about the quantity, it's about the principle ;)
Does anyone understand basic tensorflow in python?
I'm building a basic nn on mnist dataset with digits and I'm outputting some kinda probability densities in a very weird array format. For some reason doing np.argmax on the outputs spits out the number that the model predicted the image shows. This is where I'm confused. How argmax turned those probability density array of outputs (10) into the answer.
nvm got it
i googled :P (what argmax does xD)
16:21
@NovaliumCompany yes
@NovaliumCompany argmax is just threshold for regression/reinforcement.
depends on your situtation.
@NovaliumCompany Try AmazonAWS it's much better for newbies
sagemaker I mean, it's Aamazon's
@JohnRennie oh can i ask you a cosmology question?
@SirCumference i'd have guessed you know more cosmology than me by now ...
i'm still an undergrad and we've only got one cosmology course, which i'm taking now :/
You're welcome to ask
welp lemme see if I got this straight. I took the Friedmann equation $H(t)^2 = \frac{8 \pi G}{3c^2} \varepsilon(t) - \frac{k c^2}{R_0^2 a^2}$ and saw that for a flat universe, we'd have $\varepsilon(t)=\frac{3c^2}{8 \pi G} H^2$. so from what i can tell, the critical energy density is proportional to $H^2$
so in a static universe where $\dot{a} = 0$, would we have $H=0$ and therefore $\varepsilon_c = 0$?
16:39
You'd certainly have $H=0$, but I don't think that means $\varepsilon=0$
sorry, meant to write $\varepsilon_{\text{crit}} = 0$
A flat universe can only be static if a cosmological constant is present, and then you need to include it in the equation.
crud, right. although i guess i could modify that to say $\varepsilon_{\text{total}}(t) = \varepsilon_{\Lambda} + \varepsilon(t)$ in the Friedmann equation
since from what i understand, the cosmological constant is an energy
yes, it's an energy density give or take a few constants
OK, so factoring in dark energy, I get the total critical energy density in a static universe as being zero
wait i'm trying to remember what my confusion was...
welp i forgot my question, i'll see if i remember later. thanks though
16:55
OK :-)
 
3 hours later…
ABC
ABC
20:16
Hi guys, I have a doubt about complex numbers. I'm studying Poynting theorem about a non-dissipative object. I get a clear equation.
Now I'm going to represent my field with the complex formalism. I get the same reports as before more than the others, WHY? Being a writing equivalent to the complex one, shouldn't I have the same information? Here I get more information.
21:00
Anyone know how to convert the shape of a png image of (28, 28, 3) to (1, 28, 28)? (in python)
@JohnRennie No!
nvm
I googled :P...

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