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09:18
From Sabine Hossenfelder's Facebook page, facebook.com/590904573/posts/10160251774619574
We are looking to expand the team of our "Talk to a Scientist" service. We offer one-on-one conversations with scientists in which we answer questions about physics. Our typical team members are postdocs who want to top up their salary and get some hands-on experience in science communication. PhD is a requirement. If you are interested, please send your CV/resume to [email protected] with the subject "application for consultation service"

Please do NOT send me a facebook message -- I do not use the facebook messenger.
09:55
I think that's a good idea, people who spend years on nonsense theories with no outlet for it need someone to evaluate it
Andreas Cap pronounces "Lie theory" as "leaf theory"
Leaf algebras are the easier version of Lie algebras
If I can understand Cap's thick Austrian accent correctly, the dimension of the space of torsion-free conformal compatible connection is related to the group extension???
As in the Weyl connection is defined up to a 1-form $\phi$ and the second order of the conformal group is $\mathbb{R}^n$ for the SCTs
If true I guess that would explain why the orthogonal group has a trivial extension
Also I guess that sort of makes sense since the $G^2$ space encodes the symmetric linear connections?
Actually does this mean that the SCT does not impact on the frame but it does change the rep of the non metricity of the connection?
11:10
> Update: I’ve heard that Lubos himself shutdown the blog, unwilling to agree to follow rules Google was now enforcing.
The Lisi post is gone :'(
11:24
F
11:42
There seems to be a lot of buzz around the W boson mass measurement but no actually accessible paper?
"To obtain a copy of the paper, please contact [email protected]." are they really trying to tell me that they have a paper on one of the potentially most interesting measurements in a while and they didn't upload it to arXiv?
@ACuriousMind Publishing too soon may expose them to ridicule if they're wrong
I don't think that makes sense - if you're worried about being wrong you don't make official press releases about the thing that might be wrong, right?
You gotta manage the media exposure with the reputation loss
12:42
0
Q: Cite documents rather than linking only

Billy IstiakWe should tell people to cite from documentations when they use link. I always look at old posts to learn something new but some answerers give some link but they are dead now (e.g. this). His first link seems to be broken. Even currently there's more than 1000 answers which contains link and tha...

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13:34
@ACuriousMind it really seems to be the case
but it's open access on Science
 
1 hour later…
14:37
@fqq ah, thanks!
 
1 hour later…
15:44
Hi everyone, I just thought I might let you know: I got an admissions offer from Cambridge University! Hopefully I'll be joining in Autumn.
7
Big thanks to everyone in this chat room - I definitely wouldn't be as interested in physics as I am now without the fascinating conversations that happen here
16:11
@NiharKarve BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM! :-)
@NiharKarve Damn!!! Well done!!!
Which college?
@JohnRennie Caius!
(for everyone else - that's Gonville and Caius College, the same one where Stephen Hawking was a Fellow)
My niece is currently at Girton. I was at Peterhouse, though that was a loooooooong time ago :-)
16:39
You are friendly, I read your reply/response to my request in this chat in past days but I need time to elaborate what I wanted to say (in public) to the team of moderators about a post (I don't have internet at home, only in a library). Meanwhile I wish the best week for you and the chat users. Many thanks @ACuriousMind
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17:09
@ACuriousMind that might also explain why it's not on the arxiv, maybe Science has an embargo period?
idk, I've never published there
 
1 hour later…
18:22
In Cohen-Tannoudji's book $\lange \vec r| \psi \rangle$ is defined as the component of the ket $|\psi \rangle$ in the position representation. At the same time $\lange \vec r| \psi \rangle=\psi(\vec r)$ is considered later on as the corresponding wave function to the ket $|\psi \rangle$. So is the component of the ket and it's mathematical representation, the same thing?
 
2 hours later…
20:10
I’m not sure how literally to take the phrase “the component of the ket in the position representation.” It supposes that $|x\rangle $ is a well-defined state vector, which is not really true
It’s probably better to take $\langle x|\psi\rangle$ more like notation, in that you can use it to determine how to compute stuff and use resolutions of identity
I see
one more thing
To put it differently: it’s not hard to make sense of stuff like $\langle \phi_n|\psi$: it’s a component of $|\psi\rangle$ in some orthonormal basis
By contrast, the sense in which $|x\rangle$ is a “basis vector” is rather more delicate
yes
I know
it doesn't belong to the wave functions that are square integrate
Right
You can legitimate it mathematically with rigged Hilbert spaces apparently, but most QM books will not touch that
are these equivalent $\mathcal{R}^{-1}_{\vec u}(d\alpha)$, $\mathcal{R}_{-\vec u}(d\alpha)$ and $\mathcal{R}_{\vec u}(-d\alpha)$
?
I assume they are
20:17
Are these rotations with respect to the u-axis?
yes
Then yeah
I understand the 2nd and the 3rd
if I try to visualize them
but not the first
For the first and last I think algebra is easiest. To make it easier to type on mobile I’ll write “rotation by da with respect to u” as R(u,da)
I know
what I am saying is that I don't feel they represent the same thing
i'll give a simple explanation
If you have a power-tool and you put a screw in the wall, and it rotates i counter clockwise, the screw is implanted in the wall
20:21
My simple explanation would be that, if I draw a circle in front of my face, then another person looking at me will draw it the opposite way
if you rotate clockwise, you can remove the screw from the wall correct ?
That implies
inverse rotation
in other words the first and 3rd eq, mean the same thing
but if you are in the -z axis, and you make counterclockwise rotatition
you are implanting the screw in the wall
when in fact you need a clockwise rotation in the -z axis to pull it out of the wall
Just to state the algebra: R(u,da) * R(u,-da) = R(u,da-da)=R(u,0) is the identity rotation, ie, no rotation
ys
yes*
20:24
So the two rotations are inverses etc
yes same axis direction but opposite angle values
but opposite axis direction and same value of the angle
is not equivalent
unless I am imagining it wrong
Maybe imagine watching your scenario in a mirror
You’d now presumably see the screw going clockwise as it gets implanted
hmm
no
look
I’m not sure I have that right either, yeah
if you imagine the -z +z axis and you rotate $d\alpha$
since it's positive, it implies counterclockwise rotation
20:28
Watching the screw in a mirror will definitely make the screw appear left-handed, tho
regardless whether you consider the -z or +z axis
the screw is being implanted in the wall
I got it
xD the mistake I was doing was so small yet so important
Yeah,, rotations be like that
If you want to do a counterclockwise rotation in the -z axis
you need, your pov needs to be in the direction of the axis
meaning in the -z direction
I was doing it, but my POV was from the +z axis xD
20:31
Which the mirror is problematic for
Yeah
All 3 are equivalent
@Semiclassical One more thing
It’s like the business of choosing whether to mirror your video feed in Zoom
yeah exactly
it's a nice training of your imagination
anyway, can you have a look at this :
0
Q: Geometrical Rotation and Rotation operator relation and ambiguity

imbAFIn Cohen-Tannoudji's it is said (vol.1 page 694): $|\psi \rangle$ is the state of the system before the rotation. $|\psi ' \rangle$ is the state of the system after the rotation. $|\psi ' \rangle= R |\psi \rangle$ in the bracket notation. Geometrically: $\psi '(\vec r)=\psi (\mathcal{R}^{-1} \v...

20:46
Had to relocate. I don’t have a lot to say, but I think the last point is just this. Suppose $\vec{r}=(x,y,z)=R\vec{r}’$ where $\vec{r}’=(x’,y’,z’).$ Then $\vec{r}’=R^{-1}\vec{r}$, so $\psi’(\vec{r})=\psi(\vec{r}’)=\psi(x’,y’,z’)$
So $\psi’(\vec{r})$ amounts to the original wave function, except it’s evaluated at $\vec{r}’$
I take the “components” here to just mean $x’,y’,z’$, ie, the components of the $\vec{r}’$ vector
Yes I am aware
but question 2 is what I am mostly interested
So in other words, why is the rotation operator unitary?
no
because
at this point in the book, we still haven't proved that it's unitary
simply, instead of using $R^\dagger$ we use the geometrical rotatation
totally different thing
one is a geometrical entity and the other is an abstract entity acting on the hilbert space
and that is done, as if it's granted for some reason
and explanation ain't necessery
20:54
Yeah, I feel like phrasing this in terms of bra-ket notation isn’t that useful here
In terms of wavefunctions in position space it should presumably be : $R \psi(\vec{r})=\psi’(\vec{r})=\psi(\mathcal{R}^{-1}\vec{r}).$
one second
R is the operator or the geom. rotation
because you didn't use calligraphic notation
operator. Here I was matching your notation in the post
But I assume it must be the geom. rotation, written with a caligraphic
Operator acting on a wave function? and not a ket?
Yes. But it’s understood that $R\psi(\vec{r})=\langle \vec{r}|R|\psi\rangle$
Which is the convention I know
see, that's why you shouldn't post questions here directly after you post them - I already saw the question on the main site and just wrote an answer to it :P
21:08
Lol
I mean, I’m typing on my phone so low bandwidth conversation
@ACuriousMind +2 xD
21:21
@ACuriousMind " unitary representation map ρ" I never was aware of this
but this is the link between the inverse and the complex conjugate

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