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14:00
The global (non-gauge, physical, whatever) symmetries associated with non-Abelian gauge symmetries are only the discrete $\mathbb{Z}_n$ center symmetries so Noether's first theorem does not apply.
@Slereah oh yeah. I think, despite diffeomorphic invariance, the Poincaire grp still holds a special place becuz the metric still has the +---- signature
@ACuriousMind ooh
@Slereah For example, Diffomorphic invariance is there even in SR and Newton. But we cant really say that these theories do not have Galilean and Poincaire group built in
But yeah, symmetries do go away in curved spacetime
oh no, it's "diffeomorphism invariance" again
@ACuriousMind would you prefer if it was diffeomorphism variant
I would prefer people actually thought about what they meant by that term :P
I guess we have to talk about local symmetries in case of curved spaceime. Now the Poincaire group shows up as an approximate symmetry that holds locally
Becuz the first derivative of metric can b made to vanish
So we get Poincaire group as sort-of a symmetry of GR as well
14:06
The analogy to things like the Poincaré group is the global isometry group, not "local symmetries"
on gauge symmetries, GR and "diffeomorphism invariance", see physics.stackexchange.com/a/346812/50583, physics.stackexchange.com/a/706483/50583
"symmetry" can mean quite a few things in this context
I like how nlab is sometimes a nightmare but sometimes it looks like a wikipedia stub
@JackRod yes i have friends in the social sciences who have got defunded because their work did not align with the bjp
I'm just wondering what QM is trying to tell us about the fundamentals of the universe. If QM is fundamental, the observables it describes have to have something special about them
@MoreAnonymous why are u treating me like BJP agent it is all we grown up with even Congress government did support the cause because they believe in India as civilization state.
So i thought the observables may just be related to symmetries
14:12
Not among vedic even buddhist literature talk about mathematics
@RyderRude both classically and quantumly, every observable is an infinitesimal transformation and so generates a one-parameter group of transformations that are potential symmetries. They are symmetries exactly when the observable commutes with the Hamiltonian, i.e. when the observable is conserved.
As napolean once said.
@ACuriousMind oooh i got it. The Poincaire symmetry is the global symmetry that we "deform" to get to GR.... just like how we deform the global U(1) symmetry to get to electromagnetism
Hm, is the Inonu-Wigner contraction base-dependent?
History is a set of lies agreed upon
14:15
@ACuriousMind yes
@ACuriousMind i agree that, on paper, we can hav non-symmetries as observables, both classically and quantum mechanically. But maybe the observables that r physically realised in nature have to do with symmetries
Or maybe the observables that r physically realised just have to do with the measurement devices we've been able to build
But i dont like QM's dependence on the measurement devices we've been able to build
If only there was a natural mechanism for energy/momentum/angular momentum, etc to get "measured" in nature
@ACuriousMind (ignore if your not interested but do you know the answer to this)?
Ugh ... One moment
What is the minimum potential energy required (to behave as a turning point) for an elastic collision between $2$ point particles $A$ and $B$ with velocity $v_A^{\mu}$ and $v_B^{\mu}$ in a relativistic classical mechanics?
any thoughts would be welcome
@MoreAnonymous I don't even understand the question: What does it mean for potential energy to "behave as a turning point"?
14:31
I just dont know how to take QM seriously as a fundamental theory, if the Born rule-aspect of the dynamics is so reliant on the existence of man-made measurement devices
How can we get energy, momentum, angular momentum, etc measured using a more simple natural process. @ACuriousMind
Then don't take it seriously!
Aaa
But everything is supposed to reduce to QM
Is QM really a theory about the behavior of measurement devices
This is just the measurement problem
everyone knows there is no universally accepted solution to it
I mean something a bit different from the measurement problem here
No you don't
14:35
Hm
I mean : How can we get a system's state vector decohered in, say, the energy basis using a natural process?
See. I only mean decoherence here
Can you do a contraction of the kinematic group down to Galilean for any spacetime?
Let's forget about state reduction
I am suspecting that the contraction of the metric leads to essentially some spatial distribution
So that it is automatically foliated
@RyderRude Then what is the question? There's a lot of decoherence literature on how einselection happens
14:37
I'm just asking if it can happen without man-made measurement devices
@ACuriousMind i guess i should read this stuff. Thanks:)
I assure you nothing in the context of decoherent theory depends on whether the measurement device was "constructed"
Oh yeah. We can just assume the interaction Hamiltonian behaves a certain way
So it cud happen naturally
The Galilean metric is essentially gonna make a nowhere vanishing 3-distribution on the spacetime, right?
I'm not sure what happens if it's not integrable
@JackRod And so you like to agree upon bjp lies? Good luck with that.
@RyderRude isn't that basically just waiting? Nature seems to like to measure those for us anyway.
@naturallyInconsistent why does nature like to measure these particular observables? Is it becuz they r conserved charges
14:44
tough luck; whenever whatever else we hope to be fundamental clashes with quantum theory, it is quantum theory that wins. So, I do not know how you want to have a fundamental understanding of anything if you do not accept it as being fundamental.
And what flight of fantasy led you to think it is all about man-made measurements this time?
@RyderRude look at those conserved quantities. arent they pretty little things?
@RyderRude Who claims that natures "likes" to measure any observable?
Again, this is just the measurement problem
you seem to have decided that the measurement/collapse whatever must happen objectively in nature and you're demanding an explanation
but e.g. $\psi$-epistemic relative interpretations don't have this problem at all because they don't consider it an objective fact that any measurement happens at all
You are not alone in wanting a definite answer to the question of what the heck actually is going during a measurement, but again: This is the measurement problem, it has haunted us for a 100 years, and you will not find an answer by just trying to re-ask the same question in slightly different ways
Apparently it is possible to have NC theory without imposing a foliation
Oh no
Classical time travel
I am of the firm belief that having a proper lecture set to cover just interpretations alone will be helpful. It will at least be helpful for weeding out really silly misinterpretations of interpretations.
@ACuriousMind sorry again. I said "measure" instead of "decoherence". I'm currently subscribing to the "objective collapse due to an unknown mechanism after decoherence" interpretation, so this is y I tend to use the terms interchangeably. But i really only mean to ask if nature prefers to decohere certain obserbables on its own. This question is answerable independent of interpretation about objective vs relative collapse
@ACuriousMind i mean the special relativistic version of this
1
Q: Minimum energy required to behave like a turning point?

More AnonymousSo I've managed to confuse myself. We know if the energy equal to the potential energy then point at which the energy exceeds the potential energy it behaves like a turning point (slide 2). Usually in the collision of (say billiard) rigid balls we assume $V = \infty$. I realized since it's behavi...

14:50
@naturallyInconsistent Yes, the (understandable) interpretational agnosticism ("Let's just say we do Copenhagen here and never return to the question of what that actually means") of most standard texts and courses produces a lot of damage in the long run
@RyderRude You having a preferred interpretation does not give you a blank cheque to misuse words.
@naturallyInconsistent i'm sorry again. I dont do it intentionally
This stuff is very nuanced. e.g. I also tend to use collapse to just mean "state reduction".
Hello people, just wanted to confirm that will the total wavefunction of a Helium atom be antisymmetric? I read this in a Atomic and Molecular physics book, and am confused that why is it so. Helium acts like a boson, and the wavefunction should be symmetric I feel.
Someone Kindly reply.
State reduction happens independent of interpretation, either objectively or relatively.
@ShikharChamoli Antisymmetric under exchange of what?
14:53
@MoreAnonymous Part of the problem is that I have worked out a bit on why you are having this misinterpretation, yet I am also worried about reviving such an old dead horse to give a totally different answer.
@ACuriousMind antisymmetric under exchange of particles
@ShikharChamoli which particles?
That the atom as a whole "is a boson" means that wavefunctions over several such atoms should be symmetric under exchange of such atoms, but that doesn't tell you anything about what the wavefunction of a single atom is under exchange of its individual electrons
Oh no
@naturallyInconsistent i would be grateful if you told be what the misinterpretation is?
Looks like Wigner contraction isn't enough to get Newton-Cartan indeed
I mean I guess technically the Galilean group also has a local causal structure that you could violate globally
It's just a very wide light cone
Cone with pi/2 opening
14:56
@MoreAnonymous You started with boost invariance when you wrote down that adding constant c to both the velocities of A and of B in the expression for KE of each, and that immediately leads to an absurdity. Nobody talks about turning points that way.
@MoreAnonymous And so what does "potential energy" mean in special relativity? Since energy is not invariant under Lorentz transformations, what does your question mean in that context?
@ACuriousMind so under exchange of individual electrons will the wavefunction of helium atom be antisymmetric?
probably?
I mean, electrons are fermions, so their total wavefunction should be antisymmetric
@naturallyInconsistent yes and that's why u need an answer that's invariant to transformations. And regardless there should be an answer
@ACuriousMind Did I get this right--->> The wavefunction of individual helium is antisymmetric, but combination of this wavefunction when written for identical helium atoms will be symmetric?
14:59
@ACuriousMind i propose a corresponding action
1
Q: Minimum Potential energy required to behave like a turning point in relativistic case?

More AnonymousInspired by this question a normal extension would be to ask: What is the minimum potential energy required (to behave as a turning point) for an elastic collision between $2$ point particles $A$ and $B$ with velocity $v_A^{\mu}$ and $v_B^{\mu}$ in a relativistic classical mechanics? (Assume numb...

@MoreAnonymous It is physically absurd. You did not even work out which scenario you are looking at a turning point for. There is no saving that entire line of argumentation. There is no sense in having turning points be invariant to transformations that way.
@MoreAnonymous Now, you've started this conversation by asking a one-liner in chat as if it was a simple question, and now I'm up to 2 full physics.SE posts I have to read to understand what you even meant. I feel tricked :P
(Also, I regularly look at bountied questions anyway)
@naturallyInconsistent I'm confused why you say that? All collisions are reduciable to 1 dimension. In which the turning point is defined
If there is 0 potential energy the particles should go through each other
@MoreAnonymous It should be quite easy to prove that after deriving the conditions you want the turning points to appear, there will be no more possible transformations of the form you are wanting to appear.
@ACuriousMind i feel the same scam for the whole of physics :p
15:04
And you just harp on turning points. There are many different scenarios. You have to specify which want you want an answer to, and you have not
Now, if you would not stop promoting these, Imma flag them for "needs detail or clarity"
@ACuriousMind is my question ill defined?
(in the non relativistic case)
@naturallyInconsistent it's not as easy as f=ma atleast
@MoreAnonymous As usual I don't really understand what you're talking about. For instance, "we" don't usually "set $V=\infty$ in elastic collisions", we usually don't talk about potentials at all when we talk about this kind of elastic collision.
@ACuriousMind we do. For example see hard sphere model
If the potential is 0 the particles go through each other right? So between an elastic collision and particles going through each other. There should be a minima I'm potential that's all I'm saying
@MoreAnonymous Look, are you talking about repulsive turning point or oscillations? Are you talking about 1D or higher? Are you talking about orbits? Elliptic or Hyperbolic? Are you talking about van der waals? Are you talking about ideal gas? Are you talking about rigid bodies?
@MoreAnonymous Then by statistical thermodynamics, because there will always be higher and higher energetic particles of ever lower probabilities, V has to be infinite. Is that problem solved?
@naturallyInconsistent repulsive turning points. All collisions are reduciable to a 1 d problem. These details of point or rigid object do not matter in this context.
@naturallyInconsistent interestingly this model is used for gases:
15:15
@MoreAnonymous They manifestly do. Even in linear collisions you have to take angular momentum into account, and the collisions are often only reducible to 2D, and only by throwing away some information can you do it in 1D
@MoreAnonymous So why did you not put this in your question statement?
@naturallyInconsistent ah i have not mentioned the spinning rigid bodies so u can ignore that
@naturallyInconsistent cause most of the physics i learned wasnt in University so i have difficulty gauging what to include or not. Secondly it only becomes relevant when people start claiming this is physically absurd
The hard spheres model arises from considering statistical thermodynamics. The moment you have T>0, the infinite KE limit is potentially possible. Unless you arbitrarily set that the spheres are not actually hard at high enough energies, the only natural choice is for V to be infinite too.
@naturallyInconsistent yes i know
@MoreAnonymous Err on the side of stating too much.
If i have particles moving faster than the speed of light in a thermal distribution i would naturally need infinite potential
(during collisions)
15:23
Relativistic thermodynamics is in a self-delusional state. It is very easy to just guess the Maxwell-Jüttner distribution, and it is also appearing in many textbooks, but anybody who has thought through about the subject understands that that particular distribution is physically nonsense.
Or rather, I should not say self-delusional, but only that people who seriously treat that subject is self-delusional. One must be honest and note that obvious glaring problems with the naïve treatment of that subject.
Physics, or reality, is just that much more horrible than we like to pretend it is.
@ACuriousMind Can we say that this GL(n) is an "active transformation" symmetry of GR, as opposed to diffeomorphosm invariance which is just a passive transformation symmetry of any co-ordinate invariant theory
I mean the minimum potential problem is a problem of mechanics imo. Yes, in reality the world isn't solely special relativistic. But generally there's are considered to be complete subjects
Diffeomorphisms can be both passive and active transformations
that notion is like not entirely mathematical
@MoreAnonymous why is that a problem? What good is going to come out of finding a solution to your stated problem?
Here's something that i wanted to ask about transformations. In QM the observer is never in superposition. Does this mean that there is an asymmetriy between active and passive transformation in QM?
15:31
But diffeomorphism just give different labels to the same manifold. There is no notion of diffeomorphism transformations if we directly describe the theory using manifold objects without using any co-ordinates @Slereah
You can do an active diffeomorphism by physically moving every object in the universe according to said transformation
@MoreAnonymous no, and why should the observer not be in superposition?
@naturallyInconsistent i mean i'm just curious and that's enough reason for me.
@Slereah oh. In that case, active diffeomorphisms seem equivalent to "local GL(n) transformations". I guess then the only special thing about GR is that it makes the Christoffel symbols a dynamical entity
They do not
15:33
@MoreAnonymous Ok, that is fine, but can you not keep asking about it in the chat, and also not make it sound so big by calling it a problem?
@naturallyInconsistent because u apply one transformation and not a superposition or whatever of transformations. If the observer was in superposition and one superposition of him accelerated. How would u describe the system?
@Slereah what is the difference?. Becuz diffeomorphisms woudl give u local GL(n) transformations through the Jacobian
@MoreAnonymous just like any other superposition.
They can indeed, but do not confuse diffeomorphisms with the tetrad rotation
Diffeomorphisms act on tensors via their first jet which is indeed a GL action, but this is different from the other gauge symmetry of GR
also this is something that is specific to tensors, diffeomorphism action doesn't necessarily apply as a GL transformation
@naturallyInconsistent i challenge you to then do so for an observer in acceleration who is in superposition
Relevant post for one observer:
9
A: Does quantum mechanics violate the equivalence principle?

RuslanI'll take weak equivalence principle in the formulation as given on Wikipedia page: The local effects of motion in a curved space (gravitation) are indistinguishable from those of an accelerated observer in flat space, without exception. Consider a wave function $\Psi(r,t)$ and suppose that...

15:39
I will need to read ACM's answer again then :P
@MoreAnonymous By starting with inertial and gravitational masses the question is already physically wrong.
Is GR really more special than other co-ordinate invariant theories, other than the fact that the connection is dynamical?
It is a very special theory
Let's take free Dirac field theory. This can b expressed in local Gauge invariant way if we wanted. This does not require us to make the $A^{\mu}$ dynamical
@RyderRude There is at least half a dozen alternatives to GR. It is just that it seems that there are no known deviation from GR that isn't quantum in nature. It is actually more a case that it is so difficult to do experiments involving GR than anything else.
15:42
@naturallyInconsistent i mean the challenge is still open
So i guess the same is true for SR and GR. I mean that SR already has the local gauge symmetries of GR. But it's just that GR makes it dynamical
Or maybe SR doesnt already hav the local gauge symmetry of GR
Is this what u r telling me @Slereah
@naturallyInconsistent also i will use language as i please especially when not crossing an social boundary. Secondly, this is only the second time i raised it.
@RyderRude With SR the problem is tremendously easier. It is more a case of understanding what the story is about and realising that the consequences follow from the basic postulates. It is also why we have relatively little difficulty with SR QFT, as opposed to GR.
The difference between GR and SR and the difference between GR and EM are kind of a different nature
SR and GR technically have the same structure as spaces, you could just define your spacetime in the same way
In that sense it is a "gauge theory", but it is not dynamical
GR and EM are both dynamical gauge theories but GR has the Special Thing
Diffeomorphism invariance, being geometric, being a Cartan connection, being natural, general covariance, the splitting of the Atiyah sequence, the soldering
Whatever you want to call it
15:58
I don't understand this part of the answer : "It is rather crucial to note that diffeomorphism invariance is not the same as gauged GL(n)-invariance - the former is a basic aspect of all "coordinate-invariant physics", while the latter essentially arises because the Ricci scalar in the Einstein-Hilbert action is analogous to the gauge-invariant Tr(F) terms in ordinary gauge theories."
Y is the Ricci Scalar term in the action necessary to have the GL(n) gauge invariance @Slereah @ACuriousMind
It's not, it's just analogous
In analogy with EM, we can have local U(1) invariance without having the $F^{\mu \nu} F_{\mu \nu}$ term
@Slereah but if it's not necessary, then SR also has local GL(n) gauge invariance. Then GR wudnt b special in this sense
SR and GR have the same type of gauge structure and connection yes
it's just that for SR it's the flat connection
Boy there's a lot of Caratheodory theorems
@Slereah this is what im saying. GR is special only in that it makes the connection dynamical using the Ricci scalar term. This is analogous with electromagnetism where they use the $F^{\mu \nu} F_{\mu \nu}$ term.
But in both cases, the free theory (SR and Dirac respectively) can be written in a way to have the same local gauge symmetry
Do not confuse the gauge theory and the dynamics
you can have a gauge theory without any dynamics defined
16:09
Yes. This is what I mean! Even in Dirac theory, u can make it local gauge invariant without making $A^{\mu}$ dynamical
well yeah
16:51
Eureka! the answer is $m_1 m_2 c^2 /(m_1 +m_2)$
Is there a way for us to kick people from a chatroom?
Because dayum annoying to have to chat with someone and there is just a lot of noise
Especially when it is started by just two of us chatting, and this third person just joined
@naturallyInconsistent I'd recommend creating your own chatroom
17:10
Thanks, that worked
@naturallyInconsistent welcome
 
6 hours later…
22:53
Hello. Consider a device which shoots electrons through a slit. We have two situations 1) don’t measure the electron at any point 2) put a detector after the slit.
In this context, what does “the ensemble evolves unitarily, not the individual system” mean?
I had thought that one can assign the shot electron a pure state, and then manipulate it mathematically as per usual (apply the unitary time evolution operator on it and so on)
This has to do with this question, my answer, and a comment on my answer: physics.stackexchange.com/questions/765364/…
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