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14:02
$a = \frac{\partial}{\partial a^\dagger}$
it is so good to see all the old faces are still here
I hope everyone is having a good time!
14:15
@GiorgiLagidze the point is again about infinitesimals! The $\alpha(t)$ is an infintesimal variation to $q(t)$, but by definition of what an extremal point of the action is, all infinitesimal variations of a solution $q(t)$ vanish!
yes, but since $a(t)$ is not 0 at $t_0$ and $t_1$, I was wondering if extremum thing we do with variational calculus still holds @ACuriousMind
> Again, if the motion of the heaven is the measure of all movements whatever in virtue of being alone continuous and regular and eternal, and if, in each kind, the measure is the minimum, and the minimum movement is the swiftest, then, clearly, the movement of the heaven must be the swiftest of all movements.
How was that guy the basis for all physics for a thousand years
the whole idea of this proof is first, author uses $a$ transformation(a is infinetisemal number) and then uses a = a(t) and clearly, a(t) is not 0 at $t_0$ and $t_1$. That's for sure :P jhwilson.com/blog/2022/Noether-classical
@GiorgiLagidze Your source never fixes its boundary terms
there are no $t_0$ or $t_1$ in the derivation you've linked
it's doing the variational principle "unconstrained"
Yes. so the proof holds even without $a(t)$ being 0 at any moment @ACuriousMind
14:21
really given how much you dislike infinitesimals and worry about edge cases, I think Wiki's derivations is much closer to what you want
i will take a look, but i think a(t) doens't have to be 0 for proof to hold. if you got some path q(t) for which you know action is minimum, then action for q(t) + a(t) have to be bigger. no ?
@GiorgiLagidze so?
just wanted to confirm this
remember that the $\alpha(t)$ is infinitesimal
you're again trying to treat it as if its not
yes, but how is it the same as $a(t)$ being infinetisemal and $a(t_0) = 0$ and $a(t_1) = 0$ ?
14:25
what?
again, your source has no $t_0$ and $t_1$
just because it's infinetisemal, it doesn't mean at initial/end points, it's 0
let me ask a well defined final question
that blog post doesn't need $\alpha(t_0) = 0$, it doesn't even know what $t_0$ is
again, if you want the proper mathematical treatment without infinitesimals or vaguely neglected boundary terms, look at the Wiki article
Bml
Bml
Hi everyone. I have a problem with this. Consider a rigid, thermally insulated cylindrical container divided by a wall parallel to the cylinder bases into two parts A and B, each containing one mole of the same ideal gas. The wall prevents the exchange of particles and heat between the two parts.
Initially, the position of the wall is locked in the centre of the container and the system is at equilibrium with the two parts at the same volume V_A(0) = V_B(0), but different temperatures T_A(0) > T_B(0).
At a certain instant, the moving wall is left free to slide without friction, keeping parallel to the cylinder's base, and the system, after a rapid transient, reaches a new equilibrium condition. Determine the pressure values P_A(f) and P_B(f) in the two parts of the system once the new equilibrium condition has been reached.
At first glance, one would say that this situation obeys an adiabatic transformation, so one should use the relation $PV^\gamma = const$, but this is only valid for reversible processes. Does the physical situation described sound like a reversible process to you? Not really to me...
in variational calculus, we use variation such as $q(t) + \epsilon f(t)$ where $\epsilon$ is infinetisemal and it considers such paths where $f(t_0) = 0$ and $f(t_1) = 0$ and argues that every path's action other than true path has to be bigger. Ok. Now, on this article I shared, we use $a(t)$ variation(infinetisemal, sure), but since author doesn't discuss the initial/final points, that means his proof works for any case of $a(t)$ as long as it's infinetisemal
and I wanted to confirm if the theorem that action on non-true path will be bigger here even without considering the boundaries
the author simply didn't want to get into a discussion of what the symmetry might to do the boundary terms
the symmetry is in fact not required to respect the boundary conditions
i.e. there is no need to have $a(t_0) = 0$
the correct argument for that in the context of that blog post is just that $S[\sigma(q,\alpha)] = S[q(t)]$, so extremizing the former is the same as extremizing the latter for all $\alpha$
14:35
The author doesn't explain this very well, because $S[\sigma(q,a)] = S[q(t)]$ is not fully correct
because since lagrangians differ by total time derivative, actions will also differ by constant term
they explicitly say they're neglecting boundary terms!
I know, but that doesn't mean they are exactly equal. I will think on it more. Thanks for all the help <3 <3
@GiorgiLagidze but the boundary terms do not matter when you vary $q(t)$
in variational calculus, it does, because we explicitly choose $\epsilon k(t)$ variation where $k(t_1) = k(t_2) = 0$
14:39
Aristotle is saying that the stars emit light due to friction apparently
He is against the idea that they are made of fire (the standard cosmological model back then)
My point is that you can vary $q(t)$ (with that $q(t_0) = q(t_1) = 0$ condition!) in $S[\sigma(q,\alpha)]$ and the extremal points must be that same as those of $S[q]$
that's the whole point of the exercise here, shifting the Lagrangian by a total time derivative does not change the E-L equations
People tend to skip a lot of details when they do diagrams of the Aristotelian model
so $S[\sigma(q)]$ has the same E-L equations as $S[q]$
and so when we vary $S[\sigma(q)]$ (still with $q(t_0) = q(t_1) = 0$), the resulting E-L equations must be that of the original L, and in particular the term multiplying the $\dot{\alpha}(t)$ must vanish
you are in both cases just varying $q$ with the same boundary conditions, the value of $\alpha(t_0)$ doesn't enter into this at all
@ACuriousMind I tried to write it with boundary terms
$S[\sigma(q, a(t))] = \int_{t_0}^{t_1} L(q, \dot q, t) dt + \int_{t_0}^{t_1} \int a(t)\frac{d\Lambda}{dt} dt + \left[\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}\frac{\partial \sigma}{\partial a} a(t)\right]_{t_0}^{t_1} - \int_{t_0}^{t_1} \int a(t)\frac{d}{dt}(\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}\frac{\partial \sigma}{\partial a}) dt$
this says q(t) is varied by a(t)
> On the other hand, it is also clear that the stars do not roll.
14:46
@GiorgiLagidze why?
Astronomy was quite different
if you tried to write down the boundary terms then you did not understand what I said at all
the boundary terms incurred are irrelevant for the E-L equations
i get what you are saying, but want to show it rigorously
i will think on this @ACuriousMind don't want to take your time on this and i will ask later if i am not sure
@GiorgiLagidze The rigorous proof is that the boundary terms only depend on the value of $q$ at $t_0$ and $t_1$, which are held fixed during a variation (a point which you have been quite insistent about!)
so such boundary terms cannot contribute anything to infinitesimal variations with fixed $q(t_0) = q(t_1) = q_0$ and therefore also not to E-L equations
Apparently a common theory back then was that since the stars are big bodies moving very fast, they must produce a giant noise
14:50
this is a proof you should have done before you started trying to prove Noether's theorem, since this is the whole reason we allow the Lagrangian to vary by a total derivative - since it only contributes boundary terms to the action
And the reason we do not hear it is that we are so used to the noise because it is constant
@ACuriousMind got it. give me some time <3 thank you
and because of pythagorianism those are harmonics course
although Aristotle doesn't buy it
@Slereah Which is a very strange assertion since any tinnitus sufferer will tell you we unfortunately do not grow used to constant noises :P
generally I think no one believed in Aristotle's physics for the physics
I mean it's not all bad ideas
But he does just assume a bunch of ideas
14:55
I suspect it's mostly the effect that his physics are intertwined with his morals and ideas about what is "perfect" and so on, so if you want to believe in the latter you have to pretend to believe the former
IIRC Ptolemy partly based his model on Aristotle but in his book you don't really read such things
I think "working" astrologers probably didn't have time for that nonsense
Only the nonsense of astrology
Aristotle's proof that stars are spherical is that stars are fixed objects carried by the motion of the celestial sphere, and therefore do not need any method of locomotion, and as nature does not use any more than it needs, it would give them the simplest shape for this, the sphere
Otherwise they would have tiny legs
or presumably wings since they fly
I kinda wonder what it actually means when ancient astronomers mention the records of the egyptians and babylonians
I'm guessing they didn't pull them on Arxiv
Did they have to travel all the way there to look at them and construct whatever model they have in mind
Maybe Hipparcus would talk about that let's see
"Hipparchus obtained information from Alexandria as well as Babylon, but it is not known when or if he visited these places. "
15:11
@Slereah Pretty sure they more commonly either had copies or just paid someone to go there and make some
Yeah but by whom!
don't forget that papyrus decays completely in non-desert enviroments so we really don't have a good idea of how much written stuff there used to be
Also that might be a lot of copies to do
Like apparently it was a trope of having a guy go to Egypt to study the Sciences
Maybe that was part of it idk
Although since I don't think any greek people could read Egyptian I'm not sure if that helps
sure, you send someone to train as a scribe/scholar, they spend their learning time copying a bunch of stuff with which they return
Although... I guess the Rosetta stone does exist, if it was written by all the same guy
I guess maybe nobody bothered to write about Egyptian even if they could read it
15:14
@Slereah ever since Alexander's invasion of Egypt the Egyptian elite spoke Greek!
Yeah but to read the records you'd have to read Egyptian
Although maybe you could just ask a scribe there idk
I think I get it. I made stupid miscalculation
@Slereah sure, just order a servant to read them to you
btw, what is the physics meaning of the right hand side 0 for $a|0> = 0$ ?
That's how you created employment
@Shing It's the zero Hilbert state
15:16
@Shing What do you mean "physics meaning"? It's a zero.
which is different from $|0\rangle$ because of poor conventions
@Slereah it's not a state
it's a vector, but it's not a state
$|0\rangle$ is the vacuum state which isn't the zero vector since it is of norm 1
@ACuriousMind You know what I mean :p
yes, but Shing might not :P
@ACuriousMind I am more confused now :P
so a zero vector?
15:17
Yes
@Shing well, the kets form a vector space, right? And vector spaces have a zero vector? That's what it is.
It's common to write every zero of a vector space as 0 by convention, no matter which vector space it is
because I forgot about this a|0> = 0 , hence all the contradictions came lol
I see, thanks.
so does a zero of a vector space has physical meaning?
@Slereah It was not uncommon for Roman elites, for instance, to have slaves that were scholars - many famous Romans mention in passing that their tutors were slaves who spoke multiple languages and knew a lot of texts
I had read about the "harmony of the spheres" before regarding astronomy but I didn't know they meant it literally
15:20
@Shing no, it is the one element of the vector space that has no physical meaning
@ACuriousMind Makes sense I guess
Plus every philosopher was pretty much an aristo
@ACuriousMind so pretty much we need this a|0> = 0 to make physics consistent?
@Shing What do you mean by "consistent"? Would you prefer an annihilation operator that produces a state of "minus one particle" from the vacuum?
@Slereah Aristotle discovered the principle of least action :P
@ACuriousMind actually I think that's a cool idea lol
15:22
This isn't an issue since $a$ isn't a measurable thing
So there's no need to worry about like eigenvalues
@RyderRude It was a pretty common thing
The principle of sufficient reason as they call it
@Slereah well, if you weren't a noble and a scholar, then some noble bought you and you wrote for them, not under your own name :P
@ACuriousMind Basically being a graduate student
although this is more the Roman viewpoint, Athens was probably different
@Slereah actually I think $a$ has eigenstate, and it is coherent state?
could b
Haven't done QFT in a while
15:25
@Shing i've never seen this relation. can u share the reason this is false
ooh it's becuz a and a^{\dagger} r adjoints each other
so they cant hav that derivative representation
and they're non hermitian too
They can and they do, stop being so confidently wrong
omg. so this relation is tru?
The representation of $a$ and $a^\dagger$ as complex variables and differentiation is called the holomorphic or Segal-Bargmann representation
but the derivative is not the adjoint of the multiplicaiton operator
> Most people-all, in fact, who regard the whole heaven as finite-say it lies at the centre. But the Italian philosophers known as Pythagoreans take the contrary view. At the centre, they say, is fire, and the earth is one of the stars, creating night and day by its circular motion about the centre. They further construct another earth in opposition to ours to which they give the name counterearth.
In all this they are not seeking for theories and causes to account for observed facts, but rather forcing their observations and trying to accommodate them to certain theories and opinions of th
I think Aristotle might be projecting a bit here
15:28
Is there anything like Lie-group/Lie-algebra correspondence but for superalgebra and supergroup...Does the notion of exponential map and all that naturally extend...what is the canonical reference on the representation theory of superalgebras/supergroups or other mathematical aspects of SUSY?
@Sanjana The theory of Lie superalgebras is well-established and was pioneered by Kac
What do I search for? Where do I search?
@ACuriousMind y does this work even tho the derivative is not the adjoint of multiplication?
According to Aristotle, heliocentrism's position was mostly due to people thinking fire was more important than Earth and thus deserved a central place in the universe
15:34
wait a sec. a and a^{\dagger} are not adjoints of each other, either?
no they r
X+iP adjoint = X-iP
I don't know any specific reference for "Lie supergroups", but probably one of these "supersymmetry for mathematicians" texts will have them
I think a bunch of string theory books have chapters on the topic
Sure, but you already don't want to learn normal Lie theory from the physicists :P
@RyderRude all the information is in the Wiki article I linked
> By these considerations some have been led to assert that the earth below us is infinite, saying, with Xenophanes of Colophon, that it has 'pushed its roots to infinity',-in order to save the trouble of seeking for the cause.
That's how flat Earth doesn't fall :p
> Anaximenes and Anaxagoras and Democritus give the flatness of the earth as the cause of its staying still. Thus, they say, it does not cut, but covers like a lid, the air beneath it. This seems to be the way of flat-shaped bodies: for even the wind can scarcely move them because of their power of resistance.
Earth is just gliding
Flat Earth is a vibe.
15:43
Have you guys played BG3?
> there are some, Anaximander, for instance, among the ancients, who say that the earth keeps its place because of its indifference.
Whatever
theyre saying it's a new kind of adjoint using a new inner product
this space has an intimidiating inner product
@Slereah "the earth doesn't care" is a great physics theory
Nothing cares.
@Shing yes, of course ;P
15:46
@ACuriousMind It is indifference to direction but still more amusing
it's not bad but I'm not its biggest fan
Honestly, that feels somewhat profound. The mediocrity principle distilled to two words.
The Earth stas there because there is no preffered direction to fall when at the center
i thought the earth was the entire universe when i was very small
so i never questioned why things fall down. i thought it was just a rule
but i didnt question it after seeing the solar system either
when did u first figure out that model where planets are attracting us?
Bml
Bml
Does anyone have any advice or answers to my doubt?
15:56
PV = nRT, no?
> It is clear, then, that the earth must be at the centre and immovable, not only for the reasons already given, but also because heavy bodies forcibly thrown quite straight upward return to the point from which they started, even if they are thrown to an infinite distance.
If Aristotle had stronger arms he could have discovered the Coriolis force
The maximum bosonic subalgebra of $\mathfrak{su}(2,2|4)$ is given to be the product of Lorentz group and dilatations $\mathfrak{so}(1,1)$ and the R-symmetry $\mathfrak{su}(4)$. Why not $\mathfrak{so}(4,2) \times \mathfrak{su}(4)$?
I don't believe he threw anything at an infinite distance
Same number of moles, different temperatures. If you let it go to equilibrium they'll just hit a point where $P/nR= T_1/V_1 = T_2/V_2$
it's really weird that his physics survived 1000+ years. i wudnt have expected that from humanity
16:01
@Bml, it's been a while since I did thermodynamics, but that seems pretty reversible to me.
Bml
Bml
@WaveInPlace OK, but one must look for a way to find the volumes V_1 and V_2, and this can be done via the PV^\gamma relation, but, as I said, this only works for reversible processes. How can this process be reversible, since it is not controlled and no external force is exerted?
@WaveInPlace Could you explain why?
@WaveInPlace it is not reversible
but at least not every part of the world used his physics for those years
@Bml You know some relations; about just enough to solve the problem
perhaps there were good scientists between Galileo and Aristotle, but their work never happened to get mainstream
scientists who did empiricism
Bml
Bml
16:05
@naturallyInconsistent Which ones? I can impose that the difference in internal energy in the two compartments does not change, but then what? How do I find the final temperatures of the two subsystems?
There was plenty of science done between Aristotle and Galileo
as expected. so it's just that mainstream physics was non sense
It had its ups and downs
Galileo didn't even come up with motion relativity, that was Buridan
Medieval guy
@RyderRude, I feel like we've been here before. "I don't know of anyone between these two time periods" =/= "There was no one between these two time periods". Galieleo didn't work in a vacuum.
@WaveInPlace yes
@Slereah it probably wasnt even him. no one really originates an idea
principle of relativity is too foundational for one guy to come up with it
16:10
It wasn't foundational enough to be in ancient kinematics
That's not how ideas/theories work. They aren't discrete entities or building blocks.
Ideas are refined, iterated.
@Slereah yes. it is a non trivial idea. the intuition for most people is to have preferred rest frames
@Bml Sigh, you have $p_A V_0=Nk_BT_A$ and $p_BV_0=Nk_BT_B$ and you want to find $V_A$ and $V_B$ subjected to constraints $V_A+V_B=2V_0$ and ideal gas relations after equilibrium has been established. It must be doable.
but still, it's hard to imagine a history where everyone before one guy got this wrong
that's too unrealistic
probably, word got around over many years. qualitative results
Too binary. It's not a matter of right or wrong, but of accuracy.
16:13
Everybody before Einstein got proto-SR wrong.
@WaveInPlace yes!
that's y i said qualitative results
Calling the Earth flat isn't correct, but it's not "wrong". It's accurate to >99%, given the weak curvature of the Earth.
Calling it spherical isn't right either though. It's /more/ right, but not right. Spinning distorts the shape.
Calling the Earth an oblate spheroid is more accurate still, but there are mountains and valleys.
The principle of relativity can only be discovered once humanity has discovered sufficiently fast and steady boats
Ideas are never right or wrong. They're just varying degrees of accurate.
yes. but u cant pin point a discoverer. initially, sailors must have shared qualitative stories for many years
about how it feels the same as rest
and then there must be a few people who would've said if an object got no resistance it'd move forever
probably a few people said this independently
this is more quantitative
Bml
Bml
16:19
@naturallyInconsistent Sorry, don't I have to find the final pressures (which are the same, at least I think so)? Do you think finding them is as straightforward as you say?
@WaveInPlace some ideas are infinitely wrong, like that idea where the surface of the earth extends to infinity downward
@Bml Well, the question is somewhat ambiguous. There is one single final equilibrium position, which is not ambiguous, but the question seems to be wanting to get a metastable intermediate position, which is where the ambiguity arises. I'm going to sleep. Like now.
@RyderRude, that's not infinitely wrong. It describes the surface quite well, as well as at least the first few hundred meters below that.
Given that no one in antiquity could dig down farther than that, I'd even say it's consistent with their observations.
@ACuriousMind BG3? I share same feeling as you.
i'm just saying that it differs by infinity from.the actual measurement :P
@WaveInPlace ok but not all ideas are equal. some set the scientific progress backward
like Aristotle's wild guesses
@WaveInPlace one of his guesses was that if he threw something infinitely far, it wud still come back to earth
this is consistent with some observations he made in everyday life
16:26
I'm not sure what your point is. I never said that all ideas were equal.
yes. sorry
im just saying that not all ideas contribute positively to science
Bml
Bml
@naturallyInconsistent All right, thanks anyway...
@WaveInPlace yes. even in practice, we model finite things by infinity depending on the application
so the infinite model cannot be called "infinitely wrong"
@RyderRude, I don't necessarily disagree. In hindsight a lot of ideas have been pretty destructive, closing off avenues of discussion and preventing advancement.
@Shing yeah, but to be honest I didn't expect to love it because I didn't like Larian's previous games (D:OS 1 & 2) all that much either.
16:45
> And some subject all bodies whatever to generation, by means of the composition and separation of planes.
Early string theorists
17:22
this system has 4 degrees of freedom right
I guess the springs are massless(?)
17:33
I am seeing places where they regard $so(1,1)$ as dilation group in $3+1 D$. How to see that?
@Sanjana $\mathrm{SO}(1,1)$ is in general the dilation group in n+1 dimensions, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorentz_group#Hyperbolic
@Obliv I would say it has two, but maybe your definition of "degree of freedom" is double mine
I'm going off these lecture slides
@ACuriousMind I'm still trying to understand what Lie theory course you had to learn Lie theory from the mathematicians at such a level :P
i understand the coupled pendulum problem but this one isn't making any sense to me. with gravity, won't the masses just hit the walls
or I guess it depends on the equilibrium position and spring constants nvm
@Obliv where does the problem say you're supposed to consider gravity???
17:47
IT SAID 2 WALLS (I'm too literal)
I guess it could be lying on a table
ok this is infinitely easier without gravity
I was thinking we'd need to solve a lagrangian before even getting normal coordinates
I mean, unless you've done a bunch of other spring problems like this where you're supposed to consider gravity, I'd say it's a safe bet that you aren't supposed to do it here, either :P
nope, and idk what i'd do if we did tbh
or imagine if we had to consider the springs to have mass shudders
good thing we're in the 18-19th century still in my class
@Mr.Feynman the trick is once you know the math speak you can suddenly understand what all the mathematicians are saying :P
although tomorrow we are going to discuss the motion of a charged particle in a magnetic field and the lorentz force which should be interesting
that's probably still 19th century..
so you could technically use a lagrangian but a simple F=ma would suffice for this problem
@ACuriousMind In many cases I see I know the language but I'm not fluent, biggest problem I have with DG and Lie Groups
Like when you partially know a language but are slow to speak :P
fqq
fqq
18:06
@ACuriousMind Rogers' book has chapters about lie supergroups I think
is there a way to write "Every natural number is of the form $4a,4a+1,4a+2,4a+3$ for some $n \in \Bbb{N}$" where $\Bbb{N}$ includes zero, but rewritten without the zero?
i don't think so
@fqq Mr Rogers wrote a book on Lie supergroups???
@Obliv what does "rewritten without the zero" mean
like a similar form statement but where $\Bbb{N}$ doesn't include zero as an element
people sometimes call that $\mathbb{N}_{>0}$
or you could write $\mathbb{N} - \{0\}$ or $\mathbb{N} \setminus \{0\}$
the one without zero?
oh ok
18:10
@ACuriousMind Thanks. What I understand is: Conformal transformations on the sphere or Mobius transformations are locally isomorphic to Lorentz transformations, and the particular transformation corresponding to scaling is a boost in one particular direction, so the group is SO(1,1). Is that it?
@Sanjana yes
fqq
fqq
@ACuriousMind oh, he was also on TV?
I mean Alice Rogers - supermanifolds :P
@fqq who could forget Mr Rogers' Non-Euclidean Neighborhood
oh nvm I got it, it would be "Every natural number is of the form $4a-3,4a-2,4a-1,4a,4a+1,4a+2,4a+3$ for some $a \in \Bbb{N}_{>0}$"
@ACuriousMind But what does it mean at the algebra level? If I know $x^\mu \partial_\mu$ is the generator---how to make them look like that of $\mathfrak{so}(1,1)$?
18:15
Who in the world is Mr Rogers
that way you can get 1-3 where u couldn't before
@Sanjana what do you mean? $\mathfrak{so}(1,1)$ is one-dimensional, its generator doesn't have any special properties
really $\mathrm{SO}(1,1)$ is a pretentious name for a group that's just two copies of $\mathbb{R}$ :P
@ACuriousMind I mean it is trivial, right?
@ACuriousMind yes!
@ACuriousMind Hmm...Can you also have a look at my other related question?
do you guys like to drink coffee for work/studying
i think @naturallyInconsistent likes his jack daniels
i don't think I can do anything without coffee but I wonder if anyone else here is the same
@Obliv Coffee is my favorite beverage :3
18:23
@Sanjana why would it be $\mathfrak{su}(4,2)$?
like, at first glance neither your source's claim nor your claim seems obvious to me
@Obliv I like coffee but I stopped drinking it because I hated being tired and low energy when I didn't get it
yeah, I feel like if I got on a natural sleeping rhythm I wouldn't need it as much. I just am the antithesis of a morning person so i'm relying on it. How did you get over that feeling @ACuriousmind did it get better overtime
not really, I still hate getting up in the mornings :P
as far as I can tell my natural sleeping rhythm wants to be something like sleeping from 3am to midday, which is a bit impractical
@ACuriousMind I said $\mathfrak{so}(4,2)$ because that's the conformal group. They took a direct product of Lorentz group and the dilation group; I am wondering what makes them leave out the SCT and why wont these stuff mix with each other?
if energy is relative to an arbitrarily assigned zero-energy state, how does space know how much to curve?
yeah I'm pretty nocturnal as well. While in quarantine during the pandemic, I managed to completely roll over my sleep schedule to a normal time simply by sleeping later and later. Like going from sleeping at 12am to 2am, 4am, ..., 12pm, 2pm,...,8pm. I think I decided it wasn't worth trying to fix it by the 5am mark.
how does the argument for $|\Bbb{N}| = |\Bbb{Z}|$ bypass the diagonalization argument for uncountable sets
I understand this argument but I wonder why $\Bbb{Z}$ has no issue
18:39
@Sanjana I think they're just wrong; the bosonic part of $\mathfrak{su}(2,2\vert 4)$ should indeed just be $\mathfrak{su}(2,2)\cong \mathfrak{so}(1,3)$
nvm I think it's because u can define a bijection from the even natural numbers to the negative integers, then odd natural numbers to the positive integers +0
that way u escape the diagonalization problem
@ACuriousMind Just the Lorentz group? Why not the conformal group and the R symmetry group? They didn't "define" bosonic subalgebra clearly: is it clear what they are referring to? I thought that it is just bringing all the "bosonic" generators all together...
@Sanjana yes, times the R-symmetry, sorry
and re: the definition - you are reading the article, not me, how am I supposed to read their minds whether they meaning something different by "bosonic subalgebra" than anyone else :P
@ACuriousMind But you are ACM. I am sure you can easily read minds :p
maybe they got confused with that subalgebra classifying the representations
like, the claim about the representations/quantum numbers might be true, I don't have the representation theory of $\mathfrak{so}(4,2)$ memorized
19:12
I think, inorganic chemistry could become real fun, if yet another electron would appear, with exactly the same (or very similar) properties, but being a different particle as the electron itself. So, this e' would distract e electromagnetically, but pauli exclusion would be non-existent among them.
So, hidrogen with e' would be very similar to ordinary hidrogen. But, in helium there would be He without e' (or with double e'), and also He with an e and e'. This latter would behave... I have no idea, how would it behave
Trolling nature
 
2 hours later…
21:16
What do you call a Cauchy foliation of a (1+1)-dim. Lorentzian manifold with maximally mutually distinct classes of leaves?
And is this in certain cases preferable over a foliation of a (1+1)-dim Lorentzian manifold with a single one parameter class of leaves?
22:07
are all of the theories in the standard model considered weakly coupled field theories?
@Relativisticcucumber no, QCD is very much strongly coupled
at least at low energy (a statement that won't make sense to you until you get to running couplings)
@ACuriousMind does it work for electrodynamics? and what is the quantum field theory for the weak force?
quantum electrodynamics *
EM/the electroweak theory are weakly coupled; there is no separate theory for the weak force, really
it all depends on concepts you're still about to learn if you've only just gotten over scalar fields
22:23
i see. im just beginning interactions and tong is discussing that the formalism we are building now only holds for weakly coupled theories so i wanted to see more physically what the domain of this is. i think the examples he focuses on are yukawa and $\phi^4$
idk for some reason i really feel disoriented if i dont know the domain of the content in discussion. maybe this is smth i should learn to get over
just look at everything you're looking at as toy models - parts of this will recur in the formulation of the Standard Model, but almost everything in a slightly more complicated fashion
okay i think that makes sense. i will hold off on the standard model for awhile
i am too eager
22:55
Is there a single accepted way to make the heat equation behave relativistically?
23:10
does anyone know of a good example to wrap my head around: 1) every hermitian matrix is diagonalizable. 2) decompose a hermitian matrix into the sum of two non-commuting hermitian matrices. 3) the two matrices you are summing cannot be simultaneously diagonalized. 4) the sum, however, is diagonalizable.
for some reason I have this faulty idea that if the sum of two matrices is diagonalizable then there should be a way to diagonalize sums of matrices that sum to the matrix in question
@SillyGoose What trouble do you have coming up with an example? The sum of any two self-adjoint operators is self-adjoint, so just sum your two favourite non-commuting operators
well i know that this is mathematically true but i guess i was hoping for a more illuminating example, but maybe what i am thinking of does not exist :P
or maybe a more fleshed out reason for why this should be the case
@SillyGoose do you not have favourite non-commuting operators?
well we can consider $\sigma_x$ and $\sigma_y$
the first thing I look at when I look for examples is in 2 dimensions and in particular the Pauli matrices
@SillyGoose so what is mysterious about $\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(\sigma_x + \sigma_y)$ being diagonalizable, but not simultaneously so with $\sigma_x,\sigma_y$
that's just the statement that the spin operators along different axes don't commute (the sum is the spin operator along the 45° diagonal between x and y)
23:19
i think in my mind, the simplest mechanism for a sum of two matrices $A+B = C$ to itself be diagonalizable is if both matrices $A, B$ are simultaneously diagonalizable. but I am having trouble seeing the actual, general mechanism for the sum of two matrices to be diagonalizable
why does there have to be an "actual, general mechanism"?
the sum of two matrices is diagonalizable if it is a diagonalizable matrix
there does not need to but i guess even an alternate mechanism would help
this does not, in general, impose any restrictions on the two matrices it is a sum of
in fact, it's the other way around: Every matrix is the sum of two diagonalizable matrices (just split it into its upper triangular and lower triangular parts), and it's a special occurrence when those two parts are simultaneously diagonalizable
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