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00:02
ozurdilerim. benim kuzenimde cok zor girdi okula. Turkiyede education system ban baskadir. kesinlikle bir yol var senin icin, sadece bulman lazim. Ingilizcegin iyidir ve cok rahat geciceksin buruya
her state degisik kanunlar var. En basda sen buruyanin nasil immigrate yapican orenmen lazim. for example: what kind of visa they offer and what is the conditions for them
kurallari ogrenmek yani
user587860
Ozur dilemene gerek yok tabii ki. Ama bence ilk kabul almak daha onemli
04:05
@Obliv hm is this true? never seen anything like that before in the US
@Obliv maybe people like terence tao XD
 
2 hours later…
06:10
@Supersymmetry & @Obliv Please don't converse here in Turkish. The language of this room is English. The mods and room owners can't easily moderate posts in languages they can't read. And it's rude to other room visitors. But feel free to create a new room for your Turkish conversation.
@Sanjana Fourier square wave sagecell.sagemath.org/…
06:59
@PM2Ring oh I feel sad that you didn't choose to do |x| instead. It is easy to implement the changes, though, from your nice work: change f to (pi ** 2)/8 - sum(cos(k * x * pi)/(k ** 2) and then you can also plot and print the derivative of f to get the square wave.
 
1 hour later…
08:02
hi
how did ancient people measure that earth takes 365 days to revolve
constellations maybe
was an accurate measurement tho
"Aristarchus made the first calculation of the Earth-Sun distance in about 300BC. He did it by measuring the angular separation of the Sun and Moon."
08:18
> Eudemus attributed to him the discovery of 'the fact that the period of the sun with reference to the solstices is not always the same'; the vague phrase seems to mean that he discovered the inequality of the length of the four astronomical seasons, that is, the four parts of the 'tropical' year as divided by the solstices and equinoxes.
Eudemus presumably referred to the written works by Thales On the Solstice and On the Equinoxes mentioned by Diogenes Laertius. He knew of the division of the year into 365 days, which he probably learnt from Egypt.
The basic trick to look at the length of the year is to just look at when the stars rise at the same point
It is something you with fairly low tech means
365 requires some accuracy in measuring constellation position
You just really need a lot of measurements for it
Which according to the Greeks the Egyptians and Chaldeans had a ton of
yeah, it's not as impressive
as what Aristarchus did
Egyptian civil calendar had 365 days
> The civil calendar was established at some early date in or before the Old Kingdom, with probable evidence of its use early in the reign of Shepseskaf (c. 2510 BC, Dynasty IV) and certain attestation during the reign of Neferirkare (mid-25th century BC, Dynasty V).
i hav no idea how i wud measure the distance to sun myself
08:29
Apparently probably based on the observation of the rise of Sirius
inpossible without telescopes
@Slereah Just Egyptian prehistory alone, let alone Ancient Egypt, had thousands upon thousands of years. Just keeping records would have given some hints.
Telescopes don't give you any more informations about stars than you can get without a telescope, you just get more precise data
the 7 day week is based on the moon cycles
you just really need to measure angles
08:31
@RyderRude why do you have to be so brazenly wrong? You already quoted about Aristarchus.
You just get data like this
@naturallyInconsistent sorry. i thought he used telescopes
How could he
@Slereah is this ancient
Babylonian
08:33
@Slereah i mean some ancient analogue of telescope
@RyderRude Telescopes started becoming a thing in 1608, as Wiki writes. Just a short while before Galileo got to work on one and turned it to the Moon.
People used weird shit like this
A mural instrument is an angle measuring instrument mounted on or built into a wall. For astronomical purposes, these walls were oriented so they lie precisely on the meridian. A mural instrument that measured angles from 0 to 90 degrees was called a mural quadrant. They were utilized as astronomical devices in ancient Egypt and ancient Greece. Edmond Halley, due to the lack of an assistant and only one vertical wire in his transit, confined himself to the use of a mural quadrant built by George Graham after its erection in 1725 at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. Bradley's first observation with...
@RyderRude You mean an angle measuring tool
the 7 days is based on moon cycle, the 365 dyas is based on season cycle, the 24 hr is based on day-night cycle
and a calendar combines all these units of time
it is 7 days becuz the sale day was decided based on moon cycle
in Babylon
sorry idk what 24 is based on. it is randomly dividing the time into 24
The cool tool of antiquity was the gnomon rly
Greek astronomers won't shut up about the gnomon
08:39
it is a nice tool. anyone can make it
the word "clockwise" has been derived from.this device
i mean the definition of clockwise
this device used to go clockwise becuz humans originated in southern hemisphere
if humana had used this device in northern hemisphere, then anti clockwise would hav been defined as clockwise
Yes, Greece and Egypt famously in the southern hemisphere
it was before greek and egypt civilisations
you know, it's possible to not say stuff as if you were stating facts if they are not facts :P
2
sorry he says civilisation evolved in the northern hemisphere @Slereah
so clockwise has been named after the behavior of this device in the northern hemisphere
if civilisation was southern, anti clockwise wud hav been called clockwise
It is the whole, totally contrary to common sense, and we even challenged you, and you doubled down. Why can't you just pause a bit and process a challenge before commenting?
08:51
He has the wisdom of Karl Pilkington
Wiki isn't helping there: what is Pilkington relevant to this about? Presumably something about acting hardheaded?
Karl Pilkington is a man willing to construct entire theories based on something he vaguely remembers reading once
the theory of clockwise is correct. i just mixed the hemisphere
08:55
it's the southern hemisphere where horizontal sundials go counterclockwise, but in any case there is no inherent reason to base clocks on horizontal sundials rather than vertical ones (which go the opposite direction to horizontal ones)
Yes, we are aware of that. It is not that bad that you made a mistake. It is the, Slereah challenged you, and you doubled down, that is the issue.
Africa is in the southern one. i said it becuz humans originated there
so i thought it was before Greece and Egypt
@ACuriousMind nah, putting something on the floor is much easier than hanging something up. Even walls are not something easy to work with, when we are talking about that far back in time.
@RyderRude yes, I was very much willing to give you the benefit of the doubt there. I went to check when you insisted upon it. Why won't you do some fact-checking when being challenged?
i did. thats y i saw the video again
humans still originated in Africa. it seems like Neil is talking about the origin of specific civilisations
it says the population was 5 million when humans originated
i would have expected a thousand
maybe if we go back to some previous species like homo erectus, it would be a thousand
09:49
None of these statements make any sense without being much more specific: There is generically no sharp point in time when any (sub)species emerges, the nature of evolution is gradual.
@naturallyInconsistent sure, but stranger accidents have happened in history: If the first clockmakers had for some reason had a cultural attachment to vertical sundials, they might have chosen differently, even if the horizontal ones are more common
@ACuriousMind I'm not disagreeing that there is some chance of it accidentally doing that, but I think it is highly contrived. It is far easier to use a make-shift thing, e.g. tree. If it were hung up somewhere, then it would be far more work to do, with a lot of chances for the thing hung up to fall down, e.g. earthquakes. I just don't think there is a serious chance of us doing it the vertical way.
@naturallyInconsistent I just recently visited a small town near here where there was a hundreds of years old vertical sundial on the old town hall
@ACuriousMind did anything have the inclination to walk into it? miahahaha
it was like three meters up on the wall
10:15
Feeling bad for the N-ray guy because he went down in history as a big dumdum
Poster boy for dumb science
In NR electrodynamics, Whenever Ive come across Energy in any way (say in pure electrostatics, magnetostatics, or electrodynamics- poyntings vector..), Macroscopically Ive always made sense of things as large blobs worth a 1000 molecules being moved around. this is how I justified all the formulas. Is this a good picture to keep, or should I do away with this and stick to abstract averaging processes?
in FNH robinson, in a throwaway fashion, he discusses an averaging procedure called "truncation" , where $\langle E^2\rangle =(\langle E \rangle)^2$, this got me thinking about how someone could try to average the energy density itself, but it will lead to other complications, like dielectrics etc where self energy of these "blobs" in my head, dont get accounted for in any way.
10:53
@ACuriousMind statements like this are suposd to say : "there were somewhere between 4 million and 6 million humans when humans evolved, where 4 million is the mark where we're sure there were no humans
but it's still weird becuz how can u hav 4 million non-humans and then 6 million humans a few hundred years later
we r suposd to pick two marks : one where we can classify the species as non-humans and one where we can classify them as humans
these marks would hav too be to far apart then
fqq
fqq
11:20
@RyderRude most of Africa is in the northern hemisphere
@RyderRude Where do you get this nonsense from? "For the time of speciation of Homo sapiens, some 200,000 years ago, an effective population size of the order of 10,000 to 30,000 individuals has been estimated, with an actual "census population" of early Homo sapiens of roughly 100,000 to 300,000 individuals." (from Wiki)
11:40
@RyderRude Well, 24 is nice because it has lots of factors. However, the Moon's mean daily motion (relative to the stars) is roughly 12°, and the Moon's angular diameter is around 30 arc-minutes, so it moves through its own diameter in an hour.
11:58
@PM2Ring fixed-length hours actually post-date the division of the day into 24 hours; the reason for the 24 hours is that the Egyptians used a system based on 12s (possibly because there are ~12 months in a year), cf. e.g. scientificamerican.com/article/…, hsm.stackexchange.com/a/2881/3797
@ACuriousMind Sure. But the Moon's angular size and speed are quite variable, so "Moon hours" are definitely not fixed in size. ;) FWIW, I recently posted an answer about the variations in lunar motion. astronomy.stackexchange.com/a/55112/16685
@fqq yes. sorry
In the early 2000s, I made a Sundial generating program in POV-Ray. The sundial itself was pretty easy. The pseudorandom grass was a bit tricky on an Amiga with 10 MB of RAM.
@ACuriousMind it was a website when i searched it. but it actually is talking about the number of humans in 8000BCE for some reason
idk how i keep making mistakes
i knew it had to be a few thousand
12:16
There were many different hour schemes. Some sundials could be very tricky to read because they implemented multiple schemes. mysundial.ca/tsp/hours.html
@PM2Ring is this animated??
the grass looks real
there was one conference to set the value of pi as 3
12:34
@RyderRude It could easily be animated. I never bothered to make an anim with it, though. The code that calculates the Sun's position is pretty basic, but it should be accurate to within a minute or so. I have much more accurate code these days. astronomy.stackexchange.com/a/49546/16685
And of course, when I want high accuracy, I just ask JPL. ;)
user587860
I've still been failing to find a god damn left, unitary action of $\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C})\times \text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C})$ on $\mathcal{L}^2(\text{H}^{+}_{3})$
user587860
If $G$ is a unimodular Lie group and $K$ is a compact subgroup, $G\times G$ has a unitary left-action on $\mathcal{L}^2(G)$ and merely a left-action on $\mathcal{L}^2(G/K)$. Since $G = \text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C})$ is a unimodular Lie group, it seems that $\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C})\times \text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C})$ has a unitary left-action on $\mathcal{L}^2(\text{Fr}(\text{H}_3)) = \mathcal{L}^2(\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{C}))$. But I am not sure what's going in the direct product
Here's some Python code that calculates pi using the arithmetic-geometric mean in integer arithmetic. It converges quadratically. gist.github.com/PM2Ring/032ffa274fec417c47cc31f014dcfa5c I also have a version of that algorithm which has no non-trivial divisions: all the divisions are done using bit shifts, including in the sqrt steps.
AGM sounds interesting
have i already shared this philosophy to u plato.stanford.edu/entries/structural-realism ? @PM2Ring
12:59
AGM is pretty awesome. You can use it to calculate elliptic integrals. You can use it to calculate all the standard inverse circular & hyperbolic trig functions, and logarithms. It may not be the fastest way if you only need low precision, but for high precision, it's unbeatable (assuming you're using an efficient multiplication algorithm).
nicee
so u like Fourier transform or Taylor series more
some people say that Taylor series is also projecting onto a basis
but i dont see it
@RyderRude I don't think I've seen that page before, but I just bookmarked it.
greatt
it is a really nice philosophy of science
Fourier is good for periodic stuff. Or stuff that can be made periodic. Taylor has pretty broad scope, but the convergence of Taylor series often sucks. Fortunately, you can often transform Taylor series into Padé approximants that have a larger radius of convergence, and converge faster.
One fun thing with discrete Fourier is circular convolution. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_convolution
in Mathematics, Aug 24, 2021 at 15:47, by PM 2Ring
A few weeks ago, I was playing around with drawing a closed loop through a set of points, using cubic Bézier curves. I learned a nice algorithm that ensures that both the 1st & 2nd derivatives of the Bézier functions match at their endpoints. But for n points, it requires solving a system of n equations in n unknowns, which gets expensive for large n.
> Fortunately, these equations can be expressed as circulant matrices, so the problem can be efficiently solved using Fast Fourier transforms.
13:15
i too came across Pade approximations a few months ago
convolution is just matrix multiplication ,right
There's a really simple algo for making Padés from Taylor series. math.stackexchange.com/a/4823743/207316
i made this transform which is like Fourier transforms a few months ago math.stackexchange.com/questions/4756290/…
Convolution is just long multiplication. ;) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convolution Circular convolution is nice & symmetrical because it wraps around, which makes it an ideal match with Fourier techniques.
13:54
schrodinger heat equation in 1d free particle
$+$ sign instead of $-$ sign
*Schrodinger wave equation
I want to understand how the evolution occurs
Please tell me
14:10
lol
I think I have said this before but I have to express my appreciation once more to this site(s) and to this chat;
**THANKS** for helping out so much as you all do! :) I have gotten so so much help, with my questions, explanations, and finding things. Not to exclude understanding things in a better way, really this site is a life saver! (okay, not literally but you get the idea)
(like, When I have asked a question, I have always gotten good answers, comments, and replies)

edit: I tried to do bold text but doesn't seem to work
14:34
@Slereah why is this wrong
15:14
hello, in infinite dimensional spaces, is $U^{\dagger}U=I$ insufficient to conclude if a transform is unitary?
if we take a boost transform, $U(f(p))=f(\Lambda p)$, then this is sometimes unitary sometimes unitary depending on the normalisation of $|p\rangle$
but $U^{\dagger} U=I$ does not depend on the normalisation of basis vectors
15:38
Is $U^{\dagger}U = I$ not the definition of unitary? Even for operators on infinite dimensional spaces?
Dec 14 at 12:58, by ACuriousMind
what needs to be invariant under unitary transform is not their ill-defined "product" with each other, but their resolutions of the identity. In the relativistic case, you have $1 = \int \mathrm{d}\Lambda_p \lvert 0\rangle\langle 0\rvert$, where by $\mathrm{d}\Lambda_p$ I mean the usual Lorentz-invariant measure, and this whole thing is invariant under Lorentz transformations
you need to stop obsessing over what happens to the $\lvert p\rangle$ and start thinking about what your inner product on the $f(p)$ is with respect to which you want to call this operator "unitary"
the boosts are perfectly unitary, you simply haven't thought carefully enough about how the $\lvert p\rangle$ and their normalization are related to the Lorentz invariant inner product on the mass shell
@Jagerber48 The definition is actually $U^\dagger U = I$ and $UU^\dagger = I$, which is only equivalent to just $U^\dagger U = I$ in the finite-dimensional case, but that subtlety is not the problem here
But what about $\overset{U^\dagger}{U} = I$ and $\overset{U}{U^\dagger} = I$
Surely it should be true in every direction
@ACuriousMind im getting an incorrect conclusion. if $U(p,p')$ is a transform and $\int dp' U(p,p') U^*(p',p")=\delta (p-p")$, then $(U f(p), U g(p))=(f(p), g(p))$ is true regardless of what measure $m(p) d^3p$ we use to define the inner product
this conclusion is false, right?
the inner product is $\int d^3p m(p) f(p) g^* (p)$
15:56
First of all you need to be careful which things here are functions of 3-momentum and which are functions of 4-momentum
because when we write something like $\langle p\vert p'\rangle = f(p)\delta(p-p')$, everything is treated as a function of 4-momentum
but the relativistic wavefunctions in momentum space are only functions of 3-momentum, as they are functions on the mass shell, and the integral is also only over the 3-momenta (with a factor $m(p)$ making them Lorentz invariant)
im getting that the inner product with any $m(p)$ is invariant as long as $U(p,p')$ satisfies $\int dp' U(p,p") U^*(p",p)=\delta $. @ACuriousMind
so far im not talking about boosts. lets say we talk about general U(p,p')
everything is a function of 3-momentum in what i write
is this conclusion correct or incorrect?
depending on the answer, i will branch the discussion
i was using functions of three-momentum, to clarify
the fourth component is determined here by the 3
@ACuriousMind everything is 3 momenta. U(p,p'), f(p), \delta ^3(p-p') and $d^3p$
pls help
16:13
@RyderRude And in what sense do you think your $\int \mathrm{d}p' U(p,p')U(p',p'') = \delta(p - p'')$ for 3-momenta applies to boosts?
there must be some U(p,p') for boosts, right?
it is a linear transform from wavefunctions to wavefunctions
and the wavefunctions r on 3-momenta
The problem is not with the existence of $U(p,p')$!
it's more with its definition
how do you think this is defined
u mean an expression of U(p,p')?
and why is your measure here $\mathrm{d}p'$ instead of the Lorentz invariant meausre
it's just the general expression of any linear transform. so far, we're not talking about boosts, but boosts too have to fit into this
16:18
you just have mashed together a bunch of formulae from relativistic and non-relativistic physics into one mess
if u take any hilbert space and any linear tranaform, the action is $\int dp' U(p,p') f(p)$ ,right?
im just using a geneal concept of linear transform, and then we apply this logic to boosts
where does the $U(p,p')$ for an arbitrary linear transform come from?
i would say a linear transform is defined by some U(p,p') and the action being that integral?
so if u want to specify ur transform, u just specify ur U(p,p')
ooh a linear transform is more generally a linear function F(f(p))
from this, we can derive a U(p',p), right?
so there is a map F ---> U(p,p')
from linear functions to matrices
the $U(p,p')$ is what's called an "integral kernel" for the linear operator and what I want to you to write down is how you're actually defining it
because if you do this, the $\lvert p\rangle$ will appear somewhere in there
the defining expression is $\int dp U(p,p') f(p)= L[f(p)]$ where $L$ is the linear operator
16:25
so why is that $\mathrm{d}p$ and not the Lorentz-invariant measure? How do you actually get $U(p,p')$
ok i will just get to how im defining it for boost
in the relativistic normalised basis, a boost is $\psi (p) ---> \psi (\Lambda p) \frac{1}{\gamma}$
this is F
now we get U
we have $\int dp' \delta (\Lambda p - p') \frac{1}{\gamma} f(p')=\frac{1}{\gamma} f(\Lambda p)$. from the lhs, we fetch our U
@ACuriousMind becuz a general linear transform on any hilbert space fits into this $\int dp U(p,p') f(p')$. so we dont need a lorentz invariant measure right now
this U shud satisfy that integral which gets us delta
but my problem is, if any U satisfies that integral, then any inner product $\int dp m(p) f(p) g^*(p)$ is invariant regardless of what u choose for $m(p)$
becuz u cud just put a $U^{\dagger} U$ inside this integral as it's identity
sorry when i write $\psi (\Lambda p)$, it makes it seem like im working with four-momenta. but the fourth component is agian determined by the three components
16:41
Reading all that history of science has taught me to be humble because you don't want to go down as that guyvin history
You don't want historians to name something like SLEREAH'S FOLLY
It's too late
we have evidence on the hbar
Noooo
16:55
QPT in a nutshell: Taylor expand where you can't
Come on, how can they take $\int_{\mathbb{R}^2}d^2\vec{x} g(x)$ and expand $|\vec{x}|\to 0$
17:08
Quantum phield theory?
Quantum phase transitions
17:37
@Mr.Feynman this is just JD jackson
Or rather: Taylor expand everything you see
Nah, I don't think Jackson does it randomly :P
He does it in the work done formula
Where?
Which I think is a pretty random place
When I say random I mean illicit :P
17:40
@Mr.Feynman I don't remember exactly where, but he does derive the Polarisation term $P\cdot E$ term in so doing, so it's not aimlessly doing it. But chapter 6 of JDJ has a definite formula: Taylor expand everything, drop !(first 2 terms)
@Mr.Feynman Taylor expansion is always allowed
@nickbros123 We're not discussing the regurality of a function here
You can't truncate an expansion over a variable integrated over the entire plane
But after all it seems they were secretly integrating the series but decided to do so in the sloppiest way possible
I'm glad I haven't encountered such functions in my studies till now
I mean, this is simply what I wrote above
47 mins ago, by Mr. Feynman
Come on, how can they take $\int_{\mathbb{R}^2}d^2\vec{x} g(x)$ and expand $|\vec{x}|\to 0$
are they taylor expanding that integral?
either I dont understand whats going on or are they taylor expanding a real number? (most likely the former)

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