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20:00
but for the (projective) Hilbert space, the embedding of $H_1\times H_2\to H_1\otimes H_2$ or of $P(H_1)\times P(H_2) \to P(H_1\otimes H_2)$ (the Segre embedding) is not surjective. The states not in the image of these embeddings are the entangled ones
I see
@SillyGoose That is just like students who have only heard of Newtonian mechanics in terms of forces and not understanding what is the point of doing Lagrangian mechanics or Hamiltonian mechanics. Then they get supremely shocked when I tell them that forces are the first to die in the quantum revolution.
And then you still have new things being found in Hamiltonian mechanics in symplectic manifolds language every so often.
i wish to learn symplectic geometry :P
Losing Newton's mechanical universe is a shock to HS students.
Shouldn't be too hard
There's a reason they call it simple-tic
20:05
Lol
Just kidding it's actually greek for complex
Let $M$ be a graded $R$-module where $R$ is a graded ring. So $M$ decomposes into a direct sum $\oplus_n M_n$ such that $R_iM_j \subseteq M_{i+j}$. What is the intuition for introducing such a structure?
@SillyGoose polynomials with the grading being the highest non-zero power
Also forms
@bolbteppa how dare you thinking that
It's my punishment
Feb 15 at 17:23, by Sir Crackpot
I can now say dumb things without covering my master in mud
20:13
I'm just saying 'Sir Crackpot' beside a picture of Feynman could be a crank calling Feynman a crank, but who am I to judge I'm sure people on the main site wont make that mistake :p
Everybody understood my hardcore Vito Volterra reference after all
Vito Volterra (, Italian: [ˈviːto volˈtɛrra]; 3 May 1860 – 11 October 1940) was an Italian mathematician and physicist, known for his contributions to mathematical biology and integral equations, being one of the founders of functional analysis. == Biography == Born in Ancona, then part of the Papal States, into a very poor Jewish family: his father was Abramo Volterra and his mother, Angelica Almagià. Abramo Volterra died in 1862 when Vito was two years old. The family moved to Turin, and then to Florence, where he studied at the Dante Alighieri Technical School and the Galileo Galilei Technical...
*think
@bolbteppa I don't want to change my old propic as I made it editing a book cover :P
well you could just replace it with a picture of crack and pot like ACM mentioned
The picture is cool
I'm covering Feynman in mud again
I'm a disgrace to that guy
@bolbteppa Should I read your name like "Volterra", then?
He was from a different era.
20:17
@SirCrackpot why not just go with this
You mean you already weren't? It's Volterra using ****ardized Russian letters in the English alphabet
a crack pot
Oof so be it
It's a ****ing stupid name I regret
Sir mix a lot
20:19
@SirCumference Ask John Baez
@Loong never knew this was a thing lol
The Crackpot Index is a number that rates scientific claims or the individuals that make them, in conjunction with a method for computing that number. It was proposed by John C. Baez in 1992, and updated in 1998. While the index was created for its humorous value, the general concepts can be applied in other fields like risk management. == Baez's crackpot index == The method was initially proposed semi-seriously by mathematical physicist John C. Baez in 1992, and then revised in 1998. The index used responses to a list of 37 questions, each positive response contributing a point value ranging from...
ACM, it's time to push your magic button
Well done :P
lol nice
alakazam!
20:21
I have transformed you into a pot
Literally 😂
@bolbteppa I knew its meaning but I got used to reading it like an English person would pronounce it for the version with English letters
In contrast to the one in your profile bio
@ACuriousMind Curiously enough, the only thing that went through the mind of the bowl of petunias as it fell was Oh no, not again.
@ACuriousMind Well, at least you didn't transform me into pot
As did I, hence the stupidity of the name :(
20:24
@bolbteppa well you're preaching to the choir there
I'll get used to calling you Volterra
The thing in my picture is a string field derivative from Kaku's String Field Theory paper
@SirCrackpot you're an editor?
I found out a while ago that all my emails were being sent under the name "Sir Cumference"
@SirCrackpot now people might not recognize you ;)
20:25
never realized I was asking for research under that name
@user85795 No no, I did only small edits, like moving the cat and the diagram but I'm too lazy to do it again if the picture is lost
stupid google linking youtube names with gmail accounts
@SirCrackpot are you planning on going on to the next stage
That was my picture forever (as Mr. Feynman)
@bolbteppa Earth is flat
(Locally)
@SirCumference There is no alternative interpretation to your name, especially with the spacing, don't worry about it
20:27
@SillyGoose don't you people forget me :P
so it's pretty easy to roast me
@bolbteppa why don't you just switch to Вольтерра
@SirCumference good job, from now on I won't be able to read it properly anymore
probably a mistake to mention that here...
No one will type those letters
before that becomes my "nickname" elsewhere lol
20:29
Discord is savage
@user85795 well only when you have immature friends with mod powers :P
I see.
what do you guys think the benefits of an algebraic vs geometric formulation of a thing are
algebra is cooler
Lol
i saw an answer here on stack exchange that said thinking geometrically lead wigner to his classification of one-particle states...but um isn't representation theory entirely algebraic. i didn't quite understand the history behind that
20:33
ask a silly question, get a silly answer :P
Geometry uses less words.
well maybe i can be more specific. what is an example of the geometric formulation of quantum mechanics (for finite dimensional systems) giving a result that is hard to see in an algebraic formulation of it
Wigner is great but people were doing QFT for around 20 years before he did that, there is a whole other scheme people ignore
@bolbteppa what is the other scheme?
@bolbteppa who exactly was doing QFT in 1917?
20:38
Sorry he was 1939 right, I should have said 10 years
also Wigner explicitly acknowledges that Majorana and Dirac found most of the representations non-rigorously in earlier work
@ACuriousMind well, technically QM is a 0+1D QFT :P
@SirCrackpot still really only gets going in the '20s
As this summarizes, Pauli and Fierz basically took what people had been doing the past decade (energy positivity thing) and generalized it to all spins, but Wigner came out with a variation on this that is very group-theoretic
@ACuriousMind oh right, I was thinking of old QM
Which is CM with cheats on
20:41
de Broglie is '24, Heisenberg's and Schrödinger's mechanics shortly after that, I don't think you can call anything prior to this "QM" in other than a historical sense
It help put the roar in the 20s
The bomb put the dirty in the 30s
Before 1926 it was all a big mess as far as I can tell
@user85795 what bomb?
(Almost) everyone is apparently getting their decades wrong :p
The work on the foundations of it.
20:43
people only really realized that fission existed at the very end of the '30s
c'mon people, this is trivial to look up
Well, there was a depression...
@SillyGoose there's a bunch of stuff using the Fubini-Study metric which is much more natural in projective Hilbert space geometry
I can't tell if my ability to communicate ideas irl is getting worse by texting/chatting online or not but it feels like it's not where I want it to be compared to my ability to write/type
Like I'll have a bunch of good questions/interesting ideas throughout lecture but then when I discuss them with my prof it just comes out like jumbled rubbish
i bet stephen hawking didn't have to deal with this problem
first time I've seen someone be envious of his condition :P
maybe it's because it's real time and I'm used to formulating my sentences in my head a bunch of times first idk that sounds like an excuse
20:53
Hawking came out with a good bit of nonsense, I would embrace the humanity of it all
@Obliv you can formulate sentences in your head before speaking them out loud, too ;)
I mean speaking on the spot is a different thing from speaking over chat
where you can read over things before posting
and the difference is probably more pronounced with physics since it requires a lot of thought
Talking about a technical subject in person is always vague and handwaving and loose unless you are sitting down writing things clearly, it's completely normal
@ACuriousMind ugh okay but it feels like there's so much pressure when talking to a professor, like i don't want to take up their time but I also don't want to just back down lol
it's usually perfectly fine to take a few seconds and just go "Hmmm" or "I'm thinking" if you feel you're talking too fast
20:55
@Obliv you could always shoot them an email
and they can respond if/when they have the time
or if you actually have these questions/thoughts during the lecture, write them (or at least notes) down and read them off?
@bolbteppa Ok, I'm glad I'm not the only one then. @Sircumference that sounds like a much better idea lol.
@ACuriousmind true, but what if they respond and I have to think on the spot again shudders
that's life :P
writing down your question in a precise manner is usually nice. it sometimes results in resolving the question u were asking in the first place
@Obliv well at some level you'll have to get used to that :P
research meetings, answering questions during a presentation, etc.
20:57
you can always just go "I'll think about that" and formulate a response for next time (or an email)
@Obliv u can always tell them that u have to think about it and ask later :P
like okay, we were going over electrostatics again and the whole "E-field in a conductor is 0" thing came up and I wanted to be cool and point out the situation where charge can exist on the points of symmetry but I couldn't formulate it at all well and I just floundered like a fool
> In 1938, three chemists working in a laboratory in Berlin made a discovery that would alter the course of history: they split the uranium atom
I regularly say "I'll have to think about that and get back to you" when someone asks me a question I can't (or don't want to) answer on the spot
16 mins ago, by user 85795
The bomb put the dirty in the 30s
21:03
@ACuriousMind a more chaotic evil kind of reply would be "it's rather easy, I'll let you think about it"
They must've been working on it throughout the depression years @Loong
idk how other people's brains work but it seems like when I listen to a lecture my attention splits into a bunch of ways randomly and I have to restrain myself to follow the lecture silently.
I mean I just don't learn in lectures
I read the textbooks
@Obliv I don't follow lectures, I sleep there.
21:05
why is that so common lol, I don't understand why people don't take lectures seriously
just not how I learn
maybe it's because of my ADHD but following a long verbal conversation is difficult, especially since I can miss details
and I'm constantly scrambling to get it into a notebook
much easier to just read carefully structured text and be able to look back on it
@nickbros123 well, this was more meant in a work context where someone asks me about some obscure behavior of our application that I have to figure out myself first :P
@SirCumference but a textbook can't answer your questions
usually in that case i start googling
or ask here if i'm completely at a dead end
@Obliv I follow lectures when it's interesting. By follow i simply see what the lecturers tryna do and maybe the first 3 steps and I'll go back to sleep
21:07
@nickbros123 don't they get mad if they see you sleeping tho?
I usually just nod and pretend to be following
not where I live, it's crazy I see students with their heads on their desks in a lecture for optics or something
They're used to it :P
well you're lucky :P
I'm like, why even bother showing up lol are they absorbing the lecture subconsciously or something? Maybe they'll perk up at the sound of "this will be on the exam" lol
my undergrad and graduate programs have a lot of classes with stupid mandatory attendance
which is worse than useless since I come out with a fragmented understanding of the topic
21:09
@SirCumference the profs know me rather well. They don't mind it. I usually ask my questions in office hrs
much rather just teach myself than waste 1.5 hours in an unhelpful lecture
sometimes I'll pretend to take notes on my computer and instead be chatting here
Autodidacts are rare.
i mean it's just the only way I can learn
i find it's fairly common among others with ADHD
When I'm not sleeping in a lecture i just do my own thing, some problem in a book etc. I pay attention when I hear something interesting tho
i need time to process information at my own pace
21:12
@SirCumference another reason to believe I have ADHD
@nickbros123 well, you could always get a clinical test
medication is pretty helpful for treating it
though they generally won't do anything if you don't have it
@Obliv because you only deserve my attention if you put effort in what you do
Tbh I've had a lot of profs who are really passionate about teaching, but it just doesn't work for me
If I see you teaching unwillingly you don't even deserve that I listen to you
I've got a worse memory than a goldfish, so I need to spend time going over things to fully take them in
21:16
Are you and Mr. Feynman going through a break? @SirCrackpot
@SirCumference I'm like that for physics but for some reason I remember things in math a lot better
Until I'm someone worthy of carrying that name
Some profs want their students to make study guides out of their lectures.
@SirCumference I'm too lazy for that. What I find my self doing (more recently though) is that I have 10-11 tabs open, spanning about 3-4 different topics (now, thermodynamics-callen, probability-feller, statistics-hogg, rudin-PMA, Hoffman kunze-LA) and I just jump around every 20-30 mins
@user85795 I honestly just hate when profs think they know the objectively correct method of learning
@SirCrackpot plays sad violin
21:17
like people have their own strategies
@SirCumference yeah, it happens a lot.
@Obliv kind of
mandatory attendance is the dumbest thing, everyone in the class is an adult who knows how to learn by this point
@SirCumference plays angry violin
I will always deny Feynman's "there's no miracle people"
21:18
@Obliv well it is a very frustrating thing lol
where like 10% of the grade is showing up to class and asking questions
just let me learn and test me on the material
@SirCrackpot I kinda agree with Feynman on this one. Or at the very least, think it's useless to think the opposite
@SirCumference I'd be grateful that 10% of the grade is just showing up lol. I don't have that luxury, but some classes do require it (but it doesn't add to the grade, it just subtracts from it if you don't show up)
@Obliv I mean it's really dumb either way
the grade should reflect my understanding of the topic, nothing else
lectures just take time away from my studying and confuse me by introducing things too quickly
@ACuriousMind wouldn't it be funny if you said that in this context aswell :D
21:21
i.e. it just makes it much harder for me to learn
i gotta make an active effort to tune them out so i don't get my understanding of the material thrown out of wack
@SirCumference I thought it was just like that in indian colleges where I come from lol
@SirCumference I see, you got your own head canon that you gotta maintain. I feel that way too
i dunno if "head canon" is the correct terminology lol
they want speed and at their pace
@user85795 basically this
21:23
@Arjun bruh go to sleep xD
We have this stupid 80% attendance criterion ..u might be einstein of some subject but if u dont have enough attendance they won't let u take the exam and u will have to repeat it
@Arjun fuck that
seriously things like that piss me off
if ur einstein of some subject, then don't worry about it and just go be a swiss patent clerk
and formulate your theories in your spare time :)
LoL
Einstein never used flash cards :P
@Arjun it was just that 1 semester bruh, we got scammed
21:26
It actually happened to me once in electrodynamics course me and @nickbros123 have literally topped the mid term exams by huge margin..but we skipped all classes cut we were learning better by studying zangwill and griffiths on our own..but because we didn't have attendance they didn't allow us to sit for the exams
@nickbros123 are you guys in the same uni or something?
We literally had to beg the prof to let us write the exams ..finally we got the permission though
@Arjun that's the stupidest shit I've ever seen :/
Peak times that
...but presumably this wasn't a secret surprise rule, right? :P
21:27
@ACuriousMind well in that case the prof is just an asshole, not a surprise asshole :P
like, if they're even taking attendance, you know there's going to be some problem if you have literally none :P
No, it was a rule to see who would obey it.
@ACuriousMind well, it was never enforced ever before, but it existed. And we were the batch to get the axe. It was kinda stupid of us tbh
@SirCumference for someone who was so adamantly defending physicists earlier when someone called them arrogant, you seem to have no restraint in disparaging a professor :) I'm just teasing
@ACuriousMind we didn't have it in sem 1 of our uni..they suddenly introduced it in sem 2 ..we thought it wouldn't matter but got screwed
21:28
I understand your passion
@Obliv well requiring mandatory attendance is a very different thing from doing scientific research :P
@SirCumference it might not be up to the prof (at my university something like this would have to have been decided at the faculty level)
@ACuriousMind well someone responsible for this is the asshole I guess
@ACuriousMind this stuff was decided for us by the academic administration office. It was a clear rule tbh, but never enforced till our time came
it's just a nonsensical thing to penalize people for
21:30
Yupp we were the scapegoats
To be clear, I'm not defending the rule - I think mandatory attendance is silly, and I've never had a single course that had it
Now we make sure we get the attendance by hook or crook lol ifykyk
@Arjun what do u mean bruh we literally go to all the lectures xD
I much prefer our system where exam admission was usually decided by having at least 50% of the total points in the weekly exercises
To sleep there tho that's a different thing
21:32
This reminds me of the whole face mask rule ::runs::
I had such a naive view of what college & higher education would look like back in my youth. I thought that there'd be a perfectly curated path for us and it would be modified based on our abilities/who we were with selective attention. Nah, it ain't like the fictional stories :(
@ACuriousMind sounds like german universities are a lot more sane than US ones
@ACuriousMind I prefer Italian system where you can take the exam whenever you want
I've had classes with mandatory attendance + separate mandatory problem solving sessions
like wtf
just let me learn like a normal human being
Although most courses require attendance, they just don't care
21:33
it's crazy that you guys even have exam admission requirements. As long as you got $$$ you can fail the class and take the exam, but you won't get a passing mark obviously
More seriously, it sucks to have no problem sets
@SirCumference recitation?
@SirCumference there existed courses (mostly in the humanities) where attendance was taken - but usually you then passed these simply by having attendance (passes from those are called Sitzscheine, lit. "sitting certificates", because you passed the course just by sitting in it)
@Obliv yeah
where you waste 1.5 hours on solving problems you don't want at the moment
like it forces me to scramble to learn the material when I'm trying to go at my own pace
if I'm just given exams and homeworks, I'll be perfectly fine
Correct take @SirCumference
21:35
@SirCumference We also have these stupid tutorial sessions where the TAs come and solve a bunch of plug n chug problems and problems which might possibly repeat in the exam
Lol my algebra recitation is just a smack in my pride every time I attend. It's so sad our class was doing so poorly in them that the graded part of recitation has become solving an extremely basic question. The one we had today was like "if you have $f(x) \in F[x]$ for a field $F$, where $f(x)$ has degree 5 but no roots and no quadratic factors, is $f$ reducible why or why not" @SirCumference
As if that is not enough if u have enough attendance in these tutorials you might get 10% bonus score in the exams
@Obliv I wasn't paying my uni any €€€ or $$$ :P
They are stuck building up from the JEE format of education.
@ACuriousMind yup, which is why I think the faculty is more motivated to get you guys to learn? Here it's more like reputation based but there it's govt. funded
21:37
@ACuriousMind I'm starting to think I should've been born in germany...
idk how that matters actually nvm
maybe it's an american university thing but they're insanely expensive
@user85795 JEE format actually made sense though. They don't care if you attend lectures or not. If you have the scores, you good
@ACuriousMind you got some sort of scholarship or is it a norm at German universities?
@ACuriousMind would I get banned if I said you taught quantum finance in exchange? :P
21:38
@SirCrackpot we had that in the smaller courses later on; the "mandatory problems sets" are partly there to sieve out people from the large intro classes who aren't putting in any effort
sheaves?
@Arjun all public education is tax-funded and (almost) entirely free for the individual
@nickbros123 but they want you to be testable at their pace
@ACuriousMind Regardless of that, I don't have any and while studying for exams I don't find time to do problems on my books very often
@ACuriousMind in other words your tax money is actually properly spent
21:39
Yet, most book authors suggest to do almost all of them
I did have a scholarship, but that just meant I didn't have to get (interest-free, governmental) loans to get money for living
@ACuriousMind then how do they gauge whom to let in? Like do you have some entrance exams after high school?
I like how you have to boast interest free governmental loans but I guess ours is interest free if they're subsidized so nvm
@Arjun depends on the uni and the field; e.g. medicine and law are highly competitive with essentially only the people with the best high school grades having a chance (+ specific admission tests), but e.g. my physics bachelor's degree let anyone in with straight As in math and physics
They gauged that and in response ACM gauged field theories
21:42
Lol
@SirCrackpot the ACM gauge fixing
For real, I'm triggered by the fact you ask how they gauge and ACM replies saying it depends on the field lmao
(perhaps relevant background information here is that we have different kinds of "high schools", where only the gymnasium - which is 13 or 12 years as opposed to the 10 years in the other forms - directly allows you to go to uni)
That cracked me up actually
(Been meaning to say that since I became a pot)
5
Oh my god..
idk if I want to star that or close the chat
21:44
star it
@Arjun go to sleep bruv we got lab today 💀
I'll sleep in the lab lol
@SirCumference there's lots of things wrong with the specifics but yes, the basic idea is sound
RIP 😭
I don't think I'll make it to the lab
21:46
Ooooh are you colleagues?
@ACuriousMind well I've heard german healthcare is a hundred times better than the US too lol
in fact the same applies with most countries
healthcare and higher education in the US are absurdly expensive
@SirCumference same thing - lots of things wrong with the specifics, but... :P
yeah but do they have the world's largest military budget? @SirCumference
@SirCrackpot yupp..we both study in the same college
I feel like that's something 0celo7 would say
3
21:47
@Arjun cool to have some colleague on SE
@Obliv he probably would lol
Oh, maybe fellow students sounds better
In Italian we use the same word for colleagues and fellow students in uni
tuition for US universities can cost upwards of $250,000 for a 4-year education (not counting the impact of scholarships, etc.)
@SirCrackpot in German we say Kommilitonen, whose literal meaning you can probably guess from Italian
@ACuriousMind I'm impressed that you know I can guess from Italian
Oh, Latin
21:49
@ACuriousMind in Goldstein they say Kamiltonian
2
@nickbros123 really?
I mean, Physics is kind of war
@SirCumference I would rather invest that in some stocks and generate a life long revenue lol..just spend my life studying physics and math without worrying about money
@nickbros123 It's pretty common
Qmechanic says that too iirc
21:51
guys, the joke is that it's a hilarious non-sequitur to my "in German we say Kommilitonen", stop taking that seriously :P
I didn't even read to whom he was replying tbh
I had an opportunity to mention Qmechanic, so I can move onto the next topic
-184 points and Qmechanic reaches 200k
Is it possible to be good at physics without being good at math?
@ACuriousMind I'm sorry if it's a bit personal but why did you not get into academia and chose to get into software ? Cuz I'm hella confused if I would wanna go down the acad path..I just wanna decent paying job with enough time to study physics lol
@Obliv Michael Faraday existed.
Wasn't there some colleague of a physicist who was able to relate some concepts in EM but couldn't formulate it mathematically but he still got some credit for the ideas
maybe it was faraday then idk
21:56
Jul 14, 2023 at 18:55, by ACuriousMind
@nickbros123 I realized I didn't actually enjoy doing research in theoretical physics all that much, I didn't want to move around the world chasing academic positions because I like where I am right now and I wasn't all that in love with string theory and QFT anymore after actually having studied them for a while (but I could've changed fields, sure).
Do you still self study string theory :^)
Damn, if you are that good without being that in love with it... You'd be Witten's Witten if you still loved it lol
@naturallyInconsistent but do you think it is possible in this day and age considering how much physics has advanced and playing around with coils and magnets wouldnt produce any publishing worth knowledge? (No offence to Faraday lmao..I'm in no way am undermining his work)
@Arjun One could ask this question the other way around: why aren't you in an alternate universe?
@SirCrackpot Witten has a lot of stuff on YouTube
22:04
@Arjun what knowledge is worth publishing is entirely subjective and the state of academia today (from what I gather peripherally) is wrought with pointless publications or straight dishonesty lol
@SirCrackpot Even there I think they'd have to learn some sort of logical framework to study the physics of that universe lol
so I don't know if it matters whether something is worth publishing anymore.
@Arjun check ACM's bio
@user85795 I know that
> In an alternate universe, I'm a theoretician interested in (algebraic and differential) geometric aspects of physics, gauge theories, non-perturbative quantum field theory, string theory/M-theory, and the application of representation theory to physics.
@SirCrackpot maybe he already is in one who knows
he definitely proved it in the alternative universe
22:08
@Arjun I do not believe it, but physics training makes meow not really care about my beliefs. It had happened before, it can still happen, even if the chances are really small.
I mean, think about the guy who made blue LED. It doesn't seem like his work was into a lot of maths, but rather diligently chasing down a possibility that other people had written off as improbable.
meeeooow
@Obliv When I said publishing worthy I meant knowledge that has not already been discovered..and to do that I think one should understand all the physics previously discovered ..and to do that you should study a lot of math
I could be wrong lol
@Arjun ok so we've made up our minds to skip lab today. Got it
Bro u been saying sleep to me when u yourself were on chat lol
22:12
@Arjun oh, one definitely does not need to know all the physics discovered prior. Of course, one should not be totally ignorant, but exhaustive knowledge can easily become a burden.
@Arjun yeah fr I'll sleep now. I gotta wake up atleast on time for breakfast
@naturallyInconsistent I can't understand how without understanding stuff like classical mechanics ,electromagnetism ,quantum mech and statistical mech one can do anything in physics (the above mentioned subjects I think are absolutely fundamental) and to understand all of them properly i think u still need reasonable amounts of math
And the OG's question was about being good at physics..by which i presume he also wants to learn existing physics
I guess my question was kind of tautological in nature (if we view physics from the standpoint of relating experiences in nature with mathematics)
we could have a different idea of "physics" where we assess knowledge and understanding by something other than mathematical models
That's called chemistry pal
@Obliv physics is not fundamentally math as far as I understand it ..but I just can't think of any other means of writing the laws of physics with the elegance and compactness that math brings to them
@nickbros123 we just keeping looking for an opurtunity to diss the poor chemists and biologists lol,don't we? XD
22:22
@nickbros123 chemists use "mathematical" models in some sense though
@Arjun I think it depends on your nomenclature but most people mean it in reference to mathematical modelling of natural phenomenon that is apparently universal. Although, in my sisters college intro to physics class, they didn't use math and it was purely qualitative reasoning (sounds horrible)
That's like some eastern zen taoist stuff lol, describing things in all manner of ways.
@Obliv I feel bad that ur sister had to go through all of that lol
Btw @Obliv are u in univ rn?
I mean, it can be enlightening but definitely confusing beforehand. @Arjun yes, in my junior year
Great..u majoring in physics?
mhm, applied option right now but maybe switch to general later idk
23:17
@SirCumference this person's been uploading "physics" for years wow
@ACuriousMind yes, but a probability dist. on the classical tensor product space need not be factorisable either?
but i once read a really intriguing result about this
What do you think "There is no deduction of points
for an incorrect answer. So even if you cannot work out the answer
to a question, you should make an educated guess." means
when we say "if the action of our physical theory is not x-translation invariant, then x-momentum is not conserved". Isn't this assuming that the converse of Noether's theorem is true?
Like they're just bonus points? context is they're talking about multiple choice questions on an exam with open-ended problems. I can't help but interpret it as saying the open-ended section is worth 100 points of the grade and the multiple choice is extra credit but that can't be right..
@SillyGoose sounds like it
@SillyGoose for a broad class of theories, the converse is true (and it's almost trivial for Hamiltonian theories), see e.g. physics.stackexchange.com/q/24596/50583
@Obliv they're just saying there's no reason not to answer a multiple choice question
sometimes you get 0 points for not giving an answer but negative points for choosing the wrong one; they're saying this isn't that kind of exam, you get zero points for wrong answers and no answer
okay i see
23:30
@Acuriousmind so you could have negative points on an exam? That sounds so hilariously horrible
so is this an appropriate way to think about how dirichlet boundary conditions for a scalar field in a box of length L breaks translation symmetry?
By the imposition of the dirichlet boundary conditions, we have that the field must take a certain value at certain points of space, but this immediately breaks translation symmetry because upon translating the field, we cannot satisfy the boundary conditions
@SillyGoose i think this statement breaks down in the case of an accelerating frame. the lagrangian is $1/2mv2 - max$ but the quantity $mv+mat$ is conserved
@Obliv I'm explaining the system, not defending it :P
but this action is still invariant under translations upto a total derivative
oh so Noether's theorem directly applies. sorry
@SillyGoose think about this for a moment: How could momentum possibly be conserved inside a box? if you start with a non-zero momentum you're gonna hit the wall, and there the momentum of the stuff hitting the wall has to reverse otherwise stuff's going to leave the box!
arguing via some inverse Noether's theorem here is certainly correct but it's kinda obvious you can't conserve momentum of the stuff inside a box
23:33
i do see physically that momentum must be not conserved, but I would like to be able to see it in the math, too
i guess because i would usually try to deduce if the action is translation invariant directly. but in this case information about the action is encoded in these boundary conditions, so it seems one must deduce the translation variance through finding an implication given by the boundary conditions. but it is not super clear to me how statements about a transformed field no longer being a solution translate into statements about the action
because i think it seems clear that a translated field (by a non-zero translation) simply cannot satisfy the boundary conditions, so is no longer a solution to the equations ofm otion.
I'm not really sure what the question is
say i have a 1D string with fixed end points with boundary conditions $\phi(0) = \phi(L) = 0$.
suppose $\phi(x)$ is a solution. That is, it satisfies the Euler-Lagrange equation obtained by stationizing the action with the given boundary conditions.
Q1: is $\phi(x + a)$ for nonzero $a$ a solution to the E-L as well?
why are we talking about solutions to the e.o.m.?
symmetries of the action are different from symmetries of the e.o.m. which are different from symmetries of the solutions of the e.o.m.
I guess I thought that is the most direct way to show if the action is not translation invariant
hm I see so I mistakenly thought that how solutions transform would tell me about how the e.o.m. would transform
okay then my question becomes this. The original boundary conditions were $\phi(0) = \phi(L) = 0$. If I translate the coordinates to the right by $a$, are the translated boundary conditions $\phi(-a) = \phi(L - a) = 0$?
i guess heuristically, i can see if I pick up my string system and spatially translate it, the system does not look the same because the boundary points at the very least have moved.
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