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00:41
im hungry
does anyone have snacks
 
2 hours later…
02:36
@SillyGoose throws some frozen peas for the silly goose
03:16
chomp
In this paper, they are studying the decay of a particle of a scalar field into two particles of two other scalar fields. I have two questions.
(1) In textbook QFT, we would treat the incoming states and outgoing states as free particles (or plane waves). Also, total energy is conserved through the process. Hence, we would have that the "free" energy of the initial particles is equal to the "free' energy of the final particles.
however, in (3.8) we evidently have this $e^{i(m_\Phi - E_\chi(p) - E_\psi(p))}$ which is not taken to just be $e^{i0} = 1$
03:30
so it seems that we are not assuming that energy is conserved in our decay process?
I mean the final "physical" result (3.11) turns out to be energy conserving, but it is not clear that energy is conserved before that point
(2) Here, the $t \to \infty$ limit is being taken. it seems like a not-well defined quantity is hiding in the $\mathcal{P}$ of (3.10), is that right? It seems like $\mathcal{P} = \lim_{t\to\infty} e^{it\eta}$ for some constant $\eta$...
 
1 hour later…
04:58
@SillyGoose this is nothing special. conservation of energy and momentum is only enforced at infinitely far away from each other. In between, the vacuum state has all kinds of spurious nonsense; that is why we have no choice but to only ever talk about infinite past and future, never anything in-between.
@SillyGoose no, that P should be the Cauchy's principle value
 
2 hours later…
06:46
Is describing rotating bodies still a challenge to modern physics?
I wonder about this after knowing about intermediate axis theorem
@JohnRennie
@naturallyInconsistent
I don't think the intermediate axis theorem is a challenge to modern physics, though it may well be a challenge to modern physics students :-)
123
123
07:04
Hello Everyone...
 
1 hour later…
08:28
hi
Re Animator is an exciting horror movie
i give it 8 or 9 subjectively
it explores science obsession and difference between zombies and real people
 
1 hour later…
09:50
is Sabine conflating superdeterminism and contextuality
superdeterminism is the idea that the choices of experimenters are fixed in just the right way
Sabine seems to be arguing that contextuality is true, but instead calls it superdeterminism
wait, are contextuality and superdeterminism the same thing??
 
3 hours later…
123
123
12:43
Hi @RyderRude
@123 hi
123
123
I have made video for 1st law of motion. I will share you. It is basically in my language. But i have written everything in English. You will understand it what i am trying to say.
But i am very excited to make 3rd and 2nd law. Those are technical.
@123 ok :)
123
123
You and others helped me a lot in doing this. Big thanks for all of you.
u r welcome
123
123
12:48
: )
 
1 hour later…
123
123
14:04
@RyderRude Pls see above link for Newton's 1st law of motion.
Check and share if any mistake.
14:17
@123 hi.. it has no subtitles. can u pls share the english script
@123 u said u have written it in english
@MoreAnonymous hi
@RyderRude hey
How's it going?
i am great... Thanks
@MoreAnonymous i came across two slightly conflicting views about consciousness
@RyderRude which are?
@MoreAnonymous according to one, there is a universe which is made of consciousness substance and it has mathematical properties dissolved in it, which we discover as physics
And the other?
14:32
according to the other, there is a universe made of consciousness. it's just one thing. but sometimes, a part of it disassociates from the rest, and it emerges as a first person perspective like yours or mine. And then, from this perspective, the universe's properties manifest as physics
so the disassociated part is looking at the rest of it, from its disassociated perspective
Hmm ...
Is this panpsyicism?
yes, both of them
in this video, the proponents of both debate
they have debated two other times as well
I don't think progress can be made in such questions atleast not now
But I'll have a look
I've hears of bernado
great.. U were interested in this a while back
@MoreAnonymous Oh
he has some good ideas
@RyderRude true and then i got nowhere :p
There's this set if open problems by gabriel I'm interested in
@RyderRude yea I never really got how qft has something to do with disassociation
14:40
@MoreAnonymous this seems like they're trying to have some meta laws
laws which explain the laws we know
@MoreAnonymous Bernardo Kastrup believes that the wavefunction of QM is the state of knowledge, that a disassociated form of consciousness holds, about the rest of the universe
@RyderRude sounds like he has his own am interpretation
@MoreAnonymous it is a known interpretation. it's just relational quantum mechanics, kind of
@RyderRude ah I'm not that good qm interpretations... I personally just use Copenhagen
collapse is relative instead of objective, and collapse happens relative to a conscious perspective
according to this interpretation
@MoreAnonymous i am agnostic rn
@RyderRude so what would happen in winners friend
14:43
but Copenhagen is the easiest to work with
other interpretations are a mess
Wigner
@RyderRude yea ..
@MoreAnonymous so when the friend does the observation, the wavefunction relative to the friends perspective becomes : up or down. but wrt to Wigner, it becomes $|\text{friend saw up}\rangle |up\rangle + |\text{friend saw down }\rangle |down\rangle$
and when Wigner subsequenly measures the system, the state relative to him becomes $|\text{Wigner saw up, friend saw up, up}\rangle$ or the corresponding state for down (depending on what Wigner observes)
I'm using spin measurements here, as an example
it is a mess compared to Copenhagen
14:50
cya
123
123
@RyderRude basically I have written slides in english
@123 oh..
@123 yes. The slides are in english
123
123
15:08
Pls check if any mistakes in slides. Because I explained from slides.
15:31
@naturallyInconsistent Hi, I have one question regarding transitions between states, where the initial state of the system is an arbitrary one, an eigenstate $|m\rangle$ and after the turning on of some sort of disturbance, we want to find the probability of the system ending up in an eigesntate $|n,t\rangle$
I don't know if you are familiar with what I am talking or if you need for details about it
which I can provide if necessary
But the idea was that the probability of transition was:
$P_{m,n}=t\frac{2\pi}{\hbar}\delta(E_n-E_m)|\langle n|V|m\rangle|^2$, where V is the potential, which we take it as time idependent
This expression though, indirectly says that as time passes, the probability increases. And of course it can't be correct
So what is the interpretation here
Because, from that expression, dividing by t, one gets the transition rate, or fermis golden rule (for stationary states):$\Gamma_{mn}=\frac{P_{mn}}{t}=\frac{2\pi}{\hbar}\delta(E_n-E_m)|\langle n|V|m\rangle|^2$
@imbAF This is valid only for first order AND for extremely short times.
in a sense, Taylor expansion in terms of time, so then the linear transition probability with time is tolerable.
Can you expand on this? Because I don't understand what you mean with first order
and short times.
Why are we limiting ourselves to short times?
@DebanjanBiswas do not randomly ping people.
@imbAF because manifestly the result is nonsense if times are long enough that the probability exceeds 1.
So you make it make sense by dividing it by time?
Isn't that forced-making sense?
16:35
@123 it looks fine..
the definitions seem right. maybe also get it checked from a professor.
youtube.com/watch?v=cBIvSGLkwJY What do you guys think about this recent YouTube video? In short, she rants that physicists have wasted away decades working on things that they know are useless and/or completely incorrect and false.
is logic an empirical finding
some philosophers say that logical truths must be valid in every possible world
e.g. if A --->B and A then B
then this is not an empirical law. it must hold in every conceivable world
it would mean laws of logic are necessary true, instead of possibly true
a possible truth is something that happens to hold in our universe. and a necessary truth is something that must hold in every world
@Sahaj i think it's false accusations. string theorists def believe in their ideas
@Sahaj I wouldn't be surprised if syring theory was wrong personally
@Sahaj also, talking about actually useless things, Sabine is a supporter of superdeterminism -_-
she unironically believes in the stuff which almost everyone knows is both useless and wrong
@MoreAnonymous same
 
3 hours later…
19:58
A string theorist is kissing his secretary when his wife walks in. She bursts into tears and turns to run out. The string theorist yells, "Wait! I can explain everything!"
Progress in physics:
Newtonian mechanics can't solve the 3 body problem
Relativistic mechanics can't solve the 2 body problem
Quantum mechanics can't solve the 1 body problem
String theory can't solve the vacuum
The problem with physics jokes is that you don’t know whether they’re funny until you observe them.

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