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00:04
Since we are cats you expect us to bite, don't you? That's prejudice
those cats were biters lol
@qwerty I was expecting big news about cats, got news about big cats lol
@SirCumference hehehe was intentional xD but maybe it's big news about big cats? :p
 
1 hour later…
01:41
Ha. Sorry, it's just, I'm a bit imaptient
02:19
@Relativisticcucumber You should be able to see this rigorously directly from Maxwell's equations. The relevant equations are $\nabla\cdot E=\rho$ and $\nabla\times E=-\partial_t B$ and if you assume magnetostatics, then it also kills the $\partial_t E$ term in Ampère-Maxwell law, and then it is extremely clear that nothing moving is contributing to the E field. @VincentThacker @qwerty @Mr.Feynman @SirCumference
@SirCumference This is actually sad. If you really look at the theory as a whole, there was never any good reason to define the units in such a haphazard way; Heaviside's suggestion is absolutely sensible, and that is why HEP basically all uses Heaviside-Lorentz units. In such units, E field and B field have the same units, and for light waves, they have the same magnitude. Instead, what happens is that the Lorentz force law becomes $F=q(E+\frac v{\boldsymbol c}\times B)$ and that totally
explains why magnetic forces act on moving charges with a magnitude smaller by a factor of $v/c$
@qwerty JD Jackson is better, but beginners should not be starting with a graduate book. Especially for those who are not used to the maths of vector calculus and all, Jackson is just wayyyy too difficult. Griffiths was very happy when miao miao emailed him to thank him for his nice little book. @SirCumference his QM book is nice too, a simplification of others, just like his EM was a simplification of Jackson. Sadly he didn't use bra-ket.
@SirCumference it is quite a problem. sometimes miao miao finds myowself teaching English (as She is broken) at day job because they really didn't catch the meaning of the words in the code they are trying to work with.
02:47
@qwerty, do you get pings when people comment on the AfD discussion thread? You now have 2 other people saying it should be deleted yay~
@naturallyInconsistent yup it's on my watchlist. nice to see the WP:TNT tag lol as that had been my reaction when I first read it
03:09
@naturallyInconsistent interesting, I was told "Americans use Jackson, we use Griffiths" by someone at some point, so I didn't realise Jackson was graduate level. isn't Silly Goose TAing an undergraduate(?) course which uses Jackson for instance?
well, miao miao was good at maths and so also read Jackson as undergrad. it's doable, just a bit tougher
@qwerty miao miao thought that the "not textbook" tag is more relevant, though.
but yeah, it was so TNT
03:29
@naturallyInconsistent yeah the seasoned editor knows how to classify/tag and the correct things to say. part of why I asked here if anyone had experience.
04:11
@qwerty i am TAing an undergrad course that uses Purcell’s text on electromagnetism
In my (small) experience, jackson is quite a nice book to reference electromagnetism concepts. However, quite a needless time sink as a pedagogical resource. But that is my opinion.
The EM course i am currently taking takes some problems from Jackson which have been pretty good. The course content itself is taught out of prof’s lecture notes, though.
The only thing i think i learned out of jackson is solving laplace’s eqn in cylindrical coordinates as that problem is not treated in general in griffiths or zangwill (?).
@SillyGoose ooh, I see. is Purcell any good in your opinion?
I detest purcell (the book)
haha, how come?
its content is very long-winded and relies heavily on “physical intuition”. The problems in the book also heavily rely on “physical intuition”.
But the “physical intuition” employed is not very convincing to me.
Although to be fair this is the first of three required EM courses that physics students at this institution have to take. I assume they get a more systematic view of EM in the latter two courses.
04:49
It can go either way. Later courses can be extremely technically challenging, and that might require absurd levels of physical intuition to even attempt solution. Or it can go very mathematical and redo the absolute basics in diff geo. I don't think there is any course that combines the tools of maths phys and solving actually horrible problems.
 
2 hours later…
06:20
hi
06:56
hi
 
3 hours later…
09:49
> In the context of GR, we may in practice forget the conceptual distinction
between a point in a manifold and its coordinates, and so we may use 'diffeomorphism' and 'coordinate transformation' interchangeably, despite
the fact that the former is strictly speaking more general
this gives me heeby jeebies, this idea of blurring distinctions. is it just standard though?
> what physicists call GCTs (General Coordinate Transformations) is what mathematicians call diffeomorphisms, perhaps modulo some insignificant nuances like whether only the part of the diffeomorphism group that is connected to identity constitutes as a GCT or whatever else.
https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/638191/92181
good morning
morning tobias
i mean, pseudo-tobias
@qwerty that deeply misguided statement there is the core reason all the discussions around "diffeomorphism invariance" are so horrible :P
09:58
@qwerty :d
@ACuriousMind will you be explaining?
Proper differential geometers would never claim that one may forget the "conceptual distinction between a point and its coordinates"
@ACuriousMind I knooowwww. but he hedges with "in practice"... so... >.<
sighs
the correct phrase is "in bad practice" :P
eee I can't speak poorly of this person as I know and respect them, so, uh. no comment
10:02
but, sadly, it's also true that it is to a large extent "standard" in physical treatments of math
your answers I saved from phys.SE on this topic are finally starting to make more sense than just strings of jargon
physics.stackexchange.com/a/424199/92181 this seemed like a nice simplified summary
I think "learning" (by which I mean, learning a few paragraphs off of wiki) of category theory did help to organise all the definitions in my head
This error of acting as if coordinates are conceptually equivalent to the abstract objects they describe isn't only a problem in GR, by the way - the question about Noether's theorem being a trivial consequence of how integrals behave under coordinate change I answered here would never have come up if the physicists were more careful about that point
@qwerty WTF, comments on ACM's answers are answers in and of themselves...
@naturallyInconsistent could it be because you can't add images to comments? i've not tried...
@ACuriousMind i've had working out the veracity of “The fact that the coordinate values do not change, while the tensor fields do, distinguishes the diffeomorphism from a simple coordinate transformation. An important implication is that, in integrals over spacetime volume, the volume element $d^4x$ does not change under a diffeomorphism, while it does change under a coordinate transformation...
... By contrast, the volume element $\sqrt{|g|}d^4x$ is invariant under a coordinate transformation but not under a diffeomorphism.”
on my to do list for a while now because it was from that pdf you said was absolutely trash months and months ago (before I was a regular here)
>what about gauge transformations? In GR, this notion is extremely specific and application-oriented, because it only concerns perturbation theory.

this is from the person I respect, but, did not quite ring true. but perhaps it's just (another) overloaded term. iirc there isn't even a definition of gauge that pleases mathematicians; it's the next thing I need to nut out after the diffeo stuff.
10:43
@ACuriousMind I know you hate the whole passive v.s. active thingy, but reading your answer on the Noether's theorem, it seems like you are very much pushing that it is only interesting in the active sense; does it not also work in the passive sense? That is, does there not exist a way in the rigorous mathematical formalism to express the passive kind of isometry?
wait, when did ACM say he hates the active vs passive distinction?
Aug 8 at 13:08, by ACuriousMind
And again, I don't like the active/passive terminology to begin with - it's silly and I've never seen any actual mathematicians talk that way about transformations or coordinate changes. I cannot explain its details and will not defend it.
ooooh thanks. Baez does though, in his book
I'm fairly sure that's where I first read it
miao miao also likes passive v.s. active, but ACM doesnt, and it takes time to understand enough maths to understand ACM's objection
i also use this terminology. but it is sometimes confusing
e.g. some QM books would claim that $U^{\dagger} A U$ is passive transform, which is complete non sense
they say that when the operators evolve, it's passive. And when the state evolves, it's active
10:52
as is usual with you, the books can be correct and you are yet again arguing out of your depth with your incessant misreadings of stuff
i am not mis-reading anything. An actual passive transform is a change of basis, which would transform both the state and operators
transforming either one of them and leaving the other unchanged is an active transform
You just can never be wrong
i have a post explaining this distinction which i can link if some people don't blindly downvote without reading
the distinction between active and passive is extremely clear
It is also extremely clear that it is vastly more likely that you have misread what those authors are saying than having discovered a common flaw.
it is well known that books don't use these terms clearly, which is why the terms have a bad reputation in the first place
my post explains these terms in a consistent way
11:02
If it has bad rep, it would not be in such common use. ACM has a rigorous objection that he can properly state and explain. Yours may be consistent, but it is much more likely to be yet another example of your many mistakes.
um, @ACuriousMind is it okay if you please remove the starring of the "in bad practice" comment as I quoted someone I know. no worries if you don't think it's uncalled for, but I'm just slightly uncomfy with it being starred
@qwerty lol, sorry, even for meow meow it is too late to undo. you'll really need mod help on that
But I kinda think that you might be a tad bit too reticient. Maybe the one you are respecting, would be happy to be rightfully criticised~
we can remove it
thanks acm :)
try to keep in mind that these chats are Google searchable :-)
11:16
lol really?
::returns to Siberia::
(where we still have access to Google :)
In this image, the author is trying to derive a general expression for diffracted planar waves on a sample.
He gives a formula for the wave inside the sample by:
$\Psi_p(t)=\Psi_o exp(ik(L+r)-i\omega t) $
(so far so good!)

He then says, we will allow diffraction. Each point p inside the sample sends out a spherical wave, which its amplitude and relative phase are modeled by complex scatter density.
(i understand this part) So we multiply $ \rho$ with original term.

What i do not understand is the last part. Where he writes $exp(ik'(L'-r)$ divided by the norm. What is this exactly? The pl
If i am standing at B and only watching P. Then the exponential term would be just the equation for the wave emitted from P. and psi and rho are its amplitude.
but why divide by the norm of the vectors? i am trying to find an explanation to the reason why we multiply all these quantiites
11:46
@Madder your problem lies with the first statement. These are not plane waves. They are spherical waves, which is much more physically sensible than plane waves in this context.
12:00
Is the definition of the step function the opposite of what is said here?
12:11
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/2205900_Local_bulk_operators_in_AdSCFT_and_the_fate_of_the_BTZ_singularity
https://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0612053
I found many papers claiming that the local field operators are supposed to be smearings of boundary observables of the CFT in AdS/CFT
@ACuriousMind is this consistent with ur answer physics.stackexchange.com/a/832225/156987
i think these approaches want to define QFT observables using CFT observables in string theories
@imbAF The usual definition of the Heaviside function is the opposite, yes, but no one forbids you to define some arbitrary step function the other way
I suspected so, but I thought of checking
thanks
according to these, the only real observables are at the boundary. And the QFT observables are in the low energy limit
but they r defined in terms of the CFT observables
@ACuriousMind which seems to contradict ur answer
but u mention what string theory textbooks do. maybe this is more recent research
12:44
@ACuriousMind Any idea what the inner product in 2.2 is numdam.org/article/AIHPA_1979__30_2_129_0.pdf
@naturallyInconsistent i like utilizing physical insight. I disagree with purcell’s sole reliance on it though.
Are you asking for food too?
feed us
@naturallyInconsistent But how does that explain the multiplication of this term?
12:52
@qwerty you're not a cat ssssssh
@Madder The new wave out is a spherical wave, and that is the spherical wave's form, so what even is the question?
@Mr.Feynman yeppuuu
@Slereah I think it's just a strange notation for contraction of covectors with vectors?
in my usual notation I would write this $(J^\ast \alpha)(X) = \alpha(JX)$
Could be I guess?
He doesn't seem to define it
I thought that too looking at it, but it can't be it. I can't understand something posted by Slereah :P
Also is it me or is the vector J just the vector version of dual numbers
Just like an almost complex structure $J^2 = -I$, but here it is $J^2 = 0$
its name as the almost tangent structure certainly makes it intriguing
13:03
Slereah, I was wondering: since you read a lot of papers, how much of those do you actively remember?
Not saying that remembering is important, just wondering
13:15
None of them
My mind is a blank
I mostly roughly remember where the papers I want are
that is why I make a lot of bibliography-heavy notes
@naturallyInconsistent See, the reason I hate the active/passive distinction is because it doesn't map neatly onto the (much more useful, in my view!) coordinate/abstract object distinction I'm making here. I don't even really know how a "passive" transformation (or, really, the "coordinate change" = "diffeomorphism" logic) on a manifold with more than one coordinate chart is supposed to work.
People define this notion in the context of vector spaces and then act as if it still makes sense on manifolds without elaboration :P
@naturallyInconsistent right that makes sense. and also thanks @SirCumference your answer also clarified
@ACuriousMind i feel like "it" makes more sense there, no?
@Relativisticcucumber I was saying it makes perfect sense from the viewpoint of a non-native speaker in whose native language the referent of the pronoun is grammatically masculine
@SirCumference right that makes sense thanks
@ACuriousMind oh
yes i see
i think i had the inverse trouble learning spanish XD
@Slereah which is what really matters at that level
13:28
but then when i saw the measure words of chinese i was praying to go back to spanish
but at least the chinese measure words are logical
@Relativisticcucumber how many languages do you speak? :o
@qwerty one XD
hehe
but i took 3 years of chinese while living in china and 4 years of spanish in high school so i can read and speak some of both
not much tho sadly
that counts
13:31
@ACuriousMind i learned a german phrase recently
@Relativisticcucumber in the same vein, if I don't think about it I have the grammatical instinct to use 'she' for you not because of any belief I have about your natural gender but simply because the word for cucumber is feminine in German :P
@ACuriousMind LOL
also my new german vocabulary is 'wir suchen dich'
it means we're hiring, right?
oh no
yes, yes it does
did i make a mistake
0.0
literally it's "we're looking for you"
13:33
that sounds wrong o.o
@Relativisticcucumber I think I forgot again you are from the US plz don't hate me 😭
@ACuriousMind passive/active is just when you move the coordinates versus moving the entire universe
i learned it because of the reason u might assume someone who knows german would pass around this phrase to people who know english XD
Just lift the universe and move it 3 feet to the left
@Mr.Feynman my alter ego is chinese man bc of u
13:34
@Relativisticcucumber no but I understand perfectly well why that phrase is funny to anglophones :P
@Mr.Feynman honestly i take it as a HUGE compliment if i dont come off american
@Slereah sounds good just give me a long enough lever...
@ACuriousMind hehe
@Relativisticcucumber lmfao
Moving the whole universe was actually an argument of... Leibniz, I think?
Or possibly Leibniz quoting an earlier medieval philosopher
13:35
on that topic I have mental images of people in the chat that could be completely off
@Relativisticcucumber yes, most definitely
@qwerty ive been told im a chinese man -- is that ur mental image of me
> no eye, wherever in matter it might be placed, has a sure criterion for telling from the phenomena where there is motion, how much motion there is and of what sort it is, or even whether God moves everything around it, or whether he moves that very eye itself
@Relativisticcucumber no but from your comment about drinking boba, young asian(-american?) woman...
I really hate dynamics because they just can't decide on a common nomenclature
13:38
apologies for the stereotyping lol
canonical / liouville form, tautological / canonical form / symplectic potential, etc
im the pope
imagine if that was true lmao
ok time to read no cloning c u all
@Relativisticcucumber I have settled with "chinese girl" a long time ago (if I'm wrong I'm sorry I'm gonna delete this account :( bye)
@Mr.Feynman LOL bro the thing is i am p sure i already told u im not asian XD
which means i must give off STRONG asian vibes
13:41
maybe it's just from association with silly goose, or did I get that wrong too? LOL
@Relativisticcucumber I know you're not Asian but I periodically get confused :P
Guy vs girl has been a major point of confusion too
First I thought guy, then you said girl so now I remember girl
@qwerty yes, it is
feminine response: hehe masculine response: -.-
wait i never said my gender XD
Omg that's true girls "hehe" a lot
WHY
@Relativisticcucumber AAAAAAAAAH you're gonna kill poor me
but im positive naturally is a male and i think naturally hehes too so who knows
13:42
@Slereah when it comes to jargon there should just be one jargon word per technical meaning. i find even mathematicians are like that, just synonyms everywhere.
ok i must flee ciao !
The word "canonical" should probably be banned
@Relativisticcucumber nI is gay tho soooo
@Relativisticcucumber bye bald eagle cry :p
@qwerty i am indeed actually asian XD
I am too lol
13:45
Also, I am having trouble proving the claim that $I \otimes A \otimes I = B \otimes I \otimes I$ iff $A, B$ are simultaneously diagonal.
IT is conceivable that this statement is true, but I am wondering if there a way of proving it using a tensor factor permutation operator and showing that only diagonal matrices commute with it
or something like that
@qwerty Ah
What is going on here
Wait until we learn that ACM is American
@Mr.Feynman nationality vs ethnicity?
Yes, of course, I'm just learning it now :P
I haven't really made a secret out of my identity, you can find youtube videos of me giving talks for work stuff :P (I'm the first guy here, for instance)
13:56
OMG ACM videos. I could only find you on google
@qwerty I remember you saying that you speak Chinese. Didn't remember the "heritage" part
Now I can mentally read your messages with your voice yay
Come on, I can't be the only one having voices reading things in my head
Australia in major cities is very multicultural, imo more so or differently than Europe (at least the parts I visited when I last travelled there; i guess things may have changed). when i was living in southern europe briefly I used to have people (to be fair, mostly middle-aged/older people and immigrants) refuse to believe where I was from.
Incidentally, I get confused because in Italy, especially where I live, nationality and ethnicity almost always coincide
14:04
@naturallyInconsistent I see
Ok, "coincide" is an improper way to say it
well, the only Australian ethnicity is Aboriginal, and they are unfortunately very much a minority
Italy - heritage wise - has has a strong mix of ethnicities over the centuries, so what I call "Italian ethnicity" would be the mix of all of those
@Mr.Feynman I don't know that I trust you to get it right:P chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/71?m=66551638#66551638
@qwerty I was talking about ACM's voice :P
I haven't heard yours
14:07
ooops
too many overlapping messages, apologies
@ACuriousMind you actually do look a little different than I imagined xD
I'm disappointed. I thought he would mention gauge theories
14:22
there are too many structures on TTM
fqq
fqq
14:55
@ACuriousMind do you do live conferences with q&a?
Someone needs to sneak in an somehow ask about diffeomorphism invariance
i knew that was coming lol
@fqq ...sometimes, yes :P
i'm tempted to subscribe just to possibly witness this live torture event
@fqq I hereby declare that this is now a canon event
If I have some curves described by $\varphi=\text{constant}$ where $\varphi$ is a complex scalar field, the tangent vector is proportional to $\nabla \varphi \times \nabla \varphi^*$ where $*$ is the complex conjugate. Why?
15:02
@Mr.Feynman ooo could we all gatecrash and have a hbar virtual meetup
An hbar virtual meetup would be very cool, I agree :P
It would bring this chat's unhingedness to the next level
i'll find out you don't actually look like richard feynman LOL
I don't actually look like RPF
Not as handsome and smart :P
But sometimes when I do physics, I don't know why but that Brooklyn accent briefly kicks in
@fqq but really if you manage to relate what I talk about for work with diffeomorphism invariance, I'm impressed :P
15:17
I don't think fqq's intention was to offer that kind of contribution to the livestream :P
sports have streakers, nerd conferences just get people yelling diffeomorphism invariance
And then ACM would have to guess who was the intruder :P
throw in a few MIAOs and HONKs to confuse him
That might actually make it easier :P
For example Slereah would never MIAO
ooft, true
15:29
@Mr.Feynman That's not useful information, I would recognize Slereah by the French accent alone :P
We are talking about an intruder in the chat of the stream now
But anyways, if you ever plan to really do a hbar unofficial online meeting, I'm in
6
that would be pretty fun
15:47
I'll cosplay Feynman
Gonna get that XL old style white shirt
@ACuriousMind it's true, I'm the last frenchman
@Slereah that sounds so ominous
 
1 hour later…
17:02
Hello all
Sorry that we got off on the wrong foot
I'm Michael, I'm building a person-powered aircraft
I'd really love a partner, or even mentor
17:15
hello Michael
Hi
@user430580 how are you?
I'm quite okay, nothing too fancy, just chilling out at Friday evening, and you?
Same, just chilling, looking for a cofounder for an aeronautics and biomechanics project
If not a cofounder then a mentor
Uhm, Michael, the issue was not your tone or choice of words. The request itself was - uhm - difficult to understand. What is a mentor for you?
Like, do you want an Obi-Wan?
17:46
@Mr.Feynman I mean someone who I can talk to if I have physics problems. Someone off of whom I can bounce ideas
As well
Sorry, I don't watch much Star Wars
18:01
We're all Sith
@Mr.Feynman doubt it
there are always two
A master, and an apprentice
18:15
@Relativisticcucumber yay
@ACuriousMind But that just means that you cannot mathematically implement the equivalent of a passive transformation; I'm not sure whether that means you don't understand it... I mean, it is clear and obvious that the concept of an active transformation could be implemented as a global vector flow that transforms every curve; surely something similar exists for the passive case too?
@Mr.Feynman yay!!!
@Mr.Feynman miao miao iz with ya
@naturallyInconsistent 1. The group of diffeomorphisms is, in fact, not the same as the set of transformations that are flows of vector fields, cf. MO. (But this is a nitpick)
2. There is no "group of coordinate transformations" I know of. If you have two coordinate charts $(U_1,\phi_1),(U_2,\phi_2)$, then the coordinate transformation between them is merely a diffeomorphism $\phi_2\phi_1^{-1}$ on the coordinate spaces of the overlap $\phi_1^{-1}(U_1\cap U_2) \to \phi_2(U_1\cap U_2)$, not on the manifold, and you cannot stitch this together to get a global diffeomorphism
the reason physicists always get away with this identification on a technical level is that they never take manifolds seriously and work only in a single coordinate chart that covers the entire manifold (e.g. spherical coordinates which cover the entire sphere) so that these overlaps are the entire manifold
@ACuriousMind errm, did I claim anywhere that they are equivalent? I think I only claimed that one is the subgroup?
we might have a different understanding of what "could be implemented" means in what you said
but what I'm saying is that if you use "active transformation" to mean "diffeomorphism", then it is not true that every active transformation is the flow of a vector field
18:30
@ACuriousMind Sure, that is definitely possible
@ACuriousMind I avoided diffeomorphism because I am not familiar with that terminology, even if I might actually have learnt it some time back
Okay I am familiar with MIAO MIAO and know the background. Now please tell me, what is the background lore for "HONK"?
The only kinds of active transformations that physicists talk about are invariably rigid global translations, global rotations, global Lorentz boosts, and so forth. i.e. the standard Noether's theorem set.
@user430580 silly goose
@naturallyInconsistent So in English, the sound of a goose is "honk"? I would never guess, thank you!
yes
@ACuriousMind just to be painfully clear, are you saying that if the overlaps cannot cover the entire manifold, then the passive viewpoint fails to exist?
@naturallyInconsistent I'm saying it's at least not as simple as saying that a coordinate transformation "is" a diffeomorphism when we have more than one chart.
and I've never seen anyone who bothered to work this out properly - mathematicians don't use this confusing terminology, physicists don't care about charts
18:37
Oh sure; but I dont see physicists ever claiming all these passive active business in terms of diffeomorphisms either
I was under the impression this was the entire point of our discussion :P
lol that cannot be; as mentioned, I cannot trust myow own memory to keep all these maths terms straightened out, due to lack of use
@naturallyInconsistent but now that I read your original question again: Yes, I guess I am saying there isn't really such a thing as a rigorous notion of a "passive" isometry (or diffeomorphism).
diffeomorphism, isomorphism, isometry, automorphism, really can melt faces off
@ACuriousMind phew, ok. Does this mean you know it cannot exist, or that it might exist, that just nobody had ever found it (and published widely enough to make it known)?
in each individual instance where physicists talk about such things I can figure out what they really mean, but it doesn't map onto a single equivalent mathematical notion
18:42
ah, you mean that there are multiple meanings, mapping to different mathematical notions
it's less that it doesn't exist, and more that they pretend things are quite simple when in fact they are quite complicated :P
The opposite feeling is what they inspired in meow! It is always presented as some deep mystical truth...
I mean, this kind of truth has be mystical as it is certainly not rigorous ;P
nah, miao miao hath seen too many mystically presented rigorous nonsense
anyway, thanks. That cleared many things up
and it is beyond time to sneeeppuuuu so good night yall
19:02
good night
19:15
Good night 💤🐈
That's because passive and active transformations are physical notions, course
They only map imperfectly onto math!
19:33
@user430580 LOL I never thought of this
so animal sounds differ btw languages?
They do, I'm sorry I don't have any example, but I'm 100% sure they are different to the point that knowing a sound in one language doesn't help you recognize it in other laguage (in writing, that is)
im so fast my cucumber utterances are mega doppler shifted so I sound like wheeeeoooooooeeeeeoooooooooooo
@user430580 I think u r correct bc I think I learned the sound of a frog is ribbit but my Chinese friend told me its guaaa in Chinese
there were many frogs at my parents old house and what they uttered sounded nothing like ribbit or guaaa
I found example for dog: woof woof (English), guau guau (Spanish), wang wang (Chinese), bau bau (Italian)
19:37
actually I can see the ribbit if you say it right
wang wang??? no way
wait actually
I can see it
@Relativisticcucumber frogs go 'quak' in German
@ACuriousMind like an American duck??
I associate "ribbit" with frogs, but I would never guess myself that "guaaaa" is for frog :P
19:38
@user430580 the Chinese r toying w us
@Relativisticcucumber the 'a' is a longer sound than usually in "quack", but yes
@Relativisticcucumber There is a joke which says that the physicist's duck does "quark quark" :P
@ACuriousMind hm ok I can see it bc another American English sound for frogs is "croak" so maybe they r similar?
@user430580 lol so bad
but ducks also go 'quak'
LOL what the
what r the germans doing
19:40
which sometimes leads to children learning that asking if frogs and ducks can understand each other :P
LOL
absolutely
idk which is worse the germans abuse of quak or diffeomorphism invariance
lol
@Relativisticcucumber being efficient
20:06
For the following lagrange density of N fermions with mass m:

$\mathcal{L}=\sum_{i=1}^N\bar{\psi_i}(i\not\partial-m)\psi_i$ I was trying to calculate the equations of motion. I simply want to know if what I got is accurate, that way I know that my understanding is also accurate:

$\frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial(\bar{\psi}_i)_j}=(i\not\partial -m)(\psi_i)_j$

$\partial_\mu\frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial(\partial_\mu(\bar{\psi}_i)_j)}=0$

So for $\bar \psi$ one gets: $(i\not\partial -m)\psi_i$
Therefore the eq. of motion is: $\bar{\psi}_i(i\not\partial+m)$
20:30
@ACuriousMind always the orange Germans
20:48
@ACuriousMind have you seen Baez's Gauge fields, knots, and gravity?
he does it all - charts, contra/co-variant, active and passive.
@ACuriousMind apparently better than physicists and mathematicians
@qwerty I just looked at it and yes, sure, he defines the terms exactly as I would have above - the active transformation is a diffeomorphism on the manifold, the passive transformation is a switch on a single chart/on the overlap of two charts. But that's a silly definition because it just means those are two different things, while everyone else who uses active/passive terminology acts as if these are two different viewpoints of the same thing
00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

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