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00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 23:00

13:00
why are QFTs so localized anyway
are they?
Like we wouldn't expect some Dirac state of ~ 1 electron to be spread out over a giant area
why are they so typically particule-looking?
why don't they spread out
also it reminded me of that E=mc^2 thing where you have something emit two photons leftward and rigtward
what is that "thing"?
@Slereah What do you mean? The generic particle state of a QFT we write down is a momentum eigenstate that's probably as delocalized as it gets, no?
@ACuriousMind I mean in practice
In experiments a single electron is typically close to a coherent state on a small region, no?
13:02
@LeakyNun this is conflicting with the idea that all electrons have the same mass
Why isn't the natural state of an electron to be spread out over 3 light years wide cubes
@Slereah what do you mean by "natural state" :P
all the electrons you can find in a world are bound to something and hence start localized
when you "free" them, you typically do so by ripping them out of their bound and shooting them in a particular direction
Would that be true say for instance, electrons in cosmic rays?
Are they expected to be more delocalized as quantum states?
But also if you look at cosmic rays, when they interact with a detector, it's typically very localized, too
i mean that's when you "collapse the wavefunction" right
@Slereah I guess if you mean a primary electron from lightyears away that one would be more delocalized - until you observe it when it interacts with the earth's atmosphere :P
there aren't a lot of ways to interact with electrons that don't localize or destroy them :P
13:06
Yeah but then I guess the question is, why do all our measurement process select specifically for localized states?
Why isn't a very delocalized electron just vaporizing the whole cloud chamber
could you say that such an electron would have been travelling towards all directions for 10000 light years, and then when it touched earth's atmosphere, those other directions all vanished into thin air?
@Slereah if you ask a Bohmian that's because there are only position measurements ;)
I never ask a Bohmian
and yet they always answer me
@Slereah There's a famous paper by Mott that shows why the cloud chamber traces look like classical particle traces
I guess maybe a very delocalized method of measurement would require some pretty strong interaction to be visible?
idk
Yeah but it's kind of just one thing
Why is it that pretty much all measurements are very local for electrons?
@LeakyNun You could say that but then you would start one of those pointless discussions about quantum interpretations :P
@Slereah I feel this is a weird question: A measurement apparatus is some device that sits locally in some lab, and we human observers exist locally at a point. How do you expect us to make "delocalized measurements"?
Maybe it's that whole "there's no coherent motion for very big ensembles of electrons due to statistics so there's nothing like an EM wave"
@ACuriousMind this is very interesting
@ACuriousMind quantum erasers
@ACuriousMind well for instance an antenna would measure EM waves in a somewhat delocalized way, at least
Like we're not measuring individual photons here
13:11
@Slereah sure, but photons as relativistic particles have questionable localization properties anyway :P
Yeah but we're in QFT, they all do
but the reason you get "delocalization" there is because the EM wave is a coherent state with millions of photons on average
you can't have similar coherent states for a fermion
I guess the question is about the unreasonable effectiveness of the particle model
Can't you have a big chaotic ensemble of delocalized electrons interacting with something
but the linked answer answers this in terms of correlation
I guess maybe partly the issue is also the electric repulsion
13:13
@Slereah but they will still have some "individuality" because each of them has to occupy a different state
once you interact with particle A it correlates with the probability of interacting with particle B on a straight line
Delocalized wavefunction of multiple electrons is probably not too stable
it would probably dilute easily until it's too hard to detect
in the bosonic case you just can put all of them into the same state and then the particle nature "dissolves" because you just have millions in the same state
@Slereah how delocalised? like molecular orbitals are basically this right
Well I guess electrons are pretty delocalized in metals
I think so anyway?
idk what we would expect the spread of a free electron to be there
13:15
there's still one per nucleus tho XD
Cooper pairs in superconductivity are "long-range correlation states"
perhaps that's more what you want
Could be
but then again superconductivity is not exactly the "natural state" of electrons :P
I guess maybe the problem is that when I think "particle physics" I think like scattering experiments
and so it's a bit biased towards very localized experiments
Does anyone have any sources describing Schrodingers views on QFT?
13:18
Also if I wanted to know what electron states are in materials I'd have to read condensed matter stuff and I really don't want to
does an excited atom have more, uh, mass?
Actually would the current of free electrons in a metal and its consequences be considered like some measurement of a very delocalized dirac field?
@LeakyNun slightly, yes - $E=mc^2$ holds
idk what electricity is like from a QFT point of view
@Slereah isn't what actually happens in conduction this horrible rabbit hole where you flip between "the electrons move very fast", "the electrons move very slowly" and "what does 'moving' even mean" at every step? :P
13:25
Well as I said
sounds like it would involve having to read CFT 😔
and not the good kind of CFT (conformal)
yeah, and that's the whole veritasium thing, which brought me back here
so we've gone full circle
@ACuriousMind and what is the correct answer?
@LeakyNun no idea, I'm not a condensed matter theorist :P
i mean, we all learnt that very simple picture of battery provides a gradient, electrons travel in the wire as the current, etc etc
yes, that's the first stage where "the electrons move very fast" :P
well we never learnt to calculate the velocity of the electrons tho
13:31
Don't electrons move very slow in the Drude model?
I guess we can ask the @SillyGoose about it when they've mastered the Drude model :P
@Slereah yes, I think so
they don't have to move fast, because they "push on each other" to deliver the energy
Like cm/s sort of speeds IIRC
if the gradient provides a constant force wouldn't they keep accelerating?
they don't move in a vacuum
there's "friction" due to bumping
So you get a terminal velocity sort of thing
13:42
@LeakyNun i would not word it like that, that's not how energy in an electric circuit works physics.stackexchange.com/questions/17085/…
@Slereah i tried to calculate it (i hope i haven't made any mistakes), assuming a copper wire of length 1 m and width 1 mm, and a current of 1 A
density of copper = 8.96e6 g/m^3
copper wire width 1e-3 m, length 1 m
volume = 3.14e-6 m^3
mass = 28.1 g
molar mass of copper = 63.546 g/mol
number of electrons = 0.442 mol = 2.66e23

assume current is 1 A, so 6.24e18 electron charges per second

if electrons travel at velocity v then
2.66e23 * v = 1 m * 6.24e18/s
v = 2.35e-5 m/s
@qwerty yeah i'm referring to the model that we all learnt in high school
or rather, implicitly assumed
@LeakyNun I don't think it's a different model
high school textbooks would just avoid mentioning it at all
13:51
@ACuriousMind so i tried to do that, i assumed the electrons have initial velocity u and final velocity v, and the photon emitted has frequency f, this gives us 2 equations with 3 unknowns, and i ended up with f = 2(1 - v/c)mc^2/h and u = 2c-v; is the contradiction that 2c-v would be faster than light?
I'm in love with this song..😭
yeah wolfram alpha agrees with u=2c-v
i wasn't expecting this to be the contradiction
@LeakyNun I mean that's certainly a contradiction. The specific contradiction you get doesn't matter, you can also get stuff like $c=0$, see physics.stackexchange.com/a/225538/50583
yeah i think we should really consider the shortcut of moving to the electron's initial reference frame
where the proof is just that you created energy from nothing
@ACuriousMind however this "slightly" is, is important because it has to explain how the emitted photon has any energy to begin with, right
@LeakyNun Sure - the energy difference between the excited and the ground state is exactly the energy of the photon
14:00
and to be clear their rest mass is different
like it's a real thing
yes, it's the rest mass - the atom does not need to be moving to emit the photon
We don't typically care much because energy differences in chemical reactions are usually pretty small as a percentage of total mass
although it is more significant for nuclear reactions
14:30
so the real issue is really that all electrons have the same mass
and the reason is that "because it is"?
I'm not sure why it's an "issue", but it's certainly the case that all electrons have the same mass - otherwise you wouldn't call them all electrons, the rest mass is one of the defining characteristics of a particle species
@ACuriousMind because an atom can emit photon by losing mass
whereas an electron cannot
because all electrons are the same
but not all hydrogen atoms are the same
I think the "losing mass" part is the wrong thing to focus on
It's all the same electron
The relevant distinction is that the atom is a composite system with internal states of different energies. The electron is a fundamental particle without internal structure, so it has no "excited states" when it's on its own.
14:39
yeah, it's like, if the proton has the same mass and the electron has the same mass, "what" is storing the extra mass?
which is when you're introduced to e=mc^2 right
not really, QM/QED courses usually never discuss emission in terms of this mass, because as Slereah said the mass difference is practically completely negligible
well, energy if you want to put it that way
where is the extra energy
is it in the proton? is it in the electron? is it in the "vacuum" between them?
@LeakyNun What does that question even mean? "Where" is the energy when you compress a spring?
in the spring molecules i suppose?
no but we have a medium in the spring
Energy is not an actual thing with a location or whatever, it's just a number we assign to physical systems
14:42
but it's vacuum in an atom
perhaps a better analogy is: "where" is the energy something gains when you lift it up in the Earth's gravitational field? (hint: it's not "in the atmosphere" between the object and the Earth, gravity doesn't care about vacuum or not)
something something gravity doesn't exist you need more force to keep it from moving in a "straight line"
wait you actually need less force
uh...
you can do the same question with the electric force and two charged objects, this is not a trick question and general relativity is irrelevant
actually how does energy work in GR?
@LeakyNun not very well, but that's a completely different topic :P
in full GR you even have trouble defining an unambiguous notion of "mass" for everything, that's not what we're doing right now
14:48
@ACuriousMind uh... must be those virtual photons again
but yeah fair enough
when u say it's "just a number" does it have like little physical manifestation?
like you wouldn't say that velocity is "just a number" right
the traditional answer is that the energy is "in the electromagnetic/gravitational field", which is correct in the sense that you can write down an expression that integrates over the field and returns the energy "in it" but otherwise has very little concrete meaning
i mean can i transform it to something concrete like heating up water
@LeakyNun What I mean is there there is no characteristic that would be shared by all "forms" of energy except that their sum remains conserved
i see
you can measure specific "forms" of energy such as heat but there's nothing that can just measure "energy"
15:07
i have another question
when a mirror reflects a photon
uh, was the photon accelerated?
or is the answer "a photon has no speed and no path"?
oh, right, i remember hearing about that
i think i can still ask the same question
basically when a photon is reflected does the energy and momentum conservation thing applies to the mirror
that's not the same question as "was the photon accelerated?" :P
hmm
indeed
my original question was more like, if the velocity is +c this moment and -c the next moment does it mean it was 0 at some point
no, because it's not "the photon" that is somehow stopped and reverses direction
an incoming photon is absorbed by the mirror material, and a photon is emitted in the direction of reflection
15:20
28
Q: What happens when a photon hits a mirror?

user27182When a photon of light hits a mirror does the exact same photon of light bounce back or is it absorbed then one with the same properties emitted? If the same one is bounced back does it's velocity take all values on $[-c,c]$ or does it just jump from $c$ to $-c$ when it hits the mirror? Or, is t...

that is crazy
asking whether that's "the same" photon makes no sense since photons are indistinguishable
a massless particle interacting with a massive particle is crazy
they shouldn't be able to interact at all
@LeakyNun why?
@LeakyNun the whole of reality as it exists contradicts you :P
15:21
In response to your earlier question, energy is stored in the electric field around the hydrogen atom. When you excite the atom the field changes and the change in that energy is responsible for the change in mass.
i think if they were classical particles they wouldn't be able to interact
because a massless particle cannot but travel at c
I mean classically there are no photons, just EM waves
so the counterfactual doesn't make a lot of sense as there are no massless particles in the classical version of the situation
but people use photons to derive time dilation and stuff
like the "moving photon clock"
only if they're being silly :P
you can do all the special relativity thought experiments purely with classical light (that's what Einstein did), not photons
sure, it doesn't have to be an actual single photon clock i guess
it could just be a classical laser beam
ok but what does E=pc mean
what momentum, what is travelling
15:28
I mean the full equation is just $E = \sqrt{m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2}$
for something with rest mass $m$ and momentum $p$
@LeakyNun it's the second half of the equation. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy%E2%80%93momentum_relation
@JohnRennie right, but then ACM went on to say that this answer has little concrete meaning
yeah but if you say momentum then you're thinking about photons right
of course you can look at the case $m=0$, but purely classically, there really isn't anything with $m=0$
the photon is very much a quantum notion, and probably overused in such semi-classical explanations because people find it easier to reason about small billiard balls than waves
Gf course, if we accept that photons exist, then they have $E=pc$. But that's not a purely classical statement because photons are not classical objects.
15:31
@LeakyNun It's certainly true that you need to be rather careful about this as if the electron was a classical point mass there energy stored in its field, and hence the mass, would be infinite.
But changes in the energy stored in the field still make sense.
Which of us prompted the "huh"?
the mass would be infinite
PBS have just done a good video on this. Give me a moment to see if I can find it ...
That.
oh, thanks!
15:35
As popular science channels go that's a pretty good one.
@ACuriousMind yeah, but we still don't know how it happens, as you've put it it's magic
The presenter, Matt O'Dowd, is a working physicist.
@JohnRennie their, uh, black hole stuff was a bit confusing, and also their quantum eraser thing was also not as good as Sabine's explanation
Though he does look suspiciously like a werewolf.
Lol. He actually resembles a werewolf.
Or maybe he is. Who knows. Werewolves can do physics.
15:39
@JohnRennie I think he does AGN stuff
iirc
The level of his stuff on YouTube is a bit too low for most of us here in this chat, but I think he does an excellent job of explaining without over simplifying.
another question i have
i've seen it claimed somewhere that FTL (faster than light) leads to travelling backwards in time and hence paradoxes, and then Sabine said that "travelling backwards in time" makes no sense because a particle going left back in time is the exact same as a particle going right forward in time
who is correct?
none of that is specific enough to be "right" or "wrong" :P
"Back in time" is a meaningless phrase. The more accurate way to describe travelling backwards in time in your Delorean is to say there is a closed timelike curve.
and is that true?
15:51
The formal statement is that any spacetime that admits something you would describe as "FTL" has closed timelike curves.
Travelling faster than light allows the observer to travel along a closed timelike curve, though the process for doing this is a little involved. It involves acc eleration as well as travelling faster than light.
@ACuriousMind i'm not changing the spacetime, this is still SR, i have a particle that travels faster than light
@LeakyNun that's not possible
nothing with non-zero mass can travel at or faster than the speed of light, that's just baked into the structure of SR
15:54
See:
37
Q: What is so special about speed of light in vacuum?

java_doctor_101I will try to be as explanatory as possible with my question. Please also note that I have done my share of googling and I am looking for simple language preferable with some example so that I can get some insight in this subject. My question is what is so special about $c$? Why only $c$. Its li...

It is a geometric property of spacetime.
@ACuriousMind If it's FTL shouldn't it be closed spacelike curves
@Slereah Hm? Closed spacelike curves are easy, just draw a circle on a sheet of paper :P
@ACuriousMind The hard part is finding a physical object that does that!
but I think you're right the "FTL" part of my statement isn't really right, I'm trying to remember what I mean
maybe I'm remembering one of the warp drive metrics to lead to CTCs?
15:59
Yeah typically anything that can mimic CTC via devious tricks can lead to CTCs
by the usual way that you'd do causal loops with tachyons
so explanations using space-time diagram like this:
are just wrong from the beginning?
do these explanations have any value?
I'm not sure what you mean
spacetime diagrams are perfectly fine and I don't know what we've said that would imply they're bad
it's using a space-time diagram to explain how FTL implies travelling back in time
whereas you're saying that the proper time isn't even defined etc. so none of this... wait
this explanation didn't require using the frame of the tachyon
it's the same way that light doesn't have proper time and yet they exist
we just can't ever jump to the frame of a light
@Slereah ACM's answer is correct (local detectors) but should be augmented: for extracting maximum precision in the measuring, we tend to want the detectors to be tiny. In the end, the detectors are always some entity localised in space (but amusingly, someone recently claimed to have detected stuff delocalised in time over the detector's spacetime region), but that does not mean that the quantum particle is localised; the detection could imply that the particle was delocalised
over part of the apparatus before arriving at the tiny detector.
@LeakyNun Chad Orzel in "How to teach Relativity to your Dog" covers the FTL -> BTT in quite the detail using spacetime diagrams. It is very very good.
right, but John's answer is basically saying that they can't have a proper time
i mean, to counter that point, i can say that we don't have to assume it's a particle
16:12
@naturallyInconsistent but as I said, not true of all detectors
@Slereah although Bloch states are maximally delocalised, you are always mathematically allowed to work purely in terms of localised states e.g. Wannier, and so your argument fails for the strict mathematical proving standards.
i can pick two points in space time, which would require FTL to travel from A to B
i can still consider those events
there's nothing actually travelling from A to B, so there's no "proper time" to consider
so we can proceed with the whole FTL -> BTT thing
@Slereah If your detector is large to the point of imprecision, that does not mean that it isn't localised. It would much more often just be that a localised part of the detector is doing the detecting and you are losing that information in the mundane, classical, manner
@LeakyNun no, you are just being sloppy in your argumentation. You should just check out the wonderful treatments
@ACuriousMind my objection here is that it seems like your answer is that FTL is just undefined already in SR so we shouldn't consider them at all, so we shouldn't even use a spacetime diagram
@LeakyNun The diagram you presented shoots a "tachyon" as its FTL object
16:15
yes
but we have not considered the frame of the tachyon
while I thought by "FTL" we wanted some actual observer to travel, in some sense, "faster than light", like with the warp drive metrics
it's just two different meanings of "FTL"
i see
so FTL object not observer
"can" exist in SR then?
this alleged tachyon would have to have imaginary mass (whatever that means)
@Slereah that's the biggest lie...
and even then the quanta associated with tachyon fields don't even travel "FTL", see this question and its answer
16:16
@LeakyNun It's a little more complicated than that (in relativity it's always a little more complicated than that :-)
If you allow FTL travel two fundamental principles in relativity become incompatible.
so yes, the things with the spacetime diagrams show...something, but it's not really clear what statement they prove: The existence of that "tachyon" is inconsistent with numerous other parts of physics, that it would lead to weird time paradoxes is perhaps the least of our worries
why are we going quantum here?
@LeakyNun I'm just explaining why I don't think the stuff with the spacetime diagrams really shows anything: They're just postulating something that contradicts numerous aspects of physics (a particle that can travel faster than light in the naive sense in Minkowski space) and derive another contradiction.
It's not wrong, but we're not really showing anything but that garbage assumptions yield garbage results :P
16:32
@ACuriousMind ok but when we're doing "naive" SR with clocks and twins and whatnot, nobody is asking "but what happens to the current in my electric circuit", right
@LeakyNun If you want to read a rigorous but not too hard book on this I can highly recommend Time Travel and Warp Drives by Everett and Roman.
if i travel as the same speed of the current the light shouldn't turn on
thanks
 
4 hours later…
20:13
hi yall
does anyone know how i can find this article in english?
"Zur Theorie der Kernmassen" by Weizsacker
unfortunately i do not speak german
21:06
When we write the Hamiltonian as $\mathcal{H}(\vec q, \vec p)$, where $\vec q = q_1,q_2,...q_i,..$ where i=1,...N
are the individual $q_i$ vectors themselves ?
@ACuriousMind @Slereah If by "electrons moving" in the Drude model you mean the drift velocity (the non-zero "average" motion) then there is a dependence on the strength of the applied electric field and some phenomenological time constant $\tau$; $v_{dr} \approx -\frac{e\vec{E}\tau}{m_e}$. For aluminum, $\tau = 8 \times 10^{-15}$ s at room temperature.
at a more course grain level, i suppose electrons in the drude model must move slow because the drude model is non-relativistic :-)
Or, I guess you could talk about the expected value of the speed of an electron in the Drude model, which is $\langle v \rangle$ taken w.r.t. the Maxwell speed distribution, which is of order $T^{1/2}$ (temperature).
21:32
at least that is my understanding :P
 
1 hour later…
22:53
@SillyGoose The true reason is that Drude model is still mostly classical and is still too wrong to obtain the correct semi-classical limit; quite a big chunk of the book is interested in getting you to learn the actually correct semi-classical picture.
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