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12:12
@ACuriousMind i don't really buy the "Users control the site" :p
I don't remember voting for the no fun rule
@Slereah Who decides such things? Mods? Community?
No idea
I don't read the meta board a lot
Clearly ACM's fault
And his evil plan to rule over the world
Well he is probably more in charge than me, certainly
acm may be the warlord of hbar, but world domination seems more like a slereah move
12:18
maybe we could all do research on some topic for fun
i mean we in hbar
I don't think this is going to work, honestly.
yeah, it is hard to make it work. but it could work maybe
i think maybe we could research moral philosophy and slowly make our theory. anyone can contribute. The topic is such that anyone here can research it
or anyone can suggest some other similar topic that anyone could contribute to
e.g. if u suggest some specific physics or math topic, most people wouldn't be able to contribute
but this is a physics chat :d
@RyderRude i don't mean to be unkind but given recent stars... why do still you think people here would be interested in that kind of thing?
I mean, you do you. But I won't start new research here, and especially note in philosophy ^^
12:23
@qwerty I think that Slereah is above such human desires, you are humanizing him too much
@qwerty i tried to think of a topic anyone can easily research.... sorry
research is basically never easy
maybe we could do research on GR instead
@TobiasFünke I was thinking about it a few minutes ago: except for the obvious reasons that wouldn't make it work, I imagined that we establish small research group here to escape the ruthless world of academia and... We end up establishing a similar dynamics with tyrant advisors and stuff like that :P
12:25
@TobiasFünke yeah..i don't think we can develop big ideas here. i meant this as a fun activity
It sounds like one of those complex systems studies
@HerrFeinmann Lord of the Flies reloaded
@TobiasFünke I was thinking more Le Guin's the dispossessed
Let's say that I'm not an avid reader
which is fantastic btw, and even features a physicist and advisor main plotline
12:27
Oh, I don't know this hehe thanks
yeah, I just read the Wiki article a bit hehe
@RyderRude so you seem to suggest something like a study group? If so, I think there are certain chat rooms for this here on SE
I have developed a problem with non-analytical reading
I'm so used to read a few sentences and go back and forth that I enter that mindset even if I want to read a novel
@TobiasFünke it would be more like the group trying to contribute new ideas for fun, building some theory. but I don't think it could work
I end up going back and forth to gather information and it breaks the immersion :(
as in, serious research requires expertise and extreme effort. if we just build some theory for fun, we know it is probably wrong. so we wouldn't be motivated to do it
and we can't do serious research here either. some people here do expertise in things, but they dont expertise in a common thing
yes, indeed
12:33
@HerrFeinmann i guess i can relate, audiobooks are a nice option
@qwerty It would make it worse, I would rewind :P
13:29
Hi meow
@TobiasFünke not really
If you can phrase it concisely in one or two sentences I can try to help
sorry, I got lost in the previous discussion
Its okay
I want to know why the non-interacting KE in KSDFT, given by the sum of the KEs of the KS orbitals, is the minimum non-interacting KE for any N electron wave function that produces that specific density
I see
let me think about it
That was what I gleaned from what I read
Does that sound correct?
Let me think :d I have some things to do and will ping you later
13:33
Okayyyy
@Allie it depends on what exactly you mean, I would say. Suppose $n$ is the ground state density of the non-interacting system, and suppose the ground state is non-degenerate, and thus can be expressed as a single Slater determinant. Then from the definition of the functional it should be easy to show that it is indeed the sum over the corresponding single particle kinetic energies.
But is this what you mean?
You are working in Levys constrained search formalism, correct?
I believe so, yes
I think I need to read more about DFT formalism
I understand much better but that still isnt much :P
Thank you!
See e.g. Levy's paper. It can be shown that the ground state is a wave function which minimizes the functional (here $T[n]$) for the given ground state density. Let's denote the ground state by $\psi_0$ and its density $n_0$. Then by this theorem and by definition, you have $T[n_0]=\min\limits_{\psi\mapsto n} \langle \psi,T\psi\rangle = T[n_0]=\langle \psi_0,T\psi_0\rangle$. Now if the ground state $\psi$ is non-degenerate, and we are in a non-interacting system, it is a Slater determinant
and thus you can express the expectation value as a sum over single-particle kinetic energies
It was just a quick thought now. I hope it is more or less correct, but you should really double check. better safe than sorry :p
Wikipedia article : "Freyd showed that z and s form a coproduct diagram for NNOs"
Who's Freyd
He's not in the bibliography!!!
[Don't show me who Freyd is, the point is the bad practice]
13:51
Thanks Tobias!
welcome. but as I said: please double check :p I don't want to spread fake news. If you have further questions we can discuss later, just ping me. Then I might have more time to think about it
@TobiasFünke I know there are many websites and papers, including wiki, asserting that KS DFT does Slater determinant, but that step is computationally intensive and way too strong when not doing molecules (they do, however, often do it for atomic and molecular codes), and so KS DFT does not need to do the Slater determinant step. It is literally not in the code, and rightly so, since in condensed matter, we know that the Slater exchange is too strong.
I did not talk about any implementation, just about the theory/theorems ^^
@TobiasFünke All the more to note that it thus does not have a Slater determinant in it...
@Allie btw, to properly answer your question one must start with a proper definition of the functionals (including domains). as I said, we might discuss later ^^
see e.g. the discussion in Eschrig's DFT notes or Parr and Yang section 7.3.; they explain it nicely, I think. Hope this helps.
Ok, g2g back to work haha
14:12
@TobiasFünke I'd fix this so: HK1 guarantees that there is a 1-1 mapping between $V_\text{ext}$ and ground state density $n$; HK2 says that $n$ is the minimiser of the universal Hamiltonian functional $\mathcal H[n]$. Now, you have many tolerable contenders for the XC functionals, i.e. not so far off that they are show-stopping in themselves, and you want to handle the biggest problem, the KE. Then consider minimising, instead, $$\mathcal H[n]-T[n]+T(\{\psi_s\})-\lambda(n-\sum_r|\psi_r|^2)$$
Where $\lambda$ is the Lagrange's undetermined multiplier enforcing the constraint that the fictitious non-interacting wavefunctions $\psi_r$ having to reproduce the ground state density $n(\vec r)$
Clearly, since $n$ minimises the universal Hamiltonian function $\mathcal H[n]$, if this thing is meant to be a sensible replacement problem at all, it should also minimise this new system. That's what the bait-and-switch is trying to assert.
(note that this minimisation is trivial: almost everything else is a function of $n$ and is thus taken to be constant, and only $T(\{\psi_s\})$ is going to change when you do the constrained variation. And yet you also know that this KE term is a quadratic with strict lower bound and no upper bound. If there is a stationary point at all, it has to be a minimum. And there are no other stuff to vary other than the $\lambda\sum_r|\psi_r|^2$ term. Obviously the whole thing is to be minimised.)
14:47
Do you happen to know a book featuring a similar graph for the SC energy gap?
@HerrFeinmann this is almost the same graph as the usual BZB band gapping plot...
Yes, exactly! I also searched some solid state books
Just in solid state I've seen it arising differently and I'm trying to connect the things.
In this case, I'm given this plot after finding the Bogoliubov spectrum $E_k=\sqrt{(\varepsilon_k-\mu)^2+|\Delta|^2}$
Where actually $\Delta=0$ outside of a small neighbourhood of the Fermi energy, so I suppose that's similar to when in solid state you compute corrections at the edges of the Brillouin zone
i havent studied solid state yet
15:18
I can't believe that my Prof replied the same day I sent the e-mail. Everyone told me it took weeks to even get a reply and they had to text every two days
It must be because I'm using L&L
15:50
@HerrFeinmann it's time to suggest an hbar project ;)
i tried to like obsidian...and i thought i did...but notion is just better
16:14
@SillyGoose time to raise the hBar
@qwerty would you recommend it to someone who didn't like The Left Hand of Darkness?
@HerrFeinmann About your point earlier, I think a research career in mathematics probably gives people a lot more room to explore. In hep-th, it seems like you have to just churn out papers for the first decade or so of your career if you want any chance of being competitive for jobs
Oh God, I've just learned that they hate us on /r physicsmemes
what haha
please give a link
do you mean us specifically or physics SE in general? :d
Am I allowed to?
I mean PSE
16:21
why should it be not allowed?
Meow!
16:44
We're discussing science fiction!! :-)
(as opposed to fictional science)
Oh no, physicsmemes is going to be a serious time waster :-)
16:59
@ACuriousMind good point. i will think further about this
@HerrFeinmann i have concluded ppl on reddit just hate everyone
in retaliation i boycott reddit
@Relativisticcucumber especially themselves ;)
Yeah reddit sucks its all cringy debatelords
17:20
:D
but they get thousands of upvotes lol
here you can be lucky if you get 10 :d
@naturallyInconsistent Sorry, I really don't see what you are trying to do here (it is late and I am exhausted from work, so this is due to me). But in general I don't see any problems in proving assertions using the fact that Slater determinant exist in the corresponding Hilbert space.
@TobiasFünke well, maybe you'll see my point tomorrow
...and if you minimize a functional of $N$ orthonormal single-particle states which yield a density via the usual formula, I guess it is equivalent to minimize over the set of Slater determinants in some sense
17:37
@TobiasFünke thanks for suggesting "THE UNREASONABLE EFFECTIVENSS
OF MATHEMATICS IN THE NATURAL
SCIENCES"
i am reading it now and so far it is very nice. i like this sentiment a lot, as it's smth ive been thinking about recently:
"How do we know that, if we made a theory which focuses its attention on phenomena we disregard and disregards some of the phenomena now commanding our attention, that we could not build another theory which has little in common with the present one but which, nevertheless, explains just as many phenomena as the present theory?" It has to be admitted that we have no definite evidence that there is no such theory."
yes
that's the "underdetermination of theories" as known in the philosophy of science
very interesting
and that's a strong argument pro "anti-realist" (all those words are very loaded, so I put quotation marks)
@ACuriousMind I think I finally understood wigner rotations lol
17:55
You mean you got used to them ;)
:p
@ACuriousMind Neumann would've said yes to it ;)
18:44
@Allie you are confusing me with your different colors :d
Meow
Meow!!!!
19:05
Where is the line between “getting used to” and “memory”
if you concede all is just getting used to, then you might as well memorize and let the “getting used to” run in the background
with memorizing only you cannot solve related problems
19:51
i also wonder to what extent these things are useful to think about. but the quote i put above is related to some recent concerns i have because i have been reading a paper that proposes a model. to keep it vague, after reading this paper i have the impression "sure this works, but it's rather simple, so surely it's not a unique way to model this situation, so to what extent is this a good model?" and im trying to think about if this is even a good question or not.
i just feel like if a model is good, it should have some "uniqueness" in that it captures things in a nontrivial way. but i also have the mentality that a model is not "right" or "wrong" but just a way to look at things, so these two mentalities are at a tug-of-war
so what is reasonable criteria for a good model :P
@TobiasFünke debateable. have you heard the chinese room thought experiment? i think this is what it's called.
i guess this is a natural thing to wonder about tho. i mean as a budding physicist we learn all of these ways to model things, then eventually one gets thrown into the world and told "now make your own models!"
@Relativisticcucumber I heard of it but I don't see a relation
@Relativisticcucumber I think it is really important to think about such things. In general, I think that philosophy of science is underrepresented in the standard physics curriculum. I mean, you don't have to study it for years, but some basic understanding and an awareness of problems is important
well this thought experiment is like "if all i do is apply a book of rules i become indistinguishable from someone who natively speaks the language" so i think it can highlight that, actually memorization done to a very high degree can lead to producing results that are indistinguishable from other types of understandings. i mean i think we can imagine a "physics book room" situation that works in quite the same way, no?
@TobiasFünke that does seem reasonable. ill continue to ponder this until i have some thoughts of my own on the matter.
is there a typo in 2.15b?
I get that 2.15a implies that $\tanh(2K_1)\tanh(2K_1^*) = 1$
separately, i seek thoughts on another controversial topic :P i am trying to improve my geography so that i do not fit the bad stereotypes of americans who dont know geography (admittedly before this endeavor i was quite bad) for those of you who aren't american, what do you all think about what standard knowledge of geography is elsewhere, and what constitutes a good working knowledge in other regions?
right now i am endeavoring to be able to label all countries on a world map. i am at about 80% accuracy, but i still have minimal knowledge of cities, capitals, flags, etc. i also need to look at an unlabeled map, it's still kind of hard for me to say "x country has neighbors a, b, and c" reliably :P so this is also smth i aim to improve
20:08
@Relativisticcucumber I don't know (and this perhaps reflect my bad geography skills hehe)
xD
germany is a particularly hard one i feel, i think i can name some of the neighbors
i will guess Austria, Belgium, netherlands, Switzerland, france
darn i missed a lot
In school we were taught geography at least 5 years or so, if I remember well (or even longer if one wanted to). Starting from basics like topography (what you mean), i.e. naming countries, cities, rivers, perhaps mountains and so on; then later to topics such as climate/whether, and also more human-centered
ooh i didnt think about natural things like mountains and rivers.
but as I said, I was never particularly good :d and forgot the very most things; shame on me
The teacher would, right after the lesson started, call one or two students to a big map and then asked questions in front of everyone
that could either be very fun or very traumatizing
20:14
yep
it was no fun
also mega shame on me bc i have been to denmark how could i leave it off -- off to review lol
ah cmon ^^
@Relativisticcucumber if you're interested there's a bunch of games I kinda like! maybe you already know them? worldle and there's one like geoguessr but it's a static photo you guess the year it was taken too called whentaken
20:37
@ACuriousMind shockingly I haven't read really anything else from le guin! I'm not really into a lot of sci fi in general, and I tried earthsea because my partner thought I would love it but I didn't get far. I will say that I'm not the biggest fan of her writing style from "the dispossessed" at the start - I found it a bit slow. I thought it picked up around 1/4-1/3 of the way through.
what interested me most about the book was the themes and ideas she explored about political systems (anarcho-syndicalism and capitalism and alien USSR analogue), and how that interacted with "doing physics".
Is mentioning pseudoscience controversial after last week? I have a serious question to ask
if that sounds like something you're interested in, then yes; if not, probably not? may I ask why you didn't like the left hand of darkness @ACuriousMind ?
@HerrFeinmann what happend last week???
There was a "heated" discussion overnight (I didn't take part in it)
aha
but just ask if you have a serious question
20:49
My question is (ACM, if you think this is controversial, feel free to remove): how you cope with it? The existence of pseudoscientific "knowledge" is probably the thing that I struggle the most to accept in this world, so I wonder if any of you has such strong feelings about it and most of all, any advice to cope with it. Few things can trigger my rage like hearing/seeing such things
how do you define pseudoscience? (keyword: Demarcation problem)
@TobiasFünke Well, in the hope this won't become semantics, I think the definition on wiki is fairly good:
>Pseudoscience consists of statements, beliefs, or practices that claim to be both scientific and factual but are incompatible with the scientific method.
In this thread a definition of the internal symmetry is given:
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/263489/what-does-it-mean-to-say-internal-symmetry

Considering the explanation given, does it mean that i.e. translational transformations/ rotational transformations and time transformations act on the spacetime and not on the qft?
But I'm probably talking about more extreme versions like astrology, to mention one. So, let's stay in the "bulk" and avoid "surface effects", considering the things that are unmistakably pseudoscience
@HerrFeinmann no, the Demarcation problem is a real unsolved problem in the philosophy of science.
but I feel you
20:53
"An internal symmetry is a transformation acting only on the fields, therefore not transforming spacetime points, and leaving the lagrangian or the physical results invariant. Example of internal symmetries are gauge symmetries. These are local symmetries, which means the transformations are in general spacetime dependent in the sense they are, in general, different for each spacetime point."

So internal symmetries don't act on the spacetime point, gauge transformations are internal symmetries, gauge transformations can be local, dependent on spacetime. Isn't this a contradiction ?
@TobiasFünke Ok, let me put it in this way. Since my plan is not to make a philosophical dissertation, I think there are some things that all of us here would consider as pseudoscience, at least de facto, like astrology (?)
Astrology is a good example, for the sake of discussion (but I could not resist to point out that it is really non-trivial :p), I think, because it is becoming a trend (again)
If you don't want to call them pseudoscience, let's invent another term. This is a discussion at the physics level of rigor, so no need to define the domain, just have a vague idea of what we're talking about :P
I don't know. I think astrology is harmless in the sense that it is not actively harming (other) people (?)
and as long everyone is minding their own business, so be it...
denying climate change or so is far worse, IMHO... I don't know how to cope with it, though :s
The comparison was unnecessary ^^ sorry for that
Oh, I'm not offendended, I was just looking for a reply
21:00
Humans are not rational creatures (?), and no-one is exempt from fallacies, stereotypes and so on. You must always question yourself and your believes, over and over again. I think too few people (try to) do so, and thus believe in the uttermost non-sense or hold very...questionable (?) beliefs. Does that make sense?
But I think there is a fundamental difference. Even if it's not the most common situation, religion and science are compatible, in the sense that they are independent. The Bible and other religious texts are not interpreted literally (I'm thinking about things like Earth being 10k years old, to mention one) and you just have no real superposition between religion and science. For example, one may argue that a superior entity is irrelevant for science, but you can't prove there is or isn't a God
On the other hand, astrology does go against science
I guess if you are enraged by pseudoscience, you will not be in a state to effectively discuss and convince people who believe in it otherwise. I know it's not a 'decision' to have strong feelings, though.
yeah, I removed my comment because it would only shift the discussion
@TobiasFünke That is precisely why I ask, because I realize that it affects me deeply, but I realize that in most cases people who "fall for it" do not have a scientific education
@HerrFeinmann yeah, if I had to guess, I'd say there is a strong correlation
@qwerty I don't know how the chances are to convince anyone with a strong belief (in any topic)...
21:04
@qwerty I guess it's more about situations in which someone close, e.g. a friend with whom you share some other aspect of your life, mentions that kind of stuff. It affects me in general, even in unrelated discussions
yeah I know this situation right
Also, there is that kind of pseudoscience bogus that borrows physics terminology and mixes it with magic and fucks with people's mind
That is the one I cannot tolerate the most
just put "quantum" in your gibberish and it sounds correct lol
21:07
I think we all, at some point of our life, have heard about "the energies" or "quantum insert something"
At least Hollywood does that for a reason :P
@TobiasFünke eh, well, they might not have strong beliefs, maybe they just got introduced to some fringe ideas and don't know better. being able to talk and say "listen, this is why it's incorrect" is helpful imo.
@qwerty yes, ok
@qwerty most of the times it doesn't work :P
@HerrFeinmann :(
Last year I learned that a dear person in my same department believed that astrology does have some scientific bases. Paranoia had the better of me D:
I felt like an impostor for staying in that conversation
21:11
oh no :(
I'm sure @ACuriousMind has a way to cope with it :P
Well, anyways, changing topic: @TobiasFünke do you know any place featuring a similar graph about the energy gap of superconductivity? I've found it in the slides of my lectures. It reminds me of energy bands in solid state physics but the context is wildly different and I don't even know how one would get this in SC
6 hours ago, by Herr Feinmann
user image
@HerrFeinmann haven't you yourself explained how to explain this graph?
Today? It was an attempt :P
but nope, sorry, I have just checked some books, but to no avail
> sorry
You're trying to helping me, don't say that, please
Incidentally, the thing I had described looked like:
@TobiasFünke i am very disappointed in the paper xD
@TobiasFünke Oh, that's chapter 14 of P. Coleman
I'll check it carefully
the "unreasonable effectiveness of ...." because i thought he was going to actually give a resolution to this problem
21:30
(at this point I can recognize SC books by the link :P)
he did no such thing
@qwerty i will look into them thanks
@Relativisticcucumber hehe I see
 
1 hour later…
22:43
@qwerty Well - The Left Hand of Darkness also sounded interesting to me, a cultural ambassador from Earth (or a society like Earth) sent to a society of hermaphrodites with an estrous cycle who have entirely different views on sex and gender - but ultimately I didn't enjoy it. I thought all the protagonists were stupid and/or immoral and didn't really agree with what I perceived to be the themes of the book, though I could see how in 1969 this was a remarkable book to write either way.
To go in more detail would require me to spoil the whole book :P
@Relativisticcucumber if Wigner had provided a resolution it would have been called the reasonable effectiveness... :P
@imbAF No, it is not. A Lorentz transformation acts "on spacetime" in the sense that it sends $x$ to $\Lambda x$. An internal symmetry does no such thing - the transformation $\psi(x)\mapsto \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\alpha(x)}\psi(x)$ does not transform the spacetime point $x$.
However, to say that it is a characteristic of gauge symmetries to not act on spacetime points is questionable; the "spacetime symmetries" of GR are gauge symmetries; it's however correct that gauge symmetries outside of GR are almost always internal
(and the GR case is rather subtle to treat correctly)
 
1 hour later…
23:57
@HerrFeinmann you might have found a resolution -- i didn't read the discussion that follows, but i'd ask "why do you care"? not in a flippant sense, i'm sincerely posing this q -- in my opinion, i think there are tons of ideas floating around, good and bad, and it is not my business what other people choose to believe, nor to police what people say. i believe that people oftentimes believe and hear what they want to believe. [...]
[...] for someone who truly seeks knowledge and information, the world is at their fingertips. for someone who doesn't, why is it my place to judge that or correct them? ultimately other people's lives are other people's lives.
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