« first day (1957 days earlier)      last day (2976 days later) » 

12:00 AM
@Danu My favorite foods are all pretty simple.
I've had elaborate/clash foods
 
There's a difference between simple foods and eating cold noodles out of a can, imo
 
@ACuriousMind There are few things that top cold noodles out a can.
Few.
 
If you're still on SE in 4 years you're going to facepalm so hard at yourself.
 
I've had amazing cold ravioli with vanilla sauce. But I was quite stoned that night.
 
You do drugs?
I've given up drugs and drinking because of my memory issues.
 
12:04 AM
Everybody does!
"given up drugs" hahaha
So what drugs have you taken?
 
Just pot
I'm not stupid enough to do anything more.
 
Disappointing!
I can't spell for shit haha
 
@Danu Guaranteed not.
 
Don't corrupt the youth, @Danu ;)
 
@Danu huh?
 
12:05 AM
Have you ever had something more interesting, ACM?
@0celo7 I misspelled disappointing earlier
 
I'm going to shoot myself in the bloody head
Java just doesn't work
 
@Danu Anything harder and I won't get a security clearance, or at least it will be a lot tougher and I can't be as competitive.
 
Implying that anyone has to find out
 
What are polygraphs
 
Google it
 
12:07 AM
@Danu that was a Jeopardy thing
 
You didn't know that?
 
What?
 
That's a good thing (if so). Those polygraph tests are retarded and proven to be ineffective. Can't believe any stupid intelligence agency would ever use them
 
I'm telling you that a clearance requires a polygraph, and I'm not going to beat one.
They're used by every agency
 
Yeah, pretty dumb.
 
12:09 AM
Don't see how that changes anything.
I think taxes are dumb, but I have to plan for them!
 
Intelligence agencies are pretty incompetent
 
I like the 22 year old physics student making that judgement
 
I have some inside experience.
 
And it's not just intelligence agencies.
Oh sure
 
And no, I'm not allowed to go into more details :)
 
12:11 AM
Lol
 
@Danu Let's say I would have made a great hippie ;)
 
Close family member...
@ACuriousMind I'd like to try LSD sometime, too, if that's what you mean :P
 
@Danu and both my parents are spies
 
@0celo7 You can make jokes all you want :D
 
@Danu Ok, just one.
Regardless, I could end up working for the Navy. They give them too.
And actually with the Navy you have issues with certain sexual acts.
They might have relaxed those laws in the last few years, actually...and I'm not sure how it works for civilians.
 
12:14 AM
You're afraid of running into trouble on account of being... gay?
What are you trying to say? :P
 
See, this is why I don't want people IRL to know about this place.
@Danu Sodomy and oral sex, for instance, used to be a crime in the military, regardless of the sexes of the people involved.
 
Just don't embarrass yourself ;)
 
@Danu I've never embarrassed myself here.
2
 
We're his dirty secret. Not sure how I feel about that :D
 
@0celo7 Sodomy being anal sex?
 
12:16 AM
Yes.
 
@0celo7 Ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
::falls off chair::
4
ahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
 
@ACuriousMind PLEASE LINK
 
@0celo7 ACM is defnitely bookmarking this
 
Huh? What's so funny?
 
In other news, Djokovic is getting rekt in the first few games of his match.
Double break!
 
12:19 AM
Tennis?
 
Yush
 
Seriously, when have I embarrassed myself?
Everything I say, I mean.
 
It'd be amazing if Djokovic would lose this.
@0celo7 Just stop it.
It's either a lame joke, or you really need to go and stand in a corner and think about what you've done here :P
 
I really don't get it.
 
@0celo7 I have a printscreen of you saying you like balls; should I post it?
 
12:23 AM
Maybe that's not embarrassing.
And I deleted it.
 
@0celo7 Says the master of the deleted post
 
(all of which I can still access :) )
 
@ACuriousMind Ok, the things that survive are not embarrassing :)
 
Feb 8 at 17:06, by 0celo7
If you're worried about embarrassing me -- pretty sure I've said I like boys and am a 10 yo girl.
 
12:25 AM
@ACuriousMind Get the one about being a hypocrite
 
Jul 26 '15 at 14:56, by 0celo7
holy crap this is embarassing
 
@ACuriousMind And that's not embarrassing.
 
Now find the one where he says he's not a troll
Oct 22 '15 at 14:03, by 0celo7
and I do not troll
 
I'm not a troll.
 
Oct 22 '15 at 1:12, by 0celo7
I'm a hypocrite
 
12:28 AM
Deleting will not save you
 
Good one batACM
 
Meh. Still not embarrassing.
 
Feb 8 at 16:55, by 0celo7
Being a 10 yo girl does have downsides.
 
Ok, you don't know what embarrassing is.
 
@0celo7 Well, if you've not embarrassed yourself here, then why do you not want people to find out about "this place"?
 
12:33 AM
Damn, I've been on SE for three years already
 
Really tempted to ping ACM with random annoying questions...
 
@NeuroFuzzy We should help ACM and make an AI that replies to dumb questions with obnoxious answers
 
lol
Or just links the first google hit :D
@ACuriousMind If I had a mistress, that's not embarassing but I wouldn't want people to find out...
 
By people you mean Rebecca right?
 
@BernardMeurer it can ask, "What does Einstein say about it". And link to random blog posts of Lubos Motl, but only the political ones.
 
12:37 AM
@BernardMeurer and parents and other people whose judgement is important
 
@NeuroFuzzy There is still some space on my blocklist...
@NeuroFuzzy lol
 
@NeuroFuzzy Good one! Links to a random page of the einstein digital papers
 
maybe JD is an AI
 
I have proposed that for a long time
I'm en-route to creating my python AI
 
Be nice, guys
 
12:39 AM
alright, alright
 
@0celo7 I'm really jealous of the GR you and Slereah were doing.
 
I have come once again to rant about relativity.
 
@0celo7 I guess she wouldn't be happy with the fact that I proofread her homework the other day too
 
@NeuroFuzzy Uhhh, thanks?
 
i've been doing index manipulations for the last week straight. It was not a good idea to leave the homework to the last week for my grad class...
 
12:40 AM
@NeuroFuzzy I did some of that this morning :D physics.stackexchange.com/questions/243191/…
 
@barrycarter That sounds as if you're some ghost haunting us ;)
 
@barrycarter Yikes, leave!
 
If a ship passes me at .995c, and, at the instant of passing, has an event that's 1 light second in its reference frame, then, in my reference frame, the time and distance of that event is 9.96 seconds after time of passing and 10.01 light seconds from my frame's origin.
 
@NeuroFuzzy I have a feeling my reading course this summer with my advisor will be Guillemin & Pollack, Milnor and then Hawking-Ellis to cover some of the more topological aspects of GR :D
And I know Beem et al. has Morse theoretic aspects of GR.
 
12:42 AM
Yes, but this time I am ranting louder! :P
Are my calculations roughly correct?
 
@NeuroFuzzy Are you having dreams about indices chasing you yet?
 
And maybe I'll finally understand the topological conditions required for a Lorentz metric to exist...(I know what the conditions are, but I can't prove it)
 
@barrycarter What do you mean by an event "being" 1 light second?
 
@ACuriousMind the event is at distance 1 light second from the origin of that frame as measured in that frame.
 
Hmm, but I can shift the origin whereever I like
 
12:44 AM
@ACuriousMind Well, no, because I define t=0 as the time the two origins pass.
 
For that to be a meaningful number, you should give the light second as the separation between two events
 
> Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in. --Robert Frost
3
 
@ACuriousMind Surprisingly not. But I now know by heart that there are 15 tensors of the form $g_{ab,c}g_{de,f}$ with exactly two contractions. And lots of other algebraic things :(
 
@NeuroFuzzy Wtf
That's not a tensor :V
 
@barrycarter Okay, so you're saying it happens one second after the ship passes you from the ship's point of view?
 
12:45 AM
OK: event 1: I, the spaceship, am cross the observer, event 2: Shiny object 1 light second ahead of me.
 
@dmckee I'm not smart enough to appreciate that.
 
@0celo7 see?! it's already getting to me!
 
@ACuriousMind No, it happens WHEN the ship crosses me but 1 light second in distance from the ship's origin (in its own frame)
 
@NeuroFuzzy Can you give me the more precise statement :P (or reference)
 
@0celo7 It may get under your skin. If so, you'll thank me later.
 
12:46 AM
@barrycarter Ah, okay
 
@ACuriousMind So, in ship's frame: same time, 1 light second distance (between the two events)
 
@0celo7 Lol fifteen tensors of the form $A_{abc}A_{def}$ with two contractions where $A$ is symmetric in the first two indices.
 
Hey
 
I think that's precise? Idk.
 
You know how you can avoid that?
PENROSE NOTATION
 
12:47 AM
did you prove that by exhaustion or is there a method?
 
Ahahah
 
When it says I need score to get a tag badge, what gives me score?
 
Just kidding
It's even worse
 
@BernardMeurer answers
 
and why on Earth did you need to prove that
 
12:48 AM
Every net positive point on one of your answers is one score point in that tag
 
I've done (some) GR and I've never needed that AFAIK
 
I'll never get the python badge
100 points
 
Or maybe I just believed it if showed up :P
I have to say, I've lost all patience for index manipulations.
 
@0celo7 I did it by exhaustion. You can get the number 16 more easily by arguing about swapping indices but then two of the results are equivalent.
 
12:49 AM
@NeuroFuzzy What does "with two contractions" mean?
 
@NeuroFuzzy dunno, seems like "by exhaustion" can't prove "exactly this many"
 
@ACuriousMind As in, thinking of penrose notation. $g^{cd}g^{ef}A_{abc}A_{def}$ or any combination, leaving two free indices.
 
@barrycarter Then (without doing the calculation) I would say your result looks plausible
 
@NeuroFuzzy penrose notation is NOT that
if you prove anything in GR using Penrose notation I will give you \$5
 
@ACuriousMind But if the event occurs when the ship is passing me, why does it take me 9.96 seconds to see it?
 
12:51 AM
@NeuroFuzzy I know what a contraction is, I don't know what it means for a tensor to "have" one. Are you saying only two of those shall not vanish?
 
@NeuroFuzzy I honestly have no clue what you're talking about...
damn physicists
 
@barrycarter Because "when" is subjective. That's kinda the entire point of relativity. You can't say the event occurs "when" the ship is passing you, that's only true from the ship's point if view
 
@ACuriousMind I mean, I understand time dilation and length contraction, but this is neither, correct?
 
I don't get how this is so confusing. I'm saying that by choosing two pairs of indices to contract there are fifteen distinct tensors you can generate.
 
Oh
OH
 
12:53 AM
@0celo7 There's that group theory book in Penrose notation
 
@NeuroFuzzy Ah
 
It's full of proofs
 
So you're given $A_{abc}A_{def}$
and you just contract two pairs
so isn't that like 6!
or something
maybe divided by 4 or something
 
@barrycarter No, this is "relativity of simultaneity", if you want a fancy name
 
holy shit 6! is large
 
12:54 AM
@ACuriousMind Damn, that's what @timeus (sp) was talking about.
 
@NeuroFuzzy I thought you were saying there's exactly fifteen tensors of the form $A_{abc}A_{def}$, which is wrong.
 
@ACuriousMind My expectation would be: the event occurs when the other ship passes me. It's 1 light second away from him, so, my Lorentz contraction, it should appear 1/10 light second away from the ship for me. Thus, I expect to see it at time 0, at distance 1/10 light second. But that's NOT what happens?
 
@0celo7 well $A$ is symmetric in the first two indices. if the two distinct indices are $a$ and $b$ you'd have $A_{acb}A_{def} g^{cd}g^{ef}$. Distinct from $A_{bca}A_{def} g^{cd}g^{ef}$. Distinct from $A_{acd}A_{bef} g^{cd}g^{ef}$. etc.
 
@Slereah I know.
@NeuroFuzzy I know how to do it. I was throwing out some random numbers :P
Yes, you can prove that by exhaustion. But why did you prove that?
Are you proving the Lovelock theorem or something?
 
@0celo7 Lol alright. Actually Penrose notation or something similar is a really nice way to solve the problem. You'd hate the thing trying to be proved because it's an abuse of notation
 
12:58 AM
I get really angry at physicists doing GR
 
@barrycarter Nope, SR is indeed a bit more than just time dilation and length contraction. Inertial frames are related by Lorentz transformations, which can turn a pure temporal or pure spatial distance into a mixture of both
 
Are you mad yet?
 
Problem 1 is trivial. Maybe.
Just use Riemann normal coordinates for the last part.
The first part is uninteresting, just index shit :P
 
@barrycarter But this isn't really different from the classical Galilean world: If you move at a constant velocity w.r.t. an observer, all things happening along your trajectory have no spatial separation for you, but they surely have for the observer
 
@NeuroFuzzy $\nabla_a\Gamma_b$ ::eye twitch::
 
1:00 AM
@ACuriousMind Well, yes, but that's just the -v*t part, right?
 
I still don't see why you needed to prove that!
Is that not just straightforwardly fucking around with the definition of the Ricci tensor in terms of the contraction of the Riemann tensor?
 
@0celo7 Yes, but naively you wind up with 34 terms
 
@barrycarter indeed, the term in special relativity is just a bit different (but gives approximately back the Galilean one for low velocities)
 
@NeuroFuzzy Are you talking about the Cauchy problem right now, by any chance?
 
@ACuriousMind That's just saying: if you're moving at 20mph, your x coordinate for something will be my x-coordinate minus 20mph times time?
 
1:02 AM
@NeuroFuzzy Uh, what?
The Riemann tensor only has 4 terms
 
@0celo7 Yeah but no christoffels cancel/combine directly
so you have to go to the next order. The $g_{ab,c}$ :(
 
Hmm.
I believe you.
I'm not going to try it myself.
 
@0celo7 What's so terrible about that? You can totally take a covariant derivative of a connection form (that's what the curvature is, after all)
 
Smart! haha I'm not mean enough to suggest you should.
 
@ACuriousMind wrong covariant derivative
This one is not antisymmetrized and depends on the coordinates involved
 
1:06 AM
anyways. I've got to go. Renormalization group and stat mech! Woohoo!
 
sounds fun?
Maybe I should take QFT next semester.
 
Aren't you taking QM next semester?
 
Yeah, so?
It's not like I don't already know a lot of QM and some QFT already.
@ACuriousMind I don't think I'll actually get much out of the first semester of QM.
They'll probably review a lot of the math because the course doesn't have formal prereqs and the engineers who take it have no clue.
 
Since I don't know what you'll actually be doing in that course, I can't possibly comment
 
So they'll have to cover Hamiltonian/Lagrangian mechanics.
And I'll get to impress the prof by saying random things from Arnold...or maybe that will just annoy him.
 
1:13 AM
@ACuriousMind So, if I know the time and distance between two events in one frame, the Lorentz contraction and time dilation taken individually can tell me the time and distance between those two events in another frame... BUT... can't tell me when and where the events will occur in the other frame?
 
@BernardMeurer Not gonna lie, that's pretty cool.
@ACuriousMind you can speculate
maybe the prof is a multiverse guy
actually he does theoretical condensed matter, so he probably doesn't give a shit about interpretations
 
@barrycarter Not really - time dilation tells you what the temporal component for a pure temporal distance in one frame will be in another, and length contraction tells you what the spatial component of a pure spatial distance in one frame will be in another.
It's really easier to just apply the correct Lorentz transformation for general cases instead of trying to do something with time dilation and length contraction
 
@ACuriousMind Yes, using the matrix seems easier, but I'm trying to understand how it ties in to the Lorentz contractoin and time dilation. So the main point here is: just because two things occur at the same time in one frame, they don't occur at the same time in another frame?
@ACuriousMind By pure temporal distance, do you mean two events occurring at the same x coordinate but at different times?
 
@barrycarter Yep
@barrycarter And yep
 
@ACuriousMind And by pure spatial distance, two events occurring at the same time, but at different x coordinates?
 
1:24 AM
And yep :)
 
@ACuriousMind Oh! So it's not a per-coordinate transformation. A time distance of 0 doesn't get multiplied by time dilation. A time distance of 0 just means the distance factor gets multiplied.
@ACuriousMind Bloody hell, that's ugly.
@ACuriousMind Oh, and all of this has nothing to do with light travel time, correct?
 
Well, "ugly"...welcome to physics ;)
 
Exactly
Run, go do math instead
 
Not sure what you mean by "light travel time", but no, I don't think it has something to do with it
 
But it makes an odd sort of sense: 0 out one coordinate and you have a formula for the other one.
 
1:28 AM
@ACuriousMind How much of Milnor did you actually read
 
37.592%
 
@ACuriousMind If I say "frame x's origin is 7 light seconds away at time t=5", I actually don't know that until t=12, right? In other words I'm not saying "I see x's origin 7 light seconds away".
 
@ACuriousMind Huh, that's a strangely precise number.
So roughly 52.5 pages?
Hmm, I thought that would have come to a full number.
 
@barrycarter Indeed, all those statements are purely about coordinates in your frame, not about perception. For instance, you don't actually see a contracted, but a rotated object.
 
@ACuriousMind Don't confuse me more :)
@ACuriousMind OK, so if two events occur at the same time for me but at different places, I can tell you the distance at which you'll see the two events, but you won't see them at the same time.
 
1:32 AM
Shieeeeeet
Someone's confused about abstract index notation
I really should write that Q&A about it...
 
@barrycarter Yep
 
@ACuriousMind And if I see two events occur at the same place in my frame but at different times, I can tell you how long you'll have to wait between the events, but they won't occur at the same place for you?
 
@ACuriousMind BUT... this is the Gallilean/Newtonian part: the distance apart they occur from each other won't simply be because I'm traveling at a given velocity?
@ACuriousMind Example for low speeds: I'm traveling at 20mph compared to Bob. At noon, an event occurs at my origin. At 1pm, a different event occurs at my origin. I compute the distance as 0, and the time as 1 hour. Now Bob will obviously see those two events 20 miles apart, but, if these speeds were relativistic, that wouldn't be the case?
 
What's my dad doing in your thought experiment
 
1:42 AM
@barrycarter Indeed, the relativistic separation will be $\gamma v t$, not just $v t$.
 
Got it!
@ACuriousMind But that's the everyday example you were trying to give me earlier, right?
 
(you can explain that by time dilation, actually: The time that passes for the outside observer is not the $t$ you measure, but $\gamma t$)
@barrycarter Yep
 
Oh, I thought it was Lorentz contraction? What I see as 20 miles Bob must see as less than 20 miles?
 
Yes, two sides of the same coin
 
Ah OK.
 
1:46 AM
@ACuriousMind guess who
 
The cat survived, yay!
 
Einstein looks...unimpressed
 
Let's see how he likes Guillemin & Pollack
Oh he's also never seen do Carmo
Damn cat ran away
 
@ACuriousMind Oh, so if I look at Bob's clock after an hour, I might say "only 59 minutes have ticked off on his clock (time dilation)", so he's still seeing me at 59/60 of 20 miles, not the whole 20 miles. Is that what you meant?
 
I should throw Abramowitz and Stegun on him and see how he likes it
 
1:51 AM
The book or the authors themselves?
 
@barrycarter the total mass is probably the same.
 
Creamted?
Or just heavy books?
 
AS is like 1500 pages
It's crazy
 
Wow.
 
Will abuse cat some more, brb
 
1:53 AM
OK, I have learned much and thank you @ACuriousMind for your help. I'm still unhappy about special relativity, but now at least I understand it more.
 
@barrycarter von Neumann once said "You don't understand things in mathematics, you just get used to them" While meant to be tongue-in-cheek, some parts of physics are the same ;)
 
@Slereah see ^
(or the one before it)
@ACuriousMind Something I've never understood: If $L$ is the length functional of a curve and $E$ is its energy functional, then $L^2\le(b-a)E$ (I understand this part)
but why does this imply that minima of $L$ are also minima of $E$
 
@0celo7 It's an equality for affinely parametrized curves
 
@ACuriousMind ok, so?
(I knew that)
 
2:07 AM
@0celo7 So affinely parametrized stationary points of $E$ are stationary points of $L^2$ are stationary points of $L$.
 
@ACuriousMind why?
 
Because $E=L^2$ up to a constant????
 
hmm...
lemme think about that some more
@ACuriousMind so why does $\langle\dot\gamma,\dot\gamma\rangle=const.$ mean the curve is parameterized proportionally to arc length, anyway
 
Uh, just plug that into the length functional to find out why?
 
@ACuriousMind huh?
 
2:09 AM
I mean what I said.
 
I really am confused :P
you just get $(b-a)\sqrt{const.}=L$
 
More generally, you get that $L(\gamma\rvert_{[0,t]}) = t\sqrt{\text{const}}$, i.e. the length of the curve up to parameter $t$ is a multiple of $t$.
 
Oh, yeah, I was being stupid :)
@ACuriousMind Wow, that exact proof is in do Carmo, I somehow didn't catch it or just forgot
maybe not being around Einstein has degraded my math skills
 
 
2 hours later…
4:05 AM
0
Q: Struggling to not draw ire in responses to my few questions ... failing

user55515I am a novice at this, and I believe I have only asked a handful of questions in total. The first were all rapidly tagged as "opinion-based", and I can see why. I don't see how to ask for suggestions in any context if that sort of thing is declared to be off limits. Today for the first time in...

 
0
Q: Gravity as a gauge theory - Cartan-Killing form?

phy_mathFirst, let me state the form of Lagrangian for YM and GR \begin{align} L_{YM} = \alpha \textrm{tr}(F^2), \qquad L_{GR} = \beta R \end{align} I heard, YM is a gauge theory but GR isn't a really gauge theory. Due to the fact of its Cartan-Killing form of YM is positive, but GR is negative. Is i...

@ACuriousMind I'm still not clear on what the difference between Diff and GL is...
 
4:56 AM
please don't ignore me.
 
why
have you said anything useful/constructive?
 
5:08 AM
@Slereah "tachyon field is a field with negative mass term"So can it be gateway to alcuibere warp drive
 
5:19 AM
@0celo7 am just 13 so i don't know any complex physics then how can i say something useful or constructive
And i have apologized for my non sense questions many times.
we are saying particles are created by field disturbance. on the other, we say fields are excited by the presence particle. so it’s a bit chicken and egg. which comes to being first then?
-1
Q: Can we in the far future have an energy source made from vacuum energy, antimatter, dark energy, Higgs boson?

Nihal Jalaluddin PCan we in the far future have an energy source made from vacuum energy, antimatter, dark energy, Higgs boson and all kind of these like stuffs?

no satisfating answers.
sorry about the spelling mistakes.
 
6:17 AM
hello kid!
 
user116211
@DeNiSkA: o/
 
hii
 
user116211
@DeNiSkA: You are in Germany?
 
no! i used to be!
 
user116211
@DeNiSkA oh.
 
6:27 AM
how did you guess so properly?
@user36790 how you know?
 
user116211
6:47 AM
@DeNiSkA your profile ;P
 
oh!! ::first time noticing::
 
7:18 AM
why no answers?
i don't think its stupid.
@DeNiSkA aren't you kid?
 
 
2 hours later…
user116211
9:27 AM
@0celo7: I'm damn sucked of seeing CuriousOne answering in comments ;/
 
10:35 AM
@0celo7 Uh...Diff is an infinite-dimensional group, GL is not?
Sometimes, the type of question MO allows confuses me
 
Why has this question been resurrected by "Community" when an almost identical question which has hints towards the answers been [closed] by @Qmechanic? physics.stackexchange.com/questions/20109/…Farcher 4 hours ago
^ Has anyone time to help @@Farcher here? ^
 
@Qmechanic I think community just randomly picks up closed questions to reopen
 
10:51 AM
@i-physicist : I also think it was automatic, but I didn't analyze it.
 
@Qmechanic I left a comment
 
@Qmechanic is "community" run by a human or a bot?
 
The bot did not reopen anything, it just bumped that question because it has no positively scored answer and is itself positively scored.
 
@ACuriousMind : Indeed. And thx.
 

« first day (1957 days earlier)      last day (2976 days later) »