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11:40 AM
@SillyGoose yes, it is the post-measurement state
It means that, even when u know the eigenvalues of all the compatible observables after measurement, u cannot use that to determine the measured state of the system becuz it cud b any linear combination. However in reality, particles r identical, so there is not much choice in the ket. I think this is what the book means by "nature avoiding this difficulty"
It means that only that those kets r measured that r symmetric or antisymmetric under exchange of the eigenvalues
Becuz this means particles r identical
@SillyGoose I dont think this argument always works becuz the total hamiltonian also has an extra interaction term, apart from being the sum of free Hamiltonians
But this argument does work 4 angular momentum. Becuz adding the individual operators means the new operators also satisfy the angular momentum commutation relations. So they make sense as generators
More generally, the observables of the composite system can b arrived at using Noether's theorem applied to the composite system's translation and rotation symmetries
But this too doesnt always work becuz systems without symmetries also have observables
Generally, i think u can first define space-time translations and rotation transformations of a system first (regardless of whether they're symmetries or not). And then the generators of those r defines to be observables
 
12:07 PM
@SillyGoose But you are right that if two systems each carry a representation of the Poincaire group, then the composite system can trivially be given a representation of the Poincaire group by merely adding the generators from the two systems. So this is y addition is fine mathematically. But it may not work physically, becuz the physical Hamiltonian need not b a sum of the individual Hamiltonians
This addition method would b physically correct for non-interacting systems
 
12:37 PM
@JohnRennie Just wondering if you might have an opinion on this question in Literature? literature.stackexchange.com/questions/24735/…
 
@ClaraDiazSanchez Hi Clara :-)
I hadn't heard of that book before. I'll have a look around and see if I can find a copy.
 
12:57 PM
What r some good philosophies for why the laws of physics r the way they are?
 
 
2 hours later…
2:29 PM
@JohnRennie It's a quick read, and a bit weird in places (rather like QM ;)
 
2:54 PM
Bonjour all
 
 
1 hour later…
4:10 PM
@SillyGoose There's a general principle here: The subsystems are composed via the tensor product, $H_1\otimes H_2$. Unitary operators acting on these states are likewise composed with the tensor product, $U_1\otimes U_2$. But the self-adjoint operators $T_1,T_2$ as generators of unitaries $U_i = \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}\epsilon_i T_i}$ - because the exponential turns addition into multiplication - then compose via addition, $T_1\oplus T_2 = T_1 \otimes \mathbf{1} + \mathbf{1}\otimes T_2$
 
@RyderRude i see the hamiltonian counterexample does make sense… about the poincare group business, adding the generators just amounts to applying the same transformation on both subsystems, right? Is this what is meantby it is trivial
 
because only with this addition you have that $U_1\otimes U_2 = \mathrm{e}^{\mathrm{i}(T_1\oplus T_2)}$
 
I see—i was trying to make a connection between the direct sum structure of Herman operators and the tensor product structure of the unitary operator and what that means in practice. But now i am confused why the hamiltonian doesn’t fall under this general behavior? Or should we really consider the hamiltonian as a context dependent thing. (Also i mean to only talk about two-part identical systems)
 
abstractly, all that's happening here is that products of Lie groups $G\times H$ act on tensor product representations $V_G\otimes V_H$ and their Lie algebra is $\mathfrak{g}\oplus\mathfrak{h}$
@SillyGoose I mean, a free Hamiltonian acts exactly like that
if your two subsystems don't interact, then the total Hamiltonian is just the sum of the subsystem Hamiltonians
but usually there is some interaction term in there otherwise you'd not consider the two systems as "subsystems" of a larger system, i.e. the reason you're thinking about this in the first place is that your Hamiltonian doesn't factorize
 
is the hamiltonian the only observable that exhibits this behavior of interaction?
 
4:16 PM
depends on what you mean by "observable"
e.g. in a two-body system you will usually also be interested in e.g. the distance $\lvert r_2 - r_1\rvert$ between the two bodies
that's not something that factorizes either
 
well i guess now i am thinking that the hamiltonian really does seem singled out from all other observables in a nontrivial way, namely, because it can have interaction terms
 
what do you mean "all the other observables"
if you have a system with state space $H_1\otimes H_2$, then are you not considering all self-adjoint operators on that space observables?
only a small subset of them factorizes as $T_1 \oplus T_2$ or $T_1\otimes T_2$
 
hm well so maybe a better question is why do people think of the hamiltonian as being special. sure it gives rise to dynamics but only wrt to time
 
that's very special
 
i mean couldn't one say we should say the translation and rotation unitary operators togetehr are special because they give rise to dynamics wrt to space
 
4:21 PM
I mean if you think that's special then they're special :P
 
well why is time dynamics more important than spatial dynamics i guess
 
I'm not sure what you're after here - the thing the generates time evolution is "special" because more or less the whole reason we do physics is to predict time evolutions of systems
when I throw a ball I want to know where it will be in a few seconds, not where it would be if someone made a spatial translation on it :P
 
not interested in studying drops of time huh :P okay well i guess that is sufficient
why assume that time is 1D anywho
 
seems to work so far
 
4:24 PM
(also initial value problems in more than 1 time dimension are ill-posed)
 
initial problems as in initial value problems or the first problems we are met with
 
isn't it slices of spacetime we are studying? the thing is that with a single time variable we can study the evolution of an entire "frame", but a single space variable doesn't uniquely identify a frame, does it?
 
@SillyGoose I already edited the "value" in :P
The nice thing about a single time dimension is that the Cauchy problem is - under relatively mild assumptions - well-posed: The data on a single spatial slice + knowledge of the dynamics allows you to predict everything
in more than one time dimension the data on a space-like slice no longer suffices
 
so this problem is specific to adding another dimension of time?
 
as opposed to adding another dimension of space? yes
 
4:29 PM
or another dimension of something
 
what do you mean "of something"
adding a space or a time dimension is well-defined because we can talk about signature of the metric
 
idk what string theory does :P are all its dimensions space + 1 time?
 
i.e. if we start with (---+) then going to five dimensions where it is (---++) we've added a time dimension and if its (----+) we've added a space dimension
@SillyGoose yes
 
there is F-theory which formally works in 12d, two of which are time dimensions but that's a very special case and the physics you actually do is after compactifying one of the time dimensions and one of the space dimensions on a torus
 
4:34 PM
do they just work through the alphabet with these things :P
 
@SillyGoose and on the $i$th day G*d said let there be index...
 
can i think of the permutation (symmetry) unitary operator $P_{12}$ as 1) a map between operator algebras of "identical HS"; $P_{12}: \mathcal{A}(\mathcal{H}_1) \rightarrow \mathcal{A} (\mathcal{H}_2)$ as well as 2) a permutation $P_{12}: \mathcal{A}(\mathcal{H}_1) \rightarrow \mathcal{A} (\mathcal{H}_1)$ (or $\mathcal{H}_2$)
err i mean is perspective 1) just essentially what is happening
 
I don't know how you think either of these maps work
the notion of permutation only makes sense when $H_1 = H_2 = H$. Then permutation is $A(H)\otimes A(H) \mapsto A(H)\otimes A(H), X\otimes Y \mapsto Y\otimes X$
 
5:11 PM
ah i am a silly goose
 
5:24 PM
Regarding my question yesterday, will the states carry a Lorentz index for each momentum $p^\mu$?
 
@DIRAC1930 what do you mean by "carry a Lorentz index"
 
Well will a state be $|p^\mu,\dots\rangle$
and a 2 particle state $|p^\mu,k^\nu,\dots \rangle$
 
fqq already said it: The states transform in a unitary representation of the Lorentz group, while we usually talk about tensor powers of the fundamental finite-dimensional representation of the Lorentz group
You will have $U(\Lambda)\lvert p^\mu \rangle = \lvert \Lambda^\mu_\nu p^\nu\rangle$, but that doesn't fit with what we usually mean by the state "carrying a Lorentz index"
because that would have the $\Lambda^\mu_\nu$ acting on the state itself
 
What exactly is infinitely dimensional here?
 
The space of states/the "matrix" $U(\Lambda)$
 
5:30 PM
Won't the space of states be infinite-dimensional in classical mechanics too?
 
the finite-dimensional representation is on the target space of the fields
A vector field $A_\mu$ is a map into the finite-dimensional space $\mathbb{R}^4$, on which the fundamental rep of $\mathrm{SO}(1,3)$ acts
and also, you should not contrast this with classical mechanics, but with non-relativistic QM: There, the symmetry group is $\mathrm{SO}(3)$, and all the unitary reps of $\mathrm{SO}(3)$ are finite-dimensional - the spin spaces of dimension $2s+1$
 
Just so I understand, RQM is the same as classical field theory in this respect (i.e. the wavefunction is essentially a field that obeys the Schrodinger equation)
Is it just the case of QFT being different?
 
I'm not sure what you mean
 
Does the wavefunction transform as $L^{\mu}{}_\nu \psi^\nu$?
 
no
if we ignore all the issues with position, the wavefunction of a spin-0 particle transforms as $\psi(x) \mapsto \psi(\Lambda x)$
 
5:36 PM
If it is a spin 1 particle, will it also transform as the above including yours?
 
well, then it will be additionally valued in the finite-dimensional spin-1 rep of so(1,3), and transform as $\psi^\mu(x) \mapsto \Lambda^\mu_\nu \psi(\Lambda x)$
 
but spin has nothing to do with your "Lorentz index" from $p^\mu$
 
I'm struggling to understand this infinite dimensional nature
 
the point is that when we don't use some concrete representations as functions of position - and we have discussed ad nauseam why position is "bad" - then $\psi(x)\mapsto \psi(\Lambda x)$ becomes $\lvert \psi\rangle \mapsto U(\Lambda)\lvert \psi\rangle$ in an abstract notation, and that $U(\Lambda)$ is infinite-dimensional
 
5:41 PM
What is $U$ explicitly if it is infinite dimensional?
 
contrast this, again, with non-rel. QM where you also have rotations operating as $\psi(x) \mapsto \psi(Rx)$ on an infinite-dimensional function space, but where the space of states decomposes into finite-dimensional irreducible representations of SO(3) - the spherical harmonics
 
Won't this be true for any functions though?
i.e. functions of CM
 
Why would there be linear representations on a classical state space? Classically, the space of states has neither a vector space structure nor an inner product, so the notion of linear representation, let alone unitary representation, does not make sense
 
Well there's not that much difference. The wavefunction is a field (probability amplitude) that obeys a field equation (Schrodinger equation)
 
you're thinking about this far too concretely
in classical mechanics, states are points in a Poisson manifolds; in quantum mechancis, they are vectors in a Hilbert space
the notion of a linear/unitary representation makes sense in exactly one of these contexts and not in the other
 
5:51 PM
My confusion is where does this infinite nature arise from? Is it because there is an infinite number of states?
 
what do you mean "where does this arise from"?
you can prove that there are no finite-dimensional unitary representations of the Lorentz group
essentially because it is non-compact but all finite-dimensional unitary groups are compact, so it's impossible to construct a Lie group homomorphism from the Lorentz group into any finite-dimensional unitary group
 
My confusion is that there must be loads of redundancy if $U$ is infinite-dimensional when only $4$ will suffice
 
what
I have literally no idea what that means
 
I realise my question is stupid but I really am confused
I can rotate an object in normal space with a 3 dim rep
 
3 is the dimension of the group. The dimension of the representation is another thing
 
5:55 PM
again, you should contrast this with the representation of the rotation group on $L^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$ in non-rel QM
 
Daily update on paper tablets: for the time being I wouldn't recommend to get one
 
Am I getting confused between group and representation again
 
6:51 PM
@Mr.Feynman Ah, that bad? What's the culprit? :)
 
i think there will be a revitalizing boom in the market for stone tablets
 
lol, because of the proliferation of stoners?
 
Hello
 
Hello please have a seat
 
@SillyGoose yes. Obviously when the systems r non interacting, this trivial definition works for the Hamiltonian too
@Amit lol
 
7:06 PM
^_^
 
@SillyGoose u can also think of it like this : rotations and translations have an expected behavior. Like rotations are periodic and translations r commutative and stuff. Their group structure is fixed. If our definition of rotation and translation did not have this behavior, we wudnt call them rotations and translations in the first place
But there is lot of freedom in defining the time evolution function. There is no prior expectation in how it should behave
U can even have time - dependent Hamiltonians. It would still work as a notion of time evolution
Such systems would not have time translation symmetry. But even those systems would have rotations and translations behaving in the expected way
But i dont think this reasoning is very good.. Becuz requiring the Poincaire group does put a restriction on the behavior of Hamiltonian
 
7:28 PM
@Amit the source of all evil: expectation
To be more realistic, it's not actually bad. In fact I'm using it to write but I think it's not worth 450€
 
Yeah it is costly. But since again personally I bought it to read books, I figured it would quickly cover the cost of all the physical books I would have ordered in some reasonable interval of time :)
 
It's too slow and it's only useful to write (which my tab s6 can do better with respect to any feature except the feeling and the paperlike screen)
I can't use it to read pdf's and write things at the same time (with normal pace)
@Amit It isn't bad to have per se, just not suitable for what I need
But I think we're on the right path: the feeling is very good and it's comfortable to write on it even on a damn bus. I hope they'll make e-ink tablets with better software and solve the slow-screen "problem" due to the current e-ink technology
 
Well I would have bought a lot more physics/math kindle books for it if not for the annoying reality I discovered, that the kindle version of most of these types of books is worse than just a plain PDF! You know why? Because the lack of compatibility of the mathematical expressions with kindle turns out to make them irreparably tiny lol. I say irreparably because as opposed to PDF you have less freedom to mess with the kindle format, probably due to DRM issues.
I didn't experience slowness tbh... but then as far as speed goes maybe I knew what to expect. Where do you find it too slow?
My problem with PDFs is not the slowness, it's just that again PDFs are for A4 size... so every PDF page needs to be read as two "pieces" on this device, which is annoying sometimes when you need to back reference something
 
there is nothing inherently A4 to PDFs, it's just that many lecture notes and articles are written in A4 format because they're meant to be printed in A4
there are also plenty of PDFs around for the slightly different US Letter format, for example
 
You're right of course @ACuriousMind , but basically all textbooks that are in PDF format are A4 aren't they
 
7:42 PM
@Amit most textbooks?
textbooks are usually printed smaller than A4
 
I said, textbooks which are in PDF format :)
Oh, and I didn't know about the US Letter format, cool, it is quite similar in size I see though
 
I'd like e-ink stuff for reading instead of writing
Who will watch Guardians of the Galaxy part 3?
 
@Amit no, not really. I spotchecked two Springer textbook PDFs I have and they're both 155x235 mm, which is "large textbook format" and the size they would be actually printed at but smaller than DIN A4 (210x297 mm)
 
@Amit too bad then :(
Physical books r too fat to carry. And traditional screen ruins ur eyes
I always end up ruining physical books
 
@ACuriousMind Interesting, but did you purchase those files? I think that maybe the various commercial eBook type files may indeed have a size more suitable for an eReader?
 
7:47 PM
@RyderRude That's a myth, there is no evidence that any type of screen damages your eyes
what is true is that it can be more uncomfortable for many people to read on "normal" computer screens, but it does not, in fact, "ruin your eyes"
@Amit They are PDFs, not eBook files
(but yes, I purchased them)
 
I think it does damage eyes. My eyes hav been too watery in the morning @ACuriousMind
But a physical book does this too
 
@RyderRude that's not permanent damage, just a symptom of overexertion
 
I think reading, in general, does this
 
Yes, I didn't mean that eBook is a specific format, just eBook as a commercial term. I am just speculating that perhaps the purchased ones are more likely to be better suited for a device than for printing on A4, hence the smaller page size
 
@ACuriousMind oh
 
7:50 PM
@Amit but eBooks are specific formats, e.g. .epub files!
eBooks readers are optimized for reading those files, not PDFs
 
Wikipedia disagrees! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebook :)
 
@RyderRude I mean, I take P&S with me and read it on the bus or while walking sometimes
And the edition I have is pretty thick
 
@Amit I'm not saying you can't read a PDF on an eBook reader, I'm saying the experience of the reader is usually optimized to the format in which you'd purchase a book from its standard marketplace, which is not PDF in any case I know (and usually .epub)
in particular PDFs have defined pages, while the readers are really optimized for you to adjust your preferred text size and then display "pages" of whatever size comfortably fits on screen in that font size
 
A book I wouldn't bring with me is MTW though
That book is a beast
 
I mean, it would be useful if you need to kill someone
 
7:53 PM
@ACuriousMind Well, we can do a simple experiment! If you name of one of the books you purchased, we can check to see if the copies we could just "find" of them online, are A4 or not
 
@ACuriousMind are these the so called killing vectors in GR
 
@Mr.Feynman i end up ruining books when i do this
 
@Mr.Feynman yes, the killing vector is the tangent to the trajectory of a copy of MTW thrown directly at your head
 
@RyderRude I used to care, then I realized I'll die one day
 
@ACuriousMind Yes, that is an important flexibility. But even just having a smaller page size already makes the book a lot more readable on many readers. Also note that a lot of devices can do a certain amount of PDF rearranging dynamically (I know mine can) -- doesn't always work perfectly but I found it useful on occasion
 
7:55 PM
@ACuriousMind I'll quote you on this in my GR exam
 
@Amit Oh, I don't doubt you'll find many illegal copies that are A4 because if they have been scanned the scanner page size is usually A4
 
@ACuriousMind Yeah that's all I was on about then :)
Not that I'd ever steal a textbook
Jesus wept
 
I think the chat is fine with that as long as you don't post pirated material here/say how to do that
Well, I am
 
But not only the chat is listening... the NSA, CIA and OMGZ may be here... didn't you notice always half of the users here are silent? -_-
 
Yes, "the chat" has a policy that you shouldn't post direct links to copyright violations
 
7:59 PM
Why those quotation marks though? :P
 
<- this user thinks modern academic publishing is a trash fire and you shouldn't pay money for anything from the big publishers if you can avoid it
 
On a serious note yeah, that makes perfect sense :)
 
@Amit don't worry, ACM is a CIA AI
 
@Mr.Feynman haha, there is actually an important organization called ACM
 
I mean, I use that acronym to call ACuriousMind also when quoting his answers in real life
But then I forget people don't know what ACM means
 
8:01 PM
Oct 4, 2018 at 17:19, by ACuriousMind
Today at work a function threw an UNEXPECTED_ACM error and it took me a while to realize it wasn't talking about my physics.SE activity...
me too
 
lol
 
Lmfao
@Amit what is it, anyways?
 
Do the universities have deals with the academic publishers? So if a certain researcher wants to upload his papers to arxiv he can't necessarily do it?
@Mr.Feynman "Association for Computing Machinery"
 
@Amit I think most publishers have resigned to the fact that they can't stop arXiv and allow the upload of "pre-prints"
 
8:04 PM
I know about it only because I saw a very nice talk on youtube that was given at one of their conferences...
 
Their logo
 
that's why it's a "pre-print server" - technically the versions there are supposed to be preliminary versions, while the published paper is supposed to be more polished
in practice that's not what usually happens but everyone kinda just ignores it
 
@ACuriousMind That's good to know
@Mr.Feynman :)
 
also note that this is very much field dependent - while math and physics have almost universally established a culture of uploading pre-prints, this isn't universal across all academic fields and not even all STEM fields
 
I've noticed that also for books
 
8:08 PM
Well now I finally understand why it has to be under the pretense of "preprint" - the first place I saw this term is IACR, same idea as arxiv but for Cryptography papers
 
Math, Physics and Computer science books can be found easily. Moving to other fields of science like Chemistry or Biology it gets much more difficult
 
@Mr.Feynman Because the latter ones get closer to Alchemy and we all know those are heavily guarded secrets
 
Not that QFT is much different from sorcery :P
 
Some spells are difficult enough to be left in plain sight
Like Excalibur I concur
 
8:33 PM
Who will watch Guardians of the Galaxy 3?
 
Non negligible probability that I will
 
I hear it's good. I will go asap
 
I don't go to theaters anymore
 
U can wait for streaming then. But u shud consider theaters again too
But they have become too expensive since the pandemic. And most movies r not worth it
 
Not about the cost in this case, I just can't be bothered with people anymore, lol
Speaking of superhero movies, The Flash is managing to be the Duke nukem 4 ever of the film industry, lol
 
8:44 PM
The Flash has pretty bad cgi. I will still see it prob
I'm mainly waiting for Mission Impossible and Oppenheimer I guess
Most movies r not worth it
 
Why would it have bad CGI?
 
Evil dead Rise is one movie where i felt it was 100% worth it after seeing lots of movies
 
I'm rather gullible, even the CGI of the CW Series is good enough for me. If the story is good I can put up with quite a lot of CGI lameness, lol
 
@Amit it has shitty sparkles
 
You mean it's not convincing as far as relativistic effects go? ^_^
 
8:48 PM
They do the slo mo fine
I guess it will b a good movie
And pls see Evil Dead Rise in ur free time!
 
It's my favorite character I think, among the various Marvel & DC ones
 
I'm so bored of these superhero movies and other large franchises
 
They r running like three Batman franchises right now
Its so sickening
 
I'm also bored with 99% of the marvel stuff. In fact guardians of the galaxy is significantly different somehow for my taste, maybe because the actors are funnier
 
Fantasy should make a comeback over the superhero stuff
@Amit i also dont see any superhero movie after endgame
I only saw No Way Home
 
8:53 PM
@RyderRude I totally agree... if only they developed for example a series for Zelazny's Amber, for example..
 
I don't want more book adaptations, either. Make something original! I really dislike this trend of franchising and rebooting, which mostly is just done because they can reap an existing fan base
 
Actually the superhero stuff is more fantasy than sci-fi for sure, but where it fails I think is that it takes a very very special mixture of actors and writing to translate a good comic into a good movie.... and when they started they did it very well, but now they are just feeding off past successes with mediocre movies
 
You mean original low budget movies or original blockbusters?
Original drama and crime stuff is still around
 
@RyderRude I don't really care about the budget? There's good and bad movies in every price category
 
Then we already hav plenty of original non-franchise films every year @ACuriousMind
Franchises hav only taken over the large budget stuff
 
8:58 PM
I think adaptations can be very good, it's a matter of "implementation"... I mean yeah it is kind of cheap in the sense of reaping an existing fan base, but if you want to create a franchise you want people to come back for more than one movie... and that means probably you have to appeal not only to the current fan base but beyond that
 
Like u can watch movies from different languages too. There r too many original films every year, I'm sure
@Amit yes. I love sagas
 
@RyderRude Okay, I'm not only bored of the franchises, I'm also bored of everyone discussing them. If they just existed and I could ignore them I probably would be indifferent
 
But then again, it will be too similar to MCU @Amit . I'm tired of 20 movies building up
Any saga will involve 10 movies building up
 
if I have to listen to one more inane "Thanos maybe had a point" discussion I'll pull my ears off
 
Lol
Fandoms hav been annoying for decades tho. Must have been since Star Wars
They wont stfu
But I guess Marvel discussion is even bigger, so more annoying
Thanos stuff is really cringe
 
9:03 PM
I gave up on the avengers series just when Thanos started becoming relevant, so luckily I can't partake in such discussions, lol
 
@RyderRude well, but generally you can just avoid specific things if you don't like them. These large franchises have invaded pop culture mainstream thoroughly and since they keep making new ones the discussion never stops
 
Isn't the pop culture mainstream always annoying by definition? :)
 
Avatar is an exception :P. These moves r huge but with no annoying fanbase
 
I mean, people citing Monty Python are also annoying but at least there isn't a new Monty Python movie every year so that they can keep talking about it :P
 
Nudge nudge
 
9:05 PM
@Amit I mean...watching Endgame was a huge emotion for me. U lost interested during the peak of marvel :P
 
I understand, my eyes couldn't take any more explosions. Screens don't ruin eyes but I think Marvel movies perhaps do, lol
 
But the endgame stuff was about character arcs
 
When I feel that the amount of explosions takes precedence over the plot quality I just can't take anymore
 
It was an emotion. And i didnt even grow up with marvel
I just binge watched MCU :P
@Amit do u like Lord of the Rings or Harry Potter?
They dont hav explosions
 
Okay it's all a matter of taste, also in general I have a problem with excessive violence, I can't watch Game of thrones, say, at all
 
9:08 PM
I also cudnt watch GoT lol
 
LoTR was nice, again, the later movies were more difficult, but I don't remember it very well anymore. Harry potter - very much the same
 
I also dont strongly like these movies
LOTR 3 is great tho
 
Maybe adaptation stuff should be a bit more like James Bond -- start as faithful to the books, but then break free from that and write stuff which is better tailored to the screen
 
They did exactly that with GoT. But everyone was angry lol
I guess they just wrote something shit
No one recommends GoT to me anymore after that final season
 
lol... well it depends, did they ignore a GoT book or did they only start writing new material when they finished adapting the books?
 
9:12 PM
it is so great that category theory's shortened name is cat theory
 
@Amit the writer is still finishing that book series lol
 
@Amit I think there is universal agreement that the quality took a nosedive once they ran out of books, yes
 
So they had to finish it themselves
 
But cats are dangerous for geese! :)
Ah, I see
 
It's really impressive how that final season just killed its popcultural presence
 
9:17 PM
"How to lose a franchise in 10 episodes" lol
Ah, it was only 6 in that case... well same order of magnitude
 
9:55 PM
What is the basis for the representation space of $\hat{U}$? is it $|p_1^\mu \rangle,\,|p_2^\mu \rangle,\dots$?
@ACuriousMind In non-rel is it just $e^{i k x}$ for all different $k$? Are we saying infinite dimensional because we have a basis consisting of infinite elements?
 
 
1 hour later…
11:14 PM
If I have new info to add to a question, should that go in an edit to the question itself, or a comment?
I've been doing some lit searching.
 
@WaveInPlace always edit (unless the edit changes the question so much it would invalidate existing answers, in which case you probably actually want to ask a new, more focused question)
 
@ACuriousMind so do you also hate e.g. in/out states and spinors? :P
 
11:46 PM
@Mr.Feynman yes
 

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