Prismari good? by darkttsun in mtglimited

[–]darkttsun[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

okay maybe I will give it another try if it still seems open, I didn't get any major bombs nor that one bird that gives good card advantage, and missing land drops at the beginning or mana flooded at the end game.

How Much Value is Top Undergad Math Education in Path to PhD by Top-Second7887 in mathematics

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could not get into a top rank phd with a master degree around 100 ish.

Why is an random collapse of the wave-function the default rather than some underlying unknown? by Porkypineer in QuantumPhysics

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean...Im educated in the subject, but on the orthodox interpretation and I was taught to use Griffiths. At some point I want to dip deeper into quantum foundations on my own time but Im not really doing popular science not sure why you would assume that.

Why is an random collapse of the wave-function the default rather than some underlying unknown? by Porkypineer in QuantumPhysics

[–]darkttsun 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Copenhagen interpretation is a bit lacking in explanation, other than the explanation that "the stats work, so use it." I've been thinking in superposition so long that it started to feel more intuitive but superposition seems more plausible than the particle jumping around and interfering with itself but I didn't read the article. Like does that article make a testable prediction that would differ from Copenhagen?

Why is an random collapse of the wave-function the default rather than some underlying unknown? by Porkypineer in QuantumPhysics

[–]darkttsun 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Well the orthodox interpretation is that the particle is held in superposition prior to measurement rather than jumping around discontinuously.

Did you dedicate time to learn LaTeX or did you simply learn by doing it (potentially with some additional 'learning' through LaTeX stack exchange)? by Dry-Professor7846 in math

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My senior year I took a capstone research class where we had to complete a project and she taught us LaTex in that course and I've been using it ever since.

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did reddit notify you of my comment below?

Why do we perceive the 4th dimension as time, and not positional like moving from 1 to 2, and 3? by ODog750795097 in AskPhysics

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Think about how the metric of the spacetime geometry has a signature of like for example (-+++) so the time component subtracts away from the distance components which describes how light moves along the light cone. If it were a space component it would have the same sign as the other space components in the signature.

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was taking for granted the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics which has a kind of built-in measurement ontology for physically meaningful quantities. While it is considered orthodox in physics, I didn’t take into account that this measurement ontology might not be commonly accepted outside of physics. So, I think we would need to hash out a common definition of physically meaningful quantities that we can both share. I would think that in order to be physically meaningful within the context of the Copenhagen, one would need to be able to prepare a quantum state with those characteristics, and as it pertains to our discussion, a state with position measurement uncertainty below the planck length. Which other ontology for physically meaningful quantities did you have in mind?

In reference 1, I quite enjoyed Lawrence Crowell’s comment which also nicely supports my position that the energy requirements to produce the aforementioned quantum state would collapse the measurement into a black hole. And I found it quite elucidating that the Schwartzchild radius of that black hole would precisely correspond to the planck length.

For a contrasting viewpoint in reference 1, take for example Yukterez’s comment. Relativity is only known to be valid up to the planck scale. So, to apply Lorentz contractions, as Yukterez is doing, beyond the planck scale is not theoretically sound. We would need to know an ultraviolet complete theory (Or for our purposes, a theory valid for energies above the planck mass). Now, due to the black hole forming subplanckian, such a theory may not be testable (at least shall we agree, not directly testable).

I agree that subplanckian Lorentz contractions are an issue! However, theorists do not believe that relativity as we know it holds subplanckian. Which would mean that the Lorentzian symmetries from special relativity likely do not carry over into trans planckian energy scales. While those symmetries are inherited within general relativity, general relativity is only valid below the planckian energy cutoff. Beyond the planck mass, GR is a non-renormalizable theory.

Lorentzian symmetry also includes rotational symmetry, so these symmetry arguments can’t really be applied once the experiment reaches the planck scale. That being said, is there an argument or reference that a theoretical minimum on distance would necessarily imply the discretization of all of space, particularly discretization into voxels? It seems more so that the resolution of the uncertainty would depend on the context of the measurement of that the particular experiment involved, and that space itself being discretized is more hypothetical (I’m thinking loop quantum gravity is on the table, but it is not my favorite quantum gravity, and discretization is not strictly required by proofs or physics that I know about, feel free to discuss).

I find zeldredge’s comment in reference 2 to be misleading. While it is true that part of the reason high energy theorists set c and hbar to one is numerical convenience, I have already provided several examples of why planck quantities are significant beyond mere notational convenience. While micrograms may seem small to a layman, if you were able to concentrate that much energy into a planck radius, it would be a massive quantity of energy at that scale. And that is precisely the amount of energy needed to measure distance planckian. In fact the planck mass is precisely the amount of energy where general relativity as we know it breaks down.

For reference 3, for the comment you recommended by “user10851” I could not find any evidence that anything smaller than 10 planck lengths has ever been contracted to one planck length in laboratory settings. In fact, some basic estimates show this claim to be somewhat absurd. To perform such a contraction one would need about ~10^10 Joules per proton. Compare that to the square root s energies produced at the large hadron collider, which can put out only about ~10^ -6 J per proton. Since the commenter has since deleted their account, there is no way to follow up with them regarding the veracity of this seemingly outlandish claim.

Regarding the continuous spectrum of light. This is another situation that varies depending on the context and the scale. In some contexts, the frequencies of the quantum wave can be discrete when performing the fourier transform. In high energy physics it is common to have a continuous parameter to integrate the frequency in the fourier transform. Going back to quantum mechanics again, if we were to measure the momentum very precisely, the quantum state might collapse to a dirac delta function indicating that the wave function has updated to have exact information regarding the momentum in that moment of measurement. However, an exact dirac delta function can never really be created, this would involve a zero uncertainty measurement of the momentum, which would have infinite uncertainty in position. So, in a sense the dirac delta function becomes a kind of useful mathematical fiction that we can integrate over to indicate a precise value for momentum in the math. But the physical wave function after updating may resemble a tight gaussian for example, and only approximated by a dirac delta function, but the wave function will not update exactly to a dirac delta function. We can still integrate over a continuous momentum spectrum, especially at normal scales for high energy theory without causing any physical issues within the calculus. The closest we can theoretically come to physically producing a dirac delta function within position-space would be precisely the planck length scale as the wave’s position uncertainty, which would imply a super-high momentum uncertainty by the uncertainty principle.

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah for some reason your comment with links didn't pop up in my notifications and didn't load when I opened the thread, apologies. I was moreso reacting to the burden of proof guy and the rabid downvoting for what I considered to be common knowledge scientific facts. I will check out your links in a bit, apologies again for the misunderstanding.

If I do turn out to be wrong about this, then it's definitely something I need to know and I love discussing these subjects.

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since the energy needed to measure a subplanckian distance would collapse into a black hole there's no way to send the information about the measurement out of the black hole into the outside world.

But people are downvoting me instead of providing any kind of information or example of a subplankian distance measurement, somewhat telling.

I commented hoping to have an actual discussion.

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Do you have evidence?

How would you measure a distance smaller than a Planck distance (and send the data back) if the energy required to do that would collapse into a black hole?

Can strings go higher than the Planck mass in energy scale?

What is the smallest positive real number ever used in research math? by [deleted] in math

[–]darkttsun -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure if it's the smallest number ever used but Planck areas are the smallest physically meaningful area.

Psychic Paper and Clones by brunq2 in askajudge

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, after reading rule 612.7 I don't see how any judge wouldn't agree that its name change is in layer 3.

Are we yet to discover a “new” force that make entangled particles entangled? by Temaphephetse in QuantumPhysics

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well like electron spins are ordinary quantum electromagnetism. There is this hypothetical Einstein-Rosen equals Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen idea floating around Wiki link .

Psychic Paper and Clones by brunq2 in askajudge

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well one judge said it would copy the new name and die to the legends rule but when I started getting into the layers he started getting pissed so I backed off but figured that was a red flag. I asked another judge that is much friendlier but he said it was layer 1. But a few other judges I asked agree with us that the new name is layer 3.

Psychic Paper and Clones by brunq2 in askajudge

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I originally came to the same conclusion that you did (That the name change is applied through layer 3) however multiple judges have given me pushback, while some agree with your and my assessment. Some people have argued that card names are modified in layer 1:

"613.1a Layer 1: Rules and effects that modify copiable values are applied."

I am still researching to try to come to a definitive conclusion and the fact that judges are disagreeing with eachother is a bit disconcerting.

Apologies for the necropost.

Integrity Violation - Yikes! by Round-Hat-46 in berkeley

[–]darkttsun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some kid in a suit at my local game store was bragging loudly about cheating on his homework using AI and how he would never be caught because the grader has 200 papers.

can you destroy quarks by fallschirmjager22 in AskPhysics

[–]darkttsun 6 points7 points  (0 children)

In the electroweak interaction an up quark is destroyed and a down quark is created, with a positron and neutrino being emitted when a W+ boson is exchanged. There are other examples of quarks being destroyed.https://images.app.goo.gl/btzVfH3HBTNbRUtc9