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"Paper Recipe"

13 Comments -

1 – 13 of 13
Anonymous Anonymous said...

What would be amusing is if somebody rewrote that postmodernism essay generator

http://www.elsewhere.org/pomo

so that it generated theoretical physics papers at random. ;)

10:56 PM, June 05, 2006

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee,


that's a very detailed and easy-to-follow recipe, albeit quite complex :-) But I am glad to see that your papers usually do not follow too much that scheme...

BTW, I was completely unaware of the 06/06/06 date today... Thanks for warning me! At least her in Frankfurt, 06:06 am and 06:06 pm have already passed by without anything special happening, so let's keep our fingers crossed ;-)

1:31 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

anonymous said...

so that it generated theoretical physics papers at random. ;)


Well, I try to see the bright side. If enough postdocs generate random papers long enough, there is a chance one of them will eventually find a glimpse of the truth. The probability might be arbitrarily small, but nonzero. Its kind of similar to the 1000 monkeys hitting keys on random, and eventually write the bible.

B. (still waiting for the world to end)

1:40 PM, June 06, 2006

Anonymous Chris said...

can I freeze the leftovers?

5:15 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Christine said...

Great recipe, but how do I generate nice figures? :)

Christine

5:17 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Great recipe, but how do I generate nice figures? :)

Aah, an advanced question! Well, for starters, try this:

a) Take a standard plot that is vaguely related to the topic. Say, a neutrino-oscillation, a thermal spectrum, or the running of gauge couplings.

b) Redefine plotted quantities by dividing through appropriate powers of some arbitrary mass-scale to make sure nobody knows what order of magnitude we are talking about.

c) Give the new quantities names with lots of tildes, primes, over/underscores and indices to make them look really important.

d) Invert the quantity plotted on the x-axis.

e) Double-log the plot. Don't worry about possible singularities, they indicate the occurrence of new physics.

f) Multiply the same curve with a scale-factor x^n, and plot results for various n together.

g) Don't forget a lengthy but vacuous explanation in the caption of every figure.

E.g. 'The dotted curve shows a sudden increase, before dropping after it passes the maximum. It crosses the dashed curve for n larger than 3, which corresponds to the small coupling limit. The large x-behaviour is governed by the asymptotic values.'

Take care but never take me serious,

B.

5:32 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

stefan said ...

But I am glad to see that your papers usually do not follow too much that scheme...


I have a bad conscience in advance.


so let's keep our fingers crossed ;-)

Cant. It's hard to type with fingers crossed. Best,

B.

6:18 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger stefan said...

Wow, the figure recipe sounds like haute cuisine, very sophisticated, indeed ;-)

BTW: I have survived our local 06/06/06! So maybe our most famous newspaper was right: they told yesterday that this year 06 is not dangerous at all, since it is in fact 2006 and the "20" between 06/06 and 06 stands for harmony etc.. and is relaxing the situation...

6:45 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Christine said...

Great! Now the recipe is complete. :)

But that is too much work, Bee. These days people just use their microwave oven on frozen food bought at the nearby store, why go into cooking?

Best wishes,

Christine
(sometimes, don't take me serious too)

7:27 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Christine said...

But that is too much work, Bee


I am working on an instant paper: just add quintessence and stir.

Cooking can be quite relaxing. Esp. if you can give up any time and call the local Indian.

Personally, I prefer nutty fruitcakes.

Best, B.

7:36 PM, June 06, 2006

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It works!

Dynamical generation of fuzzy extra dimensions, dimensional reduction and symmetry breaking

We present a renormalizable 4-dimensional SU(N) gauge theory with a suitable multiplet of scalar fields, which dynamically develops extra dimensions in the form of a fuzzy sphere S^2. We explicitly find the tower of massive Kaluza-Klein modes consistent with an interpretation as gauge theory on M^4 x S^2, the scalars being interpreted as gauge fields on S^2. The gauge group is broken dynamically, and the low-energy content of the model is determined. Depending on the parameters of the model the low-energy gauge group can be SU(n), or broken further to SU(n_1) x SU(n_2) x U(1), with mass scale determined by the size of the extra dimension.

9:16 PM, June 06, 2006

Blogger Lumo said...

Funny. You should also add an automatically generated average abstract. Robert Helling has made the script:

http://atdotde.blogspot.com/2005_02_01_atdotde_archive.html

8:38 PM, June 07, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Lubos, thanks for the link! Now we only need an equation generator, then we can all retire and let our scripts do the work. Best,

B.

PS: I wonder how you managed to write this comment while blogger was down. I lost my post at least 3 times.

9:46 PM, June 07, 2006

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