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Anonymous paul valletta said...

A belated congratulation to you both!

I guess the honey period is over? ;)

Some great things to think about, if I may?..I have only a "top-one" question I am currently pondering:Can a water molocule (H2O) exist in more or less dimensions than 3 ? if it 'cannot' be able to exist in say 5th dimension, then this will nullify all Many World theories!

3:31 PM, July 04, 2006

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Paul,

A belated congratulation to you both!

thank you very much!

I guess the honey period is over? ;)

Unfortunately, yes. My wife (I am practising, too ;-)) wanted to experience at least one 4th of July in the US, so she went back to California just in time on sunday.

Can a water molocule (H2O) exist in more or less dimensions than 3 ?

There are no stable bound quantum states for ordinary particles and forces in more than 3 space dimensions, as explained for example in Max Tegmarks paper on the dimensionality of space. That would mean no water there. In two dimensions, it may be possible, I do not know. Some length scale has to be introduced in the logarithmic potential, but bound states and simple molecules could probably exist.

then this will nullify all Many World theories!

Why, and how?


Dear Bee,


that is really lots of structured thought for today - thank you for the lists, the great organisation and analysis, and the bottom line! Mermins article gives a refreshing and unexpected perspective, indeed. BTW, you scooped me ;-) - I will post later this week...

Best, Stefan

6:08 PM, July 04, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Hi paul,

I was about to give the same answer, but Stefan was faster... It's funny though cause I have heard this question with various molecules before, and people are always puzzled to here that it doesn't even work with atoms. However, you can always bind your charged particles to a submanifold and argue the problem away.

I was late for booking the flight and could not get a ticket the week around July 4th.

Best, B.

6:23 PM, July 04, 2006

Blogger QUASAR9 said...

I was going to joke that if you can't make a wedding list, should I trust you with particle physics, nuclear physics, astrophysics, theoretical physics or quantum physics ... then I saw your drop down oxygen mask. lol!

[2) "Do black holes destroy information? If not, what happens to the matter that collapses to a black hole?"]

Are we being metaphysical? what goes past at death from the physical world to the Spirit world: memories, emotions, feelings? Preferences in tastes: music, fashion, flavours, smells ...

Do black holes exist? - do they lead to other universes?
Or are black holes matter where the mass of Sun or Star are compressed to the size of an ultra high density marble (a very small sphere) with the gravitational (magnetic?) field ofa Sun or Star.

Are experiments in a collider or accelerator really representative of Nature & the lanscape in the big dark expanse of the cosmos or the known Universe. Or are they no more to do with 'physical' reality than how video games represent of the life outside in the real world?

I think you are at least asking the right questions. If the answer is 42 maybe people asked the wrong question. PS - I've copied your list to 'dwell' on them a little longer. Hope that is ok with you. Q

6:08 AM, July 05, 2006

Anonymous Uncle Al said...

Is the postulated Equivalence Principle true? Equivalent theory predictions (e.g., metric or teleparallel gravitation) obtain either way. String theory has EP both true and untrue. That is not physical. 10^500 acceptable vacua are a hint.

Metric gravitation is wholly contained within teleparallel gravitation. The singular empirically detectable disjoint non-overlap is vacuum free fall of opposite parity mass distributions. There can be a chiral pseudoscalar background vacuum in teleparallel gravitation. Minimum action trajectories of opposite parity mass distributions will be diastereotopic and non-parallel (test masses as left and right shoes tried on a left foot background). There are no prior constraints to 10^(-10) difference/average divergence.

Half of string theory could suddenly vanish, falsified by two days' lab work. What remains would be workable.

http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm
$(US)16 worth of chemical and two days in the lab. Sensitive to 3x10^(-18) difference/average.

10:40 AM, July 05, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Hi quasar,

Are we being metaphysical?

Why not, girls want to have fun ;-)

Anyway, I don't think the question what happens inside a black hole is metaphysical. It might seem so if you believe there is indeed a singularity. But how physical is infinity?

outside in the real world?

Is there a real world?

PS - I've copied your list to 'dwell' on them a little longer. Hope that is ok with you.

Thats fine with me. Send me a copy of your answers.

Best, B.

3:46 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger Sean Carroll said...

It would be much more interesting to me to get a list of the top ten problems with string theory, constructed by string theorists, and likewise for LQG. Both camps engage in far too much hyping of their own successes and hiding of their shortcomings.

4:51 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Sean,

it is true that constructive criticism in the communities is lacking, imo a result of the specialization into essentially decoupled subfields (see also Science and Democracy II and I.)

However, the point I wanted to make was just that a big part of research focuses on problems in a framework of a theory, problems that arise from problems which arose from problems that were caused by problems... that were maybe pointed out in a Russian paper somewhere in 198-something, forgot the reference, sorry.

And the discussion of these problems has lost contact with what we originally wanted to know.

Maybe it's time to step back and refocus. Best,

B.

5:54 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Uncle,

Half of string theory could suddenly vanish, falsified by two days' lab work. What remains would be workable.

Unfortunately, half of string theorists would not vanish, and what remained would hardy be workable. Someone should think of a 2nd education for out-dated string theorists of which we already have too many.

Best, B

6:08 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger stefan said...

This afternoon's physics colloquium here in Frankfurt was by Gerhard Börner, the author of The Early Universe - Facts and Fiction. It was a very general and not to specialised talk, with a nice overview of the current evidence for dark energy and dark matter from supernovae and WMAP data. So, it has touched mainly point 4, and also point 5 of the list.

Börner was quite cautious as far as possible physical explanations of dark energy and dark matter were concerned.

In the end, I was wandering if this cosmological puzzle would not make up one more item fitting excellently on Mermin's list: Can we be sure that in 2100, our ideas of the cosmos will still be roughly the same as today, or are we completely missing something, and cosmology will look very different?

Best, Stefan

7:03 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger QUASAR9 said...

Wow! Bee, showing your colours!
Are we being metaphysical?
[Why not, girls want to have fun ;-)]
Yeah, I'm with ya on this One.

[Anyway, I don't think the question what happens inside a black hole is metaphysical.]

Because you call something a black hole doesn't make it a HOLE. So you think you can produce a black hole in a test tube? hmmm ... maybe even a wormhole? Maybe you can replicate "The black hole of Calcutta" in a test tube

8:55 PM, July 05, 2006

Blogger Russell said...

If my little sister can destroy information (and believe me she can) I'm guessing a black hole can too.

7:00 PM, October 25, 2008

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