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13:00
@chmod711telkitty Perhaps I should teach you some English.
Meh - I just spent ages getting ready to go shopping. Coat: check. Cards: check. Bags: check. List: check. Dog got food/water: check. keys: check. So, I go out and... car: no check:((

I must have left it down the club again.
It's a constant presence because it's always there.
It's not a constant quantity.
My advice: stick to programming, don't do science
Please give an example of an experiment without experimental error.
@R.MartinhoFernandes fuck you for that damn it. It's too interesting.
@chmod711telkitty you must be new here
Xeo
Xeo
13:02
@MartinJames haha
@R.MartinhoFernandes you said the error is constant, my argument is that the error is not constant, when you are proving a theory using experiments, you usually can do a few things to minimize the error. And you need to be able to explain the error. That's why relativity can not be proved using today's technology - because the difference between the results calculated by the classic physics and that of relativity is so small it can be easily attributed to, say the imperfection of the lense,
the accuracy of the watch or the measuring tools
5 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
@chmod711telkitty Perhaps I should teach you some English.
@chmod711telkitty No, it's not. Go read some.
The reason people explain how the experiments were conducted in scientific papers is exactly so you can't come up with that bullshit.
It cannot be easily attributed to that stuff because the experiments are designed in a way that differences caused by that are easily noticeable.
it cannot be attributed to that stuff at all.
the error rate in the atomic clocks they sent into orbit in the 1950s and 1960s is well below the difference due to relativity.
else using the experiment to try to prove relativity would be meaningless.
13:07
I'm pretty sure that the effect of special relativity have been demostrated repeatedly beyond the reasonable bounds of experimental error.
indeed.
@DeadMG We could have been terribly unlucky and they have been totally consistent in having an error that validates the theory :P
it's amazing how precise we can make scientific equipment these days.
That's telkitty's reality.
@DeadMG Yeah, especially clocks.
13:09
I think our physics lecturer has once said "the results calculated by relativity has never really been completely right ever"
Less error, probably
completely on the spot, never
That's the basis of your argument?
probably didn't account for dark matter.
or dark energy.
Appeal to authority and not even a good authority at that?
2
or any number of beyond-relativity physics.
@DeadMG Dark energy? Leave Vlad out of this.
2
13:10
if the theory predicted the outcome of the experiment to 100%, then we wouldn't need any further physics.
And no, nothing has ever really been completely right.
That's what measurement error means.
So what?
everybody knows that both relativity and the Standard Model have their limits.
that's why we're trying so hard to build new theories of physics
And what if we are so unlucky that the infinitesimal chances that all the experiments we have conducted have had errors that validate our theories when they shouldn't?
that are more accurate
Who the fuck cares?
13:12
This is like discussing calculus with a year 3 pupil ... I give up
All those theories still reliably predict useful outcomes.
@chmod711telkitty Sorry. I thought you were older.
I'll stick to the Simple English wikipedia next time.
2 mins ago, by R. Martinho Fernandes
Who the fuck cares?
this is fun
@BartekBanachewicz Physicists who need to justify next years' grants.
General relativity is a theory of space and time. The theory was created by Albert Einstein in November 1915 and published in early 1916. The central idea of general relativity is that space and time are two aspects of spacetime. Spacetime is curved when there is gravity, matter, energy, and momentum. The links between these forces are shown in the Einstein Field Equations. One equation in General relativity is E=mc^2, and there are many more. In general relativity, an observer in freefall and an observer standing still on a body with mass such as the Earth see no difference in the movem...
"I mean, shit, we've got this massive, circular tunnel under the border that cost billions, and now we're gonna use it as a fucking wine-cellar?".
@chmod711telkitty Are you talking about General Relativity or Special Relativity? Or are you saying they're both wrong?
okey, it was a great read
like a Verne's book
@R.M I presume further experiments were made, as suggested in the paper?
@BartekBanachewicz Yes. Gravitational lens effects show up all the time in telescope pictures.
@R.MartinhoFernandes That, and astigmatism:)
13:21
That's why relativity can not be proved using today's technology
you know, I am actually amazed at how much bullshit telkitty can produce in this chat room
I thought it was proved using yesterday's technology.
basically she can be stupid on any topic at hand
@EricFinn I am saying relativity can possibly produce a more correct result, but I am not sure about it's completely correctness - it has never able to produce a perfectly accurate result - it could be that with our level of technology we are not able to produce instrument that accurate or maybe the theory is still not completely right
that's an undeniable achievement
@chmod711telkitty Nothing has ever produced a perfectly accurate result.
That's not the world we live in.
13:23
@chmod711telkitty you're mixing two different things; the fact that the experiments have errors, and the fact that taking relativity into account gives way more accurate results.
The theory is right enough. It makes useful and valid predictions.
In mathematics, the Pythagorean theorem—or Pythagoras' theorem—is a relation in Euclidean geometry among the three sides of a right triangle. It states that the square of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. The theorem can be written as an equation relating the lengths of the sides a, b and c, often called the Pythagorean equation: :a^2 + b^2 = c^2\!\, where c represents the length of the hypotenuse, and a and b represent the lengths of the other two sides. The Pythagorean theorem is named after the Greek m...
@chmod711telkitty That's not an experiment.
@chmod711telkitty are you implying that every observed cause where relativistic corrections stood up was a coincidence?
this is a theory ... pretty accurate one at that
13:24
It's not a theory.
it's a theorem.
It's written right there on the screen.
Theorem != theory
@BartekBanachewicz Yes. Go back to reading.
A theorem is a proven idea in mathematics. Theorems are proved using logic and other theorems that have already been proved. A theorem that someone must prove so that he/she can prove another theorem is called a lemma. Theorems are made of two parts, there are hypotheses and conclusions. Theorems use deduction, in contrast to theories which are empirical. Some theorems are trivial, they directly follow from the propositions. Other theorems are called "deep", their proof is long and difficult. Sometimes, such proofs involve other areas of matematics or show connections between different ...
@chmod711telkitty Oh, you're going with Pythagoras. I was gonna say that my calculator adds integers together perfectly with no errors.
13:24
that too
It's theorems all the way down until you reach axioms and then nothing's proven and everything is assumptions.
@R.MartinhoFernandes finished the paper and QFT seems a bit too hard for me at the moment. Recommend a subsequent read ITT.
Does anyone know what a troll looks like - I seem to be changing form?
I am also planning on going back to Pierce soon
@BartekBanachewicz Oh. I thought that was telkitty. Sorry. Similarly looking avatar at this scale.
13:26
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah - they're both dark matter.
Sure they're not both dark energy?
A theory is a group of linked ideas intended to explain something, especially an explanation based on basic ideas that do not depend on facts about the thing to be explained. For instance, to explain why gold is yellow, a good theory should not base itself on the fact that people all observe gold to be yellow. A theory in science (in contrast to a theory in layman's terms) is "a logical, systematic set of principles or explanation that has been verified—has stood up against attempts to prove it false." For example, Darwin's Theory of Evolution is a system of ideas that points to humans ...
Simple English wikipedia oneboxing is cool.
@EricFinn No, that's reserved for Vlad.
The theory of relativity, or simply relativity in physics, usually encompasses two theories by Albert Einstein: special relativity and general relativity. (The word relativity can also be used in the context of an older theory, that of Galilean invariance.) Concepts introduced by the theories of relativity include: *Measurements of various quantities are relative to the velocities of observers. In particular, space contracts and time dilates. *Spacetime: space and time should be considered together and in relation to each other. *The speed of light is nonetheless invariant, the same for...
relativity is a theory
A scientific theory
13:27
Yes. Pretty much everything in physics is.
@MartinJames ahah
@chmod711telkitty Yes, and people were saying that you posted a link to a theor*em*, not a theor*y*.
Physics is in the business of producing theories that can make predictions about reality.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ow :D
Philosophy is in the business of truth (among other things).
13:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes all languages onebox
ITT robot reckons reality has nothing to do with truth
you don't cease to amaze me
oh look now we're gonna hear BS about philosophy
Modern physics acknowledges that you can never know the whole truth.
3
Mathematics acknowledges similar defects as well.
I mean I can imagine someone just not knowing something about something.
It doesn't matter.
13:30
But to be actively ignorant and wrong about so many topics requires a fair amount of work.
@R.MartinhoFernandes shh, Heisenberg's stuff are "only" theories.
yes, waiting for it to solidify so I can star it! yes yes!
@BartekBanachewicz ..or not.
Relativity could be "wrong" for all we care. Using it to compute my position thanks to a few pieces of metal above the sky is useful.
@chepner It's hard to put passwords in a file if you cannot put passwords there. It's fine to put passwords in an encrypted file, IMO — sehe 28 secs ago
That is what makes physics theories come and go.
Xeo
Xeo
13:31
r175122: "App version 1.0.1"
--- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+++ <?xml version="1.0.1" encoding="utf-8"?>
Oops
In quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle is any of a variety of mathematical inequalities asserting a fundamental limit to the precision with which certain pairs of physical properties of a particle known as complementary variables, such as position x and momentum p, can be known simultaneously. For instance, in 1927, Werner Heisenberg stated that the more precisely the position of some particle is determined, the less precisely its momentum can be known, and vice versa.. Annotated pre-publication proof sheet of [http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/specialcollections/coll/pauling/bon...
Seems like sehe needs more RAM.
@Xeo I don't even.
I can guess what caused that.
find&replace?
Xeo
Xeo
  <versionNumber>1.0.1</versionNumber>
There's also that field
user1804599
13:33
Ahahah.
Xeo
Xeo
@BartekBanachewicz Nah, just sloppiness with the manual version bump
@chmod711telkitty I have an idea on how to resolve this debate.
even funnier
Ask about whether or not Relativity is real there
Ooh err.. as if the relativity trolling was not enough, web pages with XML are now making an unwelcome appearance:(
13:34
@EricFinn I have a question there! :3
@EricFinn Haha, I would love it if she asked there.
Xeo
Xeo
Yeah, I was wondering why the .xml could not be parsed
i hear they can simulate the rough universe evolution in the computer these days
Truth always rests with the minority ~_~
why can't they use that to find earth twins?
13:35
now you're just copying and pasting random words
@chmod711telkitty Err... what does that mean?
@BartekBanachewicz That's just chandelier.
The truth is the truth. Scientists work to get close to it.
@MartinJames :D
The truth isn't in anybody's hands, afaik
13:36
science doesn't want to get to truth
@EricFinn Not really. Physics is happy enough with a model that produces the same results as reality.
:16336956
“Truth always rests with the minority, and the minority is always stronger than the majority, because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion, while the strength of a majority is illusory, formed by the gangs who have no opinion — and who, therefore, in the next instant (when it is evident that the minority is the stronger) assume its opinion… while truth again reverts to a new minority.”

― Søren Kierkegaard
because they can't. they want to get to a scientific understanding (= methodologically atheistic understanding) of the universe.
Whether that is actually the truth or not, is philosophy.
@chmod711telkitty But I'm serious about asking on Physics SE. Ask about the discussions we've had here, ask about what your professor has said. The experts on the subjects we're talking about are there, not here.
13:37
The speed of trolls is a universal constant, the same for all observers, about one per post for the last hour.
trolls dont have speed
@R.MartinhoFernandes I'd argue that that's close to the truth. Close enough to be useful.
@ÓlafurWaage 'rate of trolling' didn't scan very well:)
@Jef you don't.
@EricFinn I agree. I said it above a couple of times already.
Hello C++ people. Still alive?
Have you tried C++?
W..wh.. what just happened?
@Jef Hahahaha
Hey @KonradRudolph
13:39
I'm believing this is a joke
Jef
Jef
Ow shit
Jef
Jef
Not a joke, mis read, long work day
Ah. Then yeah, wrong room, buddy
13:39
@KonradRudolph we're haskell people
howgh
TURN THAT FUCKING SCRIPT OFF!
what script?
Whatever is toggling the stars.
13:42
that's called a bored somoene
It's the same person as always.
star disco
I thought I would not be the only one to have noticed it so far.
Johannes?
the pattern seems to be binary counting upwards!?
13:44
There's one person that always shows up shortly before the stars.
it's johannes.
@DeadMG what am I?
isn't he the one who drew dicks all over everything?
@JohannesSchaub-litb The one person that always shows up shortly before the stars.
13:45
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's not true. sometimes i'm wrong
ah i thought you said I am right.. well yes it seems that I always show up shortly before the stars
0
Q: Newtonian Physics vs Relativity - the results

chmod 711 telkittyDoes anyone have examples of the results calculated by using Newtonian physics vs the same ones calculated using relativity, compared with real measurements obtained for those experiments? Please elaborate on the experiments and their circumstances too. Thanks.

there seems to be someone who goes all happy and throws stars when I join in here
What is this I don't even.
and by that what we mean is
kindly fucking stop.
13:47
yes, please whoever throws those stars at me, please stop this nonsense. thanks
better throw upvotes
Has anybody seen Armin’s click library for Python? I was thinking of how to port this to C++ …
@KonradRudolph Oh, that'd be neat, especially if you make it header-only.
I rolled my own for nonius :S
@Shog9: ban johannes plix
@R.MartinhoFernandes Unfortunately you cannot really use meta attributes like that in C++ – that I know of
but the following works:
@DeadMG why should he ban me!? i'm not violating anything here.
13:50
you incessantly star random shit and disrupt the room.
Morning.
Yeah Johannes, stahp.
@DeadMG last time this happened, I created a meta question that they shall forbid users to star and unstar posts
Pairs of atomic clocks have been used repeatedly to demonstrate time-dilation.
but nothing happened really. you can't even see what user did the star and unstarring, which is even worse
@MartinJames But never in a way that telkitty deems acceptable.
13:53
@R.MartinhoFernandes Of course:(
there should be a debug log output window only for our channel, that shows all actions and by whom
@JohannesSchaub-litb Yeah, but we already know it's you.
@JohannesSchaub-litb You just edited an existing one. :)
This is too broad, and probably will be closed because the question is asking for what would probably amount to hundreds of thousands of pages of information. A synopsis is given by John Baez at math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SR/experiments.html. Additional info can be found at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tests_of_special_relativity and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tests_of_general_relativity. — DumpsterDoofus 27 secs ago
He didn't link to the Simple English wikipedia. Not gonna work.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I watched on on YouTube that demonstrated a 40ns discrepancy after a transatlantic flight by one clock. 40ns is a HUGE amount of time for such clocks.
13:55
Please give us some numbers? — chmod 711 telkitty 1 min ago
Haha. I gave you better than numbers!
You can measure the orbit of Mercury yourself.
@Jefffrey you can't see my other dupe post of it because I already deleted it
It's probably the most accessible example of noticeable general relativity effects.
@JohannesSchaub-litb I know. I created a dupe at the same time as you and you recommended that I should post an answer instead. I was joking.
@DeadMG you don't really know. just because I join the room just before the starring happens doesn't mean that I do the starring. that's like saying that I would cause trains to start rolling because just after I arrive at the train station, trains start rolling magically.
Xeo
Xeo
13:57
@KonradRudolph I'd rather have this ported :)
@Jefffrey ohh i already forgot xD
@JohannesSchaub-litb There's one important difference: trains still start rolling if you don't arrive.
Not true with the stars.
it's pretty fuckin' obvious that the stars don't happen if you don't happen, and they do happen when you arrive.
anyone with two brain cells can tell that you're the one doing it.
It's probably me
13:59
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok you have convinced me. I wasn't aware stars are quiet when I'm not there. I will try to convince the stars to not dance if I appear
I was here both times. Maybe it's me.
I'm spartakus
@R.MartinhoFernandes You could maybe DIY - you can rent rubidium clocks - not sure if stable enough. Also, a rubidium clock with heavy batteries in a suitcase may alarm airport security:)
@ÓlafurWaage Startacus?
@Xeo Also good … I actually just wanted to test how far you can push C++ in the absence of full introspection, and was quite satisfied with the (fully statically typed, except for the default values, which are stored as boost::any) result

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