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The veracity of information doesn't depend on the form of its source. It can be statement of a teacher, or colleague, textbooks, online encyclopedia, news, TV, website, blogs, social media, or AI models.
I would class a Feynman diagram as a mathematical model, as, I think, would Feynman.
Huygen's construction doesn't purport to explain anything.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 23/02/2024 08:42:05The veracity of information doesn't depend on the form of its source. It can be statement of a teacher, or colleague, textbooks, online encyclopedia, news, TV, website, blogs, social media, or AI models.But it has to be correct, and if it is in response to a question, it has to be relevant and informative. Better still if it is actually helpful. One line of code: IF CHAR=<?> THEN PRINT "the answer may be found in textbooks". How's that for efficient programming, in genuine 1960s Algol!
Quote from: alancalverd on 23/02/2024 21:00:44I would class a Feynman diagram as a mathematical model, as, I think, would Feynman.I would say, if I was asked, that a Feynman diagram is a representation of a(n element of a) symmetry group. Namely U(1) symmetry. The fermions are there for closure (that's over the algebra).With the caveat that the symmetries are not exact according to modern theories.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 23/02/2024 08:42:05The veracity of information doesn't depend on the form of its source. It can be statement of a teacher, or colleague, textbooks, online encyclopedia, news, TV, website, blogs, social media, or AI models.Perhaps that's the issue. Without critical thinking skills, all sources no matter how unreliable seem to be on equal footing?
Gemini's answer is better than most sources found online which I posted on the first page.
I would say, if I was asked, that a Feynman diagram is a representation of a(n element of a) symmetry group. Namely U(1) symmetry.
In theoretical physics, a Feynman diagram is a pictorial representation of the mathematical expressions describing the behavior and interaction of subatomic particles.
How can Feynman's diagram be used to explain diffraction and interference?
Quote from: alancalverd on 23/02/2024 10:18:20Huygen's construction doesn't purport to explain anything. It would make it useless.
which is pretty much what I said.
Quote from: hamdani yusuf on 24/02/2024 09:56:28Quote from: alancalverd on 23/02/2024 10:18:20Huygen's construction doesn't purport to explain anything. It would make it useless. We have very accurate models for predicting sunrise and high tides, but don't explain either. Try telling a mariner that they are useless.
Edge (dimension → 0) or surface (dimension → ∞)? One produces diffraction, the other produces reflection. Real objects fit somewhere between.
A rather blunt knife, but at least commensurate with the wavelength, so Huygens is a good approximation.
Quote from: alancalverd on 29/02/2024 11:29:03A rather blunt knife, but at least commensurate with the wavelength, so Huygens is a good approximation.Do the characteristics of the barrier have any effect?What does Huygens' principle say about this? Is there any quantitative statement?What's your threshold for being good?
I have uploaded new video showing diffraction in microwave frequency.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NEsb8J9DroBasically, the experiment result leads us to conclude that diffraction comes from the material blocking the microwave path. When the obstruction is opaque enough, we find no diffraction. It's similar to my experiment using laser showing non-diffractive obstruction.This result is not widely known yet.