Exotic math

From apm
Revision as of 14:02, 1 June 2021 by Apm (Talk | contribs) (basic crude page)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is a stub. It needs to be expanded.

In statistical physics

There's a transformation from a huge statistical number of nested products to a huge statistical number of nested sums
involved as a critical step in the derivation of thermodynamic potentials from microstates in statistical physics.
Conventional mathematical notation has no means to denote this step formally in a proper way. So it comes over as hand-wavey.
It works though.

In the classical scattering problem

In the case of the the physical scattering problem the solution approach involves solving it by Fourier transforming space forth and back.
There are several implicit limits involved in the classical scattering problem.
This is making a proper mathematical treatment very difficult (and tedious), and thus such a treatment is practically never done.
Especially not in a limited time educational context where students struggle with the basic concepts.


On an other note: There's a matrix in the denominator of a fraction involved, which is quite odd. Related:

  • Cauchy's integral theorem – it gets a very prominent application here to solve an integral
  • Born–Oppenheimer approximation – and its deceiving pseudo convergence – (to check)

In generalized functions (distributions)

"Support functions" zero everywhere except in a finite region and infinitely often continuously differentiable Are not forced to be a constant seemingly contradicting Liouville's theorem (complex analysis). But they don't.
What was the reason here again? ...

Related: Repeated integration of the Thue–Morse sequence leading to the Fabius function which interestingly is nowhere analytic

In the theory of quantum chaos

In the theory of quantum chaos to get the Lyapunov exponent
there's something involved even more wild than matrices in the just exponents.
TODO figure out what that was.

In the context of generating functions

A link

In the Curry-Howard-Lambeck correspondence (or isomorphism).
(The three names refer to programming-language-types, logical-propositions, and category-theory-constructs respectively.)
Data structures (like lists and trees) of specific format (ADTs algebraic data types – product types and sum types)
have a direct correspondence to algebraic polynomials that can be collapsed down to generating functions.

Note: Functions and data are being treated unitedly as one and the same thing.

Now the fascinating thing:
While finding the category theoretical analogies of prog-lang types is straightforward
the reverse going from category theory to prog-lang types leads some unexpectedly present blank spots being filled
It's about inverse operations that at first glance don't seem to make sense.
(Maybe just like matrices in exponents and in denominators at first glance don't seem to make sense.)
But maybe these new operations do make sense in some way. It seems likely.

Just playing around

In the context of generating finctions there is an analog with products instead of sums.
What was this all about again? ...

Limits of math

The program that constructs and executes in parallel all possibly constructable programs.

Interesting less known fractals

  • devils stairecase
  • fractal from (x+-1) polynomials ?? ...