Recent content by William Crawford
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I Noether's theorem for point particles
Hi PF, As I'm delving back into analytical mechanics, I've noticed that many textbooks don't provide an in-depth discussion of Noether's theorem in the context of point particle Lagrangian mechanics. Does anyone have recommendations for resources (books or otherwise) that cover this topic in...- William Crawford
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- Analytical mechanics Noether's theorem
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Classical Physics
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I Partial derivative of Dirac delta of a composite argument
I'm trying to prove the following statement: $$ D\partial_t\left(\delta\circ\mathbf{v}\right) = J^i\partial_i\left(\delta\circ\mathbf{v}\right), $$ where ##\mathbf{v}## is some function of time and ##n##-dimensional space, ## D ## is the Jacobian determinant associated with ##\mathbf{v}##, that...- William Crawford
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- Composite function Dirac delta Partial derivative
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Calculus
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I The Vector Laplacian: Understanding the Third Term
The Laplacian, or vector Laplacian to be precise, is naturally defined for vector functions as well. In the framework of vector calculus this is often done as $$ \Delta\mathbf{v} = \nabla(\nabla\cdot\mathbf{v}) - \nabla\times(\nabla\times\mathbf{v}), $$ which has the added benefit of being valid...- William Crawford
- Post #6
- Forum: Calculus
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I The Vector Laplacian: Understanding the Third Term
Hi thanks for your respons. Isn't the cross-product of two matrices an ill defined notion? At least, I won't call it a "standard" opperation.- William Crawford
- Post #3
- Forum: Calculus
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I The Vector Laplacian: Understanding the Third Term
Suppose ##A = A_i\mathbf{\hat{e}}_i## and ##B = B_i\mathbf{\hat{e}}_i## are vectors in ##\mathbb{R}^3##. Then \begin{align} \Delta\left(A\times B\right) &= \epsilon_{ijk}\Delta\left(A_jB_k\right)\mathbf{\hat{e}}_i \\ &= \epsilon_{ijk}\left[A_j\Delta B_k + 2\partial_mA_j\partial_mB_k + B_k\Delta...- William Crawford
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- Cross product Laplacian Vector calculus
- Replies: 6
- Forum: Calculus
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I Are linear automorphisms nothing but the identity mapping?
Hi Physics Forums, Quick question! Are every automorphism on a vectors space ## V ## over some field ## \mathbb{F} ## nothing but the identity mapping in disguise? The reason for asking is; automorphisms are (from my point of view) basically a change of basis, and vectors are invariant under...- William Crawford
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- Linear algagbra
- Replies: 6
- Forum: Linear and Abstract Algebra
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A Ground state of the one-dimensional spin-1/2 Ising model
Never mind, I've solved it myself. Simply using that $$ \min_{\lbrace s_n\rbrace}\mathcal{H} = \sum_n\min\left(-Js_ns_{n+1}\right). $$- William Crawford
- Post #2
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter
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A Ground state of the one-dimensional spin-1/2 Ising model
Hi, I know that the ground state of the spin-1/2 Ising model is the ordered phase (either all spin up or all spin down). But how do I actually go about deriving this from say the one-dimensional spin hamiltonian itself, without having to solve system i.e. finding the partition function? $$...- William Crawford
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- Ground Ground state Ising model Lattice models Model State
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Atomic and Condensed Matter
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A Adjusting Parameters for Identifying Features of an Action Potential
The action potential satisfy a 2nd order ODE according to the Hodgkin-Huxley model. See equation (30) of their seminal paper [1]. This equation has no closed form solution, but can be solved numerically. [1]. HODGKIN AL, HUXLEY AF. A quantitative description of membrane current and its...- William Crawford
- Post #15
- Forum: General Math
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I Good introductory book for chaos theory?
Nonlinear dynamics and chaos by Steven Strogatz is a classic and often the book used in introductory courses on the subject. It's exceptional well written and easily digestible. More advanced treatments of the subject depends on the direction you want to go in. Chaos is a big field with a lot of...- William Crawford
- Post #3
- Forum: General Math
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First order differential equation involving a square root
I would expect the equation to be $$ \bigg(\frac{dR}{dt}\bigg)^2 = \frac{GM}{R} $$ if it where to describe the gravitational collapse of a non-relativistic star, as a fluid parcel located at distance ##R## is gravitational bound (the Viral theorem). But I might be wrong, I haven't really studied...- William Crawford
- Post #16
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Solution of a parametric differential equation
No worries! It was me that read your original post in a hurry. Your differential equation in ##y^\prime## belong to a notorious difficult class of ODE's called Abel's nonlinear ODE's of the fist-kind. I haven't had the change nor time to study this class of ODE's, so I'm afraid that I can't...- William Crawford
- Post #4
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Solution of a parametric differential equation
Your ODE is a second-order linear equation with constant coefficients. It is rather straightforward to solve, simply observe that you can write it in the following form $$ \big(e^{kt}y^\prime\big)^\prime = - ae^{kt}.$$ Now you simply have to integrate twice.- William Crawford
- Post #2
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Can You Solve This Challenging Functional Equation?
Let ##c## be a rational number (possibly irrational), then there exist a sequence ##\{q_n\}_{n\in\mathbb{N}}## of purely rational numbers that converges to ##c##. Therefore (assuming ##f## is continuous) $$ \begin{align*} f(cx) &= \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}f(q_nx) \\ &=...- William Crawford
- Post #35
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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Can You Solve This Challenging Functional Equation?
The function ##f(x) = \mathrm{max}(x,0)## (i.e. the positive part) is also a solution to Cauchy as well and though it is continuous it isn't differentiable at ##x=0## and thus not analytic. Check for yourself if also satisfy the original functional equation.- William Crawford
- Post #29
- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help