New Member Here!

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EruedraithH
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Hello everyone!

I'm a college student with a passion for math, physics, philosophy, etc. I wanted to get more involved with the general physics community to meet others with common interest and to continue learning.

Thank you!
 
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Welcome to PF! :smile:
 
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berkeman said:
Welcome to PF! :smile:
Thank you!
 
You've come to the right place.

Although I am active on a number of subforums, I tend to concentrate on Quantum Mechanics, especially its foundations.

So fire away with your questions.

Thanks
Bill
 
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Welcome! I'm an autodidact hack but I can at least make you feel welcome!

EDIT: Err, I hope.
 
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bhobba said:
You've come to the right place.

Although I am active on a number of subforums, I tend to concentrate on Quantum Mechanics, especially its foundations.

So fire away with your questions.

Thanks
Bill
Much appreciated!

I find QM very interesting and want to study it in depth at some point (hopefully soon). I’ve only had an intro course and some self study. I mainly paused to master the fundamentals first.

You tend to focus on its foundations? Do you have a favorite part?

Thanks
Isaiah
 
sbrothy said:
Welcome! I'm an autodidact hack but I can at least make you feel welcome!

EDIT: Err, I hope.
haha you already did! Thanks!
 
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Welcome to PF! From a physics graduate.
 
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Aha! Someone who can actually answer questions! I knew there were a couple on here! :woot:
 
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DeBangis21 said:
Welcome to PF! From a physics graduate.

Shucks. I am a lowly math graduate.

Thanks
Bill
 
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bhobba said:
Shucks. I am a lowly math graduate.

Thanks
Bill
Oh I think that'll do just fine. :smile:
 
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Hello, I had been a young researcher and furthermore had a lot of spare time in 2024 to investigate fundamental matter which was unresolved in my mind despite years of writing equations. This investigation includes finding the most interesting texts (either peer-reviewed or not) of truly academic researchers. Thank you for offering this space!
 
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Simon F said:
Hello, I had been a young researcher and furthermore had a lot of spare time in 2024 to investigate fundamental matter which was unresolved in my mind despite years of writing equations. This investigation includes finding the most interesting texts (either peer-reviewed or not) of truly academic researchers. Thank you for offering this space!
Welcome to PF.

Please be sure to read the PF Rules (see INFO at the top of the page). We do not allow personal speculation or discussing unpublished work here. We discuss mainstream science as published in the scientific literature (peer-reviewed journals and mainstream textbooks).
 
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berkeman said:
Welcome to PF.

Please be sure to read the PF Rules (see INFO at the top of the page). We do not allow personal speculation or discussing unpublished work here. We discuss mainstream science as published in the scientific literature (peer-reviewed journals and mainstream textbooks).
I found it was important to "break the rule" for the centrifugal force topic but now I regret it, you are right. My last topic about the Coriolis force contained videos released by truly academic scientists/institutions.
 
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Simon F said:
I found it was important to "break the rule" for the centrifugal force topic but now I regret it, you are right. My last topic about the Coriolis force contained videos released by truly academic scientists/institutions.
Just make sure that any technical links you post are to valid peer-reviewed journals or mainstream textbooks. That is the gold standard here.