raj_vad said:
Does the study of QM helps in theory-building?
Does the study of Hilbert spaces or infinite dimesnional spaces give you any new insights in solving a problem?
Does it make you see symmetries in a new way?
I would like to know some of these experiences.
The discussion seems to have go lil awry, I am afraid.
I wish I could make it more focussed.
Thanks a lot space-tiger and all of you.
Ah, sorry, and I contributed to it. "general discussion" is the (only) place on PF were people are not supposed to be really serious. This is the joker's place a bit...
But my answer was not so very silly either, and was a bit in the same spirit as space tiger. A *usual* intro course in QM does not learn you much physical insight, because it focusses on getting the formalism working. But then, even there, you do not get far enough to be able to use it to tackle a "real" problem ; usually an intro QM course ends with the working out of the hydrogen atom.
The main things you've done is A LOT of linear algebra (that's useful as a skill) and some partial differential equations (that's also useful elsewhere). The physics usually remains entirely opaque, and that's meant to be, because no matter how you view QM, it is mindboggling. But that insight comes much later, because in order to even perceive it, you have to become fluent with the machinery.
The only ILLUSION you get out of solving the hydrogen atom is that you now "know" how to deal with chemistry in a physicist's way. But BZZT. Once you start doing such a thing, as say, H Cl, you are dealing with such a difficult problem that it is even hard to get good numerical estimates.
That's why I said that after an *intro* course, you might have the illusion that you can now go and beat that silly chemistry professor to the ground... well, no. A genuine QM problem is usually practically unsolvable. But as you haven't seen that yet in the intro course, you might think that there exist methods (such as finite element in classical mechanics) that can solve real-world problems. They are usually *much harder* than you anticipate after an intro course.
So, usually, you get out:
- a piped-up set of math skills
- not much physical insight (yet)
- the illusion of being able to do things with it.
Nevertheless, the genuine skill you do get out is the first one.
At least that has been my experience, but I think it is quite general.