srallaba
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- TL;DR
- What is a run away solution?
I was asked to show that a system has run away solutions, the implications of which are that it is inherently unstable.
The discussion centers around the concept of "runaway solutions" in systems, particularly in the context of stability and instability. Participants explore the implications of these solutions, their differences from stable solutions, and the relevance of these concepts in both classical and quantum frameworks.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the implications of runaway solutions, the nature of causality, or the relationship between classical and quantum frameworks. Multiple competing views remain on these topics.
Participants note the importance of context in discussing stability, as it is a multidisciplinary topic that may vary significantly depending on the specific system being analyzed.
srallaba said:I was asked to show...
bhobba said:It has acausal runaway solutions as detailed in the paper.
Sorry for the confusion. I just wanted what 'run away' implies.Swamp Thing said:... by whom, and in what course, about what kind of system? -- That kind of context might help other members to target your problem a lot better. Stability is a multidisciplinary topic where context would help narrow down to what you need.
Causality in this sense is not a fundamental microscopic law, but an emergent macroscopic law. It is closely related to the 2nd law of thermodynamics.vanhees71 said:At the end everything should be retarded in classical electrodynamics due to causality.