What is the role of theorists in scientific research?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the role of theorists in scientific research, particularly in the fields of physics and mathematics. Participants explore the differences between theorists and experimentalists, the contributions of graduate students, and the nature of theoretical research and its implications for experimental validation.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants describe the role of theorists as developing mathematical models that experimentalists test, while others emphasize the collaborative nature of their work.
  • One participant notes that theorists often simplify complex equations to derive testable predictions, which can then be validated through experiments.
  • There is mention of "phenomenology," where theorists derive observable phenomena from theoretical equations, indicating a shared responsibility between theorists and experimentalists.
  • Some participants express uncertainty about how theorists generate new ideas or models, questioning the process of theoretical innovation.
  • Graduate students are discussed as playing a significant role in research, often contributing to the bulk of the work while professors receive credit for publications.
  • One participant highlights the importance of funding in theoretical research, suggesting it is a significant aspect of a theorist's responsibilities.
  • There is a distinction made between theorists who develop groundbreaking theories and those who work within established frameworks to compute results or refine existing models.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the nature of theoretical work and the contributions of theorists versus experimentalists. There is no clear consensus on how new theories are developed or the specific processes involved in theoretical research.

Contextual Notes

Some participants acknowledge limitations in their understanding of theoretical research processes and the collaborative dynamics between theorists and experimentalists, indicating a need for further exploration of these topics.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to students and researchers in physics, mathematics, and related fields, particularly those curious about the interplay between theoretical and experimental work in scientific research.

Poop-Loops
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This question has been on my mind for a while now, and I don't want to bug any of my professors in case they give me something to do.

I know what an experimentalist does. Devise some experiment, build it, take data, analyze data. Either your experiment gives evidence for something or shows that it just doesn't happen (say a new particle being detected under XYZ circumstances). Unless you get an "inconclusive" as a result, but that's irrelevant to my point.

So it's all pretty straight forward. If people start bugging you about your work, you show them where you are at in the experiment, where you hope to be in the future, etc.

But I can't think of what a theorist does. I can't imagine it's something like "Oh I'm in the process of solving this equation but it will take me another month." or the like. I can see people finding new ways to solve really hard equations (i.e. using Perturbation Theory or something like that), but partial results probably don't get you anywhere, so you can't just say "I tried it, it failed.", like an experimentalist would. Could you?

This goes for mathematicians, too. I know math is something different, but similar in the research I suspect. And grad students? How do they help a professor in their research?

Sorry if this is a stupid question. :(
 
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Poop-Loops said:
And grad students? How do they help a professor in their research?
In a sense, its no different than any other field. The grad students do the lion's share of the work and put the professor's name on all the papers, sometimes the first name on the paper.

I just got my name on a paper this way. I had the original idea on how to solve a problem and did a bit of the initial math. Except for this initial math, someone else did all the work. Since it was my idea, my name is on the paper. Since someone else did all the work, my name is not first.

I also didn't get my name on many papers. I helped an intern through a messy problem last summer (I helped him a lot last summer, probably too much, but it was a fun problem). The problem is messy enough to make it the core of his thesis topic. He spent an additional nine months on the problem. I got an acknowledgment in an upcoming paper, which is fine. He did nine months of work without any consultation whatsoever.
 
Having no experience with formal education, I'll just put in my amateur opinion. A theorist comes up with the stuff that the experimentalist tests for.
 
Poop-Loops said:
But I can't think of what a theorist does. I can't imagine it's something like "Oh I'm in the process of solving this equation but it will take me another month." or the like.

Sometimes it really does boil down to such a situation. In almost all seminars I have attended the research has been done with a set of very complicated equations that has been simplified through scaling or other arguments (i.e. steady-state, spherically symmetric, etc). They continue to solve them with as much rigor as possible and adding more complications as results improve from older methods.

Disclaimer: I am an undergraduate and am just stating my opinions and observation from seminars and my own research experience.
 
Then there is also "phenomenology" (not to be confused with the Sartrean philosophy of the same name), which is taking the theories and trying to derive testable results from them; i.e., to see what observable phenomena are implied by the equations. Both theorists and experimentalists participate in this.
 
Danger said:
Having no experience with formal education, I'll just put in my amateur opinion. A theorist comes up with the stuff that the experimentalist tests for.
Something like that. Experimentalists develop the experiment and equipment to test a theory or model, and a theorist will develop the mathematical model or framework to explain the observation. It's really cool when a theorist can make a prediction, and then have an experimentalist develop an experiment in which the outcome agrees with the prediction.

Experimentalists and theorists often collaborate, particularly when it comes to applied science. I do simulations because doing many experiments would be prohibitively expensive. So there are a limited number of experiments performed by different groups, and theorists then develop models based on the results of those experiments, but also with other basic research regarding the behavior and properties of materials. We put the models together and then do predictive analysis, and these days, we do a pretty decent job of predicting the behavior of complex systems and interactions.
 
I see... tit for tat (I wonder if the censor software will let that through). I had totally forgotten that an experimentalist can observe something that then has to be explained by a theorist. That's pretty embarrassing. :redface:
 
Thanks for all your help, people.

D H said:
In a sense, its no different than any other field. The grad students do the lion's share of the work and put the professor's name on all the papers, sometimes the first name on the paper.

I just got my name on a paper this way. I had the original idea on how to solve a problem and did a bit of the initial math. Except for this initial math, someone else did all the work. Since it was my idea, my name is on the paper. Since someone else did all the work, my name is not first.

I also didn't get my name on many papers. I helped an intern through a messy problem last summer (I helped him a lot last summer, probably too much, but it was a fun problem). The problem is messy enough to make it the core of his thesis topic. He spent an additional nine months on the problem. I got an acknowledgment in an upcoming paper, which is fine. He did nine months of work without any consultation whatsoever.

But that's not what I meant...

I am asking what it is you actually did.

Like my friend is doing research for a professor. Right now this professor is trying to figure out whether or not some experiment is viable with the equipment and what they are using, etc. That much makes sense.

But when you have people coming up with new models, say for example Einstein and his relativity, or Maxwell, or whoever, how do you come up with something completely different like that? Does it just have to click or what?

I have another professor who does biophysics stuff, so I assume a lot of his time is spent modeling behaviors of various cells and whatnot. I understand how you can say "Okay, assume it's spherical, in a vacuum" etc, then one by one add more complexities to the situation and try to account for them.

But it just baffles me how someone can do theoretical research on some new theory or something completely different. Same with math. How do you do research for math, to prove something or come up with new math? It just seems so crazy.
 
They also spend a lot of time scavenging for funding...
 
  • #10
Einstein was a theorist.
 
  • #11
A physicist who is a theorist has 2 main jobs.
For areas where there is an established model, to compute results for previously untested regions. There may or may not already be experimental evidence for these results, if there is, the results are compared, if there isn't you wait for someone to do an experiment, and then compare the results.
If there is an established model, but it disagrees with experiment of some sort, then the theory is only approximately correct, or only correct in some region. The theorist then tries to come up with a new theory (or a correction to the old one) which will be valid in a larger region.
More generally than that, running numerical solutions, computing analytical solutions (or approximations), etc. and so on, and comparing the numerical/analytical solutions/approximations to each other and to experiment.
 
  • #12
There are two kinds of theorists..There are the ones who come up with the brilliant ideas such as Relativity, QM, QED, etc...

The other type are the ones who do the pick and shovel work applying the theory to other cases and extending the theory.

Most of the theorists are of the latter not the former.

Let's give some examples, Einstein, Schrödinger, Dirac and Feynman were of the first type, brilliant leaders.

Now Bethe was more of the second type, he was brilliant, but his strength was in putting everything together that existed and furthering it.
 
  • #13
I understand what you mean by furthering what we already know. That makes a lot of sense.

I guess creating new theories and stuff just takes a stroke of genius, then, and not really some logical progression?
 
  • #14
Poop-Loops said:
...Does it just have to click or what?...

I
I think you have to have been seriously puzzled about something for some time. Then it has to click!
There is a very good account of this in the first ten chapters of "Personal Knowledge" by Michael Polanyi (experimentalist cum theorist), (Harper & Row,
New York, 1964).
 
  • #15
There is an awfull lot to be puzzled about if you just so happen to try and make sense of the last glacial transition. The number of studies in the different areas double about every year and maintaining situation awareness is increasingly hard.

I think that the key is in understanding why the European, South American and GRIP ice core transition to the Younger Dryas dates to 12,700 years BP and the Cariaco basin - GISP ice core transition dates 12,900 years. I try to write a 6000 word study on it but given the plethora of evidence it gets to at least 9000. And most definitely, something in some suppositions is definitely wrong and that's when it gets very tricky.

In this case, theorists should be seen as "generalists", who try to maintain overview of the whole picture, not a confined specialism.
 
  • #16
pkleinod said:
I think you have to have been seriously puzzled about something for some time. Then it has to click!
There is a very good account of this in the first ten chapters of "Personal Knowledge" by Michael Polanyi (experimentalist cum theorist), (Harper & Row,
New York, 1964).

It funny how that works. I have solved some serious problems at work by having things just click -- usually while driving for some reason. I don't know what it is about driving, but I have the best ideas while driving. The best way is on a lonely dark road through the desert. Although I had the solution to one of my most difficult problems come to me while driving through Los Angeles... Weird.
 
  • #17
wildman said:
It funny how that works. I have solved some serious problems at work by having things just click -- usually while driving for some reason. I don't know what it is about driving, but I have the best ideas while driving. The best way is on a lonely dark road through the desert. Although I had the solution to one of my most difficult problems come to me while driving through Los Angeles... Weird.

I think that it's just because driving (even in a city) is mostly an autonomous function to a lot of people. Your brain has to remain at a high level of alertness, but the physical actions are pretty much just muscle memory. You don't have to think about what you're doing with your arms and legs. That frees up a lot of the alert brain to think about other things. I'm not sure about that, of course, but it's how it seems to work for me.
 
  • #18
Yes, it works for me too: not driving a car through a desert but rather a bicycle through a forest to and from work. I guess the details are not so important.
 
  • #19
Same principle, regardless of the vehicle.
 
  • #20
Yeah, I thought it was common knowledge that spinning rubber emits Braintrons, which helps you think.

Oddly enough, reality TV emits anti-braintrons.
 
  • #21
Poop-Loops said:
Yeah, I thought it was common knowledge that spinning rubber emits Braintrons, which helps you think.

Oddly enough, reality TV emits anti-braintrons.

I've noticed that too. Maybe we can write a general theory of Braintrons and anti-braintrons.
 

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