What mathematics should I know to study quantum mechanics, particle physics?
Tensor analysis?
Is it as difficult as Finite Element Method?
Statistical calculus necessary?
Basic Algebra. Basic Calculus. Linear algebra will be very useful. Vector calculus. Some group theory could be useful. Differential equations, particularly partial differential equations.What mathematics should I know to study quantum mechanics, particle physics?
Not only what is Quantum Mechanics, but also how do Quantum Mechanics work. How is a quantum event modelled?
We know there is a threshold event involved which triggers the quantum change. At this threshold event the system is in a state of "quantum suspension" or "in superposition" before collapsing into a single state.
If we are ever going to find an absolute universal time constant, it should be the duration of a "superposition" before the quantum collapse itself.
AFAIK quantum events have a value, but I don't know of any equation for the duration of "superposition" before collapse of the function.
Is it more difficult? Depends your preferences for mathematics. I personally preferred it to FEM.What mathematics should I know to study quantum mechanics, particle physics?
Tensor analysis?
Is it as difficult as Finite Element Method?
Is it more difficult? Depends your preferences for mathematics. I personally preferred it to FEM.
You need calculus, linear algebra (as much as you can do!), functional analysis, tensor calculus, basic probability theory. You need to be comfortable with vector spaces, duals (everything is a Hilbert space!), inner products, eigen-values/vectors/spaces/functions/states, variational methods, multi-dimensional integrals/calculus, group theory. Differential geometry wouldn't hurt either, especially if you lean towards anything related to space-time (general relativity, string theory etc).
A lot of non-relativistic QM is about linear operators (finite or infinite matrices usually) acting on Hilbert spaces. Almost everything then depends on operator spectral decompositions - ie energies and eigen-states. If you're comfortable with matrices, vectors, calculus and index notation you'll get up to speed pretty quickly and a lot of that does come up with FEM.
Thanks, I just randomly thought "I wonder how SciForums is doing" and took a look. Occasionally in the past I've checked up on how people like Farsight are/were doing, for a chuckle, and stuff like that but not felt compelled to post. Someone actually wanting to learn some QM seemed a more worthwhile reason to actually post.This may be off-topic but it's awesome to see you back, hope you're doing well!
Farsight disappeared long ago, I'm pleased to say and Reiku seems to have stopped. I think Reiku, who is on the autistic spectrum, has finally discovered words, which must be a big help to him. Perhaps we are some of the beneficiaries of that.Thanks, I just randomly thought "I wonder how SciForums is doing" and took a look. Occasionally in the past I've checked up on how people like Farsight are/were doing, for a chuckle, and stuff like that but not felt compelled to post. Someone actually wanting to learn some QM seemed a more worthwhile reason to actually post.
Thanks, I just randomly thought "I wonder how SciForums is doing" and took a look. Occasionally in the past I've checked up on how people like Farsight are/were doing, for a chuckle, and stuff like that but not felt compelled to post. Someone actually wanting to learn some QM seemed a more worthwhile reason to actually post.
I got taught the historical foundations of QM as part of my undergrad studies, (Ultraviolet Catastrophe, Photo-Electric Effect, Geiger-Marsden Experiment etc) but my understanding may be a bit basic for you.Yeah, I've been picking up lots of bits and pieces lately. If there's ever enough interest I might eventually want to go back to that thingy I was doing about deriving everything in Special Relativity directly from classical electromagnetism and some basic physical reasoning, I think the Lie Symmetry stuff someone else brought up was an unnecessary tangent. I took a course in String Theory a long time ago and want to eventually come back to learning it, but for now I'm more interested in the historical foundations of QM and Relativity, how we can confidently rule out the alternatives from basic historical experiments before we go into more advanced details etc. Found some good sources on the historical development of General Relativity, Wiens and Planck dealing with blackbodies, Arago's stellar aberration experiments and Fresnel's ether drag theory, lots of cool stuff.
Are you much familiar with historical developments, in case I might have questions to ask?
I got taught the historical foundations of QM as part of my undergrad studies, (Ultraviolet Catastrophe, Photo-Electric Effect, Geiger-Marsden Experiment etc) but my understanding may be a bit basic for you.
We humans have gradually discovered many additional recurring shapes and patterns in nature, involving not only motion and gravity, but also areas as disparate as electricity, magnetism, light, heat, chemistry, radioactivity, and subatomic particles. These patterns are summarized by what we call our laws of physics. Just as the shape of an ellipse, all these laws can be described using mathematical equations.
Equations aren't the only hints of mathematics that are built into nature: there are also numbers.
As opposed to human creations like the page numbers in this book, I'm now talking about numbers that are basic properties of our physical reality. For example, how many pencils can you arrange so that they're all perpendicular (at 90 degrees) to each other? 3 – by placing them along the 3 edges emanating from a corner of your room, say.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/is-the-universe-made-of-math-excerpt/Where did that number 3 come sailing in from? We call this number the dimensionality of our space, but why are there 3 dimensions rather than 4 or 2 or 42? And why are there, as far as we can tell, exactly 6 kinds of quarks in our Universe? There are also numbers encoded in nature that require decimals to write out – for example, the proton about 1836.15267 times heavier than the electron. From just 32 such numbers, we physicists can in principle compute every other physical constant ever measured.........more..