- #36
gleem
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gleem said:I apologize in advance to those who might be offended but so many times the thread becomes a debate among responders and miss the chance to provide a helpful learning experience.
The OP author I believe is a high school student. The question was straight forward. The explanation does not need, nor is IMO of much value, to provide a state of the art dissertation or erudite dialog on elements of the OP
I respectively disagree wrt this thread. Some of the discussion in this thread are of little value to the question asked.. IMO some of the responses just distract from the presenting of the best answers to the question. I might add that there where about 8 response to the OP when the poster repeated his question having had no satisfactory response to that point.vanhees71 said:This is utter nonsense. The debate among physicists is the highest value a forum like this can provide to a student. To just get an answer, it's most efficient to read a good textbook on the subject (although particularly in QT you have the problem that there are many textbooks, and it's not easy to find the good ones out of the noise). The discussion in the forum provides additional insight, how problems are attacked. You also learn that the arguments are not so simple even for experts, which should be encouraging to learn more and to build an own opinion on the problem and its possible solutions.
The tendency in modern physics didactics is very dangerous for the education: The tendency is to marginalize proper mathematical and scientific methods in favor of pseudoscientific qualitative narratives. The impact on the German high school system in the STEM curricula is already now very worrisome. Now they even discuss to give up the distinction between the classical fundamental subjects in the natural sciences (physics, chemistry, biology) and mix everything together in a kind of "natural history" class. This is a step back behind the achievements of the 19th century where a high scientific standard has been reached in the German high school curriculum. I fear the real reason is to cut even more on the educational budgets of the states and finally to reduce the overall hours in the STEM part of high school education.
The consequences are well visible here at the university: At the university entrance level you have to provide more and more auxilliary lectures and courses to close the gap between what was standard in the high school curriculum, particularly in mathematics (which used to include a solid basis in calculus, linear algebra, and probability theory which are all very useful for studying any subject with a quantitative empirical basis, and these are not only the obvious "classical" natural sciences but also part of the humanities, medicine, psychology, and of course economy).
So, as part of the scientific community, we should fight against these tendencies, which are unfortunately not restricted to Germany, as good as we can and note give in against superficial "studies" in questionable didactics!
Sorry for getting off topic.
vanhees71 said:Well, that's a pity since if you are only after the explicitly analytically solvable models you need to solve only for the (3D symmetric) harmonic oscillator. With this you get the solution for the angular-momentum algebra su(2), and this can be used for so(4)=su(2)⊕su(2)so(4)=su(2)⊕su(2)\mathrm{so}(4)=\mathrm{su}(2) \oplus \mathrm{su}(2) and their deformations needed for the Kepler problem/hydrogen atom in its most simple form :-).
How does this clarify the OP, when the question obviously indicates a lack a familiarity with partial differential equation solutions.?
Sorry about staying off the topic.