In Part 1, I explained my hopes that classical statistical mechanics reduces to thermodynamics in the limit where Boltzmann’s constant k k approaches zero. In Part 2, I explained exactly what I mean ...
Sep 9, 2024 To see classical thermodynamics as a limit of classical statistical mechanics, we want to see the Legendre transform as the limit of some quantity related to a Laplace transform. Here’s a ...
Earlier this month the Mathematics Institute at Uppsala University hosted a conference called Categorification in Algebra and Topology, clearly a theme close to our collective heart. As yet there are ...
Why do I care? As we’ll see later, classical statistical mechanics features a crucial formula that involves a Laplace transform. So it would be great if we could find some parameter β \beta in that ...
I’m trying to work out how classical statistical mechanics can reduce to thermodynamics in a certain limit. I sketched out the game plan in Part 1 but there are a lot of details to hammer out. While I ...
organized by Zoran Škoda and Igor Baković.
This is the homepage for the UT Geometry and Quantum Field Theory Seminar. At the organizational meeting we will flesh out the details of our plans for the semester. Below are some suggestions to get ...
A. Perez-Lona, D. Robbins, E. Sharpe, T. Vandermeulen, X. Yu, “Notes on gauging noninvertible symmetries, part 1: Multiplicity-free cases” A. Perez-Lona, D ...
A physical framework often depends on some physical constants that we can imagine varying, and in some limit one framework may reduce to another. This suggests that we should study a ‘moduli space’ or ...
Aug 25, 2024 You can understand Stirling’s formula using the statistical mechanics of ‘energy particles’ — that is, theoretical entities with no properties except energy, which can be any nonnegative ...
Nov 30, 2011 There’s a new paper by Barwick and Schommer-Pries on the (∞,1)-category of (∞n)-categories.