User lakshya bhardwaj - MathOverflow most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-06-19T07:23:43Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/user/16110 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93944/advice-on-doing-physics-under-the-umbrella-of-mathematics-and-the-converse Advice on doing physics under the umbrella of mathematics and the converse Lakshya Bhardwaj 2012-04-13T08:42:41Z 2012-04-13T20:51:55Z <p>Note: This is a question directly copied from Theoretical Physics SE primarily to get the advice of people indulged in mathematics.</p> <p>In the current scenario of research in QFT and string theory (and related mathematical topics), which of the following would an undergraduate student, like me, be advised to do and why if s/he is interested in both the foundations and pushing the frontiers of these subjects and doesn't differentiate between them or thinks that different set of skills and attitudes are required (plus the student is not so strict about mathematical rigor and even <strong>precise</strong>, logical, hand waving arguments suffice to convince him/her)?</p> <p>Get into a maths department for graduate studies and work under people having similar interests and probably also take advice from people in physics department.</p> <p>Get into a physics department for graduate studies and work under people having similar interests and probably pick up the mathematics one needs along the way.</p> <p>Moreover, what would such a student majoring both in mathematics and physics advised to concentrate on during his/her undergraduate education?</p> <p>It seems to me after reading <a href="http://theoreticalphysics.stackexchange.com/questions/321/graduate-school-for-theoretical-physics" rel="nofollow">this post</a> and general experiences of mine that often mathematicians are more willing to accept physical ideas than physicists willing to accept mathematical ideas. Also, the number of people willing also seem to be more in mathematics, at least to me. Also, it seems that some physicists often develop a kind of hatred for mathematics and always remain skeptical that any mathematics can ever do good to physics. On the basis of this, I am inclined towards option 1. Please feel free to correct me.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/78592/unitary-operator-as-a-complex-valued-function Unitary Operator as a complex valued function Lakshya Bhardwaj 2011-10-19T16:42:15Z 2011-10-19T21:15:05Z <p>A book on Quantum Mechanics states, "A unitary operator can be considered to be a complex valued function of a Hermitian operator."</p> <p>Please give a hint on how to prove this assertion.</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93944/advice-on-doing-physics-under-the-umbrella-of-mathematics-and-the-converse/93945#93945 Comment by Lakshya Bhardwaj Lakshya Bhardwaj 2012-04-13T12:39:12Z 2012-04-13T12:39:12Z I would like to clarify that the student likes rigor and prefers it over just hand waving but doesn't let rigor hinder his progress of things that he can directly see from intuition. That was the essence of that statement. Sorry for confusion.