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Are the good examples of Examples where physical heuristics led to incorrect answers? |
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Physicists can be wrongAre the good examples of where physical heuristics led to incorrect answersI have always been impressed by the number of results conjectured by physicist, based on mathematically non-rigorous reasoning, then (much) later proved correct by mathematicians. A recent example is the $\sqrt{2+\sqrt{2}}$ connective constant of the honeycomb lattice, derived non rigorously by the physicist B. Nienhuis in 1982 and rigorously proved this year by S. Smirnov and H. Duminil-Copin. I would be interested in knowing examples of results conjectured by physicists and later proved wrong by mathematicians. Furthermore it would be interesting to understand why physical heuristics can go wrong, and how wrong they can go (for example, were the physicists simply missing an important technical assumption or was the conjecture unsalvagable). |
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Post Reopened by Wadim Zudilin, Yemon Choi, Gjergji Zaimi, Alekk, Harry Gindi
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Post Made Community Wiki by Alekk
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Post Closed as "off topic" by Robin Chapman, S. Carnahan♦
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