Blog Post number 2
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Physics student and researcher. When I'm not thinking about physics, economics or math, I like to take pictures, read books, travel and bike, listen to the Talking Heads, etc...
less than 1 minute read
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This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.
6 minute read
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I only met uncle Jacques once. We were in Bathurst, on the shores of Atlantic New Brunswick. He had just left his second wife to get back together with his first. He was a fisherman. Our interactions were infrequent, unremarkable, and bordered on uncomfortable. But he told the tale of his last few months, and I was attentive. I was in Gaspé and drove straight down to Montréal, he said. An eight-hour trip, eyes on the road, lost in a dizzy focus. Beyond the destination, there was another. I drove to clear my head, to guide myself and stay on my tracks. When you drive, you’re forced to stay within your lane. Bound by a set of rules, confined to pre-existing models. Resisting, at all times, the call of the void. To steer off in one direction or another. I may have been paraphrasing – he did only speak French, after all. But I remember that metaphor still, as it finds its way back to me staring out the passenger seat window. As I am stopped at a red. As I turn at a bend. And it came to me yesterday, as I lived the near three hours of Drive My Car, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi’s latest feature.
5 minute read
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What is the vector potential, really? Besides a mathematical trick envoked to exploit the fact that the magnetic is always incompressible, undergraduates (such as myself) were never shown a satisfying explanation. We go through our electromagnetism classes spiting it, thinking to ourselves that “if the universe were more symmetric, it wouldn’t exist!” when in fact the truth could not be more different. This strange potential function is undoubtedly the most used and applied field in all of physics, and its importance to the theory of quantum mechanics, from lattice gauge theory to particle physics, cannot be overstated. In what follows, I hope to convince you, a young physicist of limited knowledge and strong conviction, that this potential is not simply a mathematical construct. That it is perhaps the piece with the deepest and most resonant consequences.
less than 1 minute read
Published:
This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.