falkod | 7 years ago | on: Log-Spherical Mapping in SDF Raymarching
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falkod | 8 years ago | on: Jupyter, Mathematica, and the Future of the Research Paper
falkod | 8 years ago | on: Scale-invariant instantons and the complete lifetime of the standard model
This is usually implicit in such analyses.
>> More generally, what's even the point of placing a confidence level on a non-falsifiable claim? What utility does it serve?
It's not about falsifiability in the sense that someone should go out and measure the predicted lifetime of the universe experimentally.
The point of such lifetime calculations (and their associated confidence levels) is more as a test of the underlying theory - the Standard Model of particle physics. If this theory would make the prediction that the lifetime of the universe should be shorter than the observed lifetime of the universe, then clearly there is something wrong with the theory, or with the way the lifetime has been computed, since clearly we are still here to make that calcuation. Usually, this is seen as a sign that there should be some new physics - i.e. physics that is not described by the standard model in its present form - that should enter at an energy scale relevant to the calculation. Since this we do not know about this physics yet, the calculation is necessarily incomplete, which would explain finding a "too short" lifetime of the universe, while with a more complete theory one would (hopefully) find a result, that explains observed lifetime of the universe.
The fact that the paper finds a "long enough" lifetime of the universe, could be seen as an indication that the theory is able to make predictions at energy scales relevant to this calculation.
falkod | 8 years ago | on: Show HN: Arxiv Vanity – Read academic papers from Arxiv as responsive web pages
I agree that maybe layouting based on physical paper is maybe not ultimately necessary, but it gives the reader a familiar structure. The way the advertised web site is transferring the papers into a long scrolling list of text ... I find it rather disorienting and unstructured. Text that is split up into "pages" (whatever size they are in the end) somehow helps break up the reading flow.
In the end it remains to be shown that the gain from having academic papers not typeset in PDF outweighs the hassle of having to deal with non-standardized ways of rendering properly formatted text on websites (thinks like MathJax etc. do not support everything that is available in full LaTeX etc.).
falkod | 9 years ago | on: Show HN: Academic Bio – A simple static site generator for academic webpages