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by whatshisface
858 days ago
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I've never actually seen a physical example of a system without a continuous first derivative. For example phase transitions, commonly touted as an example of discontinuity, don't actually occur until the matter has gone a bit over the point and a transition nucleates somewhere. The probability of a phase transition is a continuous function of temperature, with continuous derivatives. I'm skeptical that discontinuities can exist because, if they did, they'd serve as infinitely powerful microscopes. If there's a discontinuity in nature, it must exist at absolute zero. I don't have a similarly good argument for continuous first derivatives but I do think it's interesting that there are no examples AFAIK. |
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