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by moregrist
481 days ago
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I was also struck by this. I was introduced to eigenvectors in a math course on linear algebra. They seemed esoteric but I could prove theorems and stuff… cool but kind of forgettable. Then I took quantum mechanics. That’s where I learned eigensystems. That’s where their utility and beauty were beaten into me, problem set by problem set. In quantum mechanics, eigensystems are ubiquitous: from using ladder operators to solve the harmonic oscillator in an elegant way, to what quantum numbers actually are, to the reason behind the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, and to the so many different ways to use perturbation theory to explain atomic and molecular spectra. You can do the basics of quantum mechanics without explicit linear algebra, and many intro physical chemistry texts aren’t able to assume the math as a pre-requisite and have to do that. But it’s tedious and awkward, like trying to learn physics without calculus. |
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