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by srean 273 days ago
I have always wanted to know if there is any theorem that says one cannot preserve all of the standard invariants.

For example, we know for mappings that we cannot preserve angles, distances and area simultaneously.

1 comments

The short answer is that discretization can generally preserve only one invariant exactly; others must be approximate.

This could provide some evidence for the universe not being truly discrete since we have multiple apparent exactly preserved kinematic quantities, but it’s hard to tell experimentally since proposed discrete space times have discretization sizes on the order of hbar, which means deviations from the continuum would be hard to detect.

Thanks for replying on this now rather inactive thread.

I am really curious about this issue and am looking for a theorem that gives an impossibility result (or an existence result).

It might be well known but I don't know DE to be aware about f the result.