Matter /CAN/ be created!

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cookyy2k

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Aug 14, 2009
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RJ 17 said:
cookyy2k said:
RJ 17 said:
snip

Of course matter canNOT be created. If you honestly clicked on this topic thinking that you'd find some brilliant proof via ALGEBRA, of all things, that one of the most basic laws of physics is wrong, then I honestly feel sorry for you. (This being a message to everyone, not specifically the person I just quoted)
Heh, I feel sorry for your ignorance. I spend a lot of my time building equipment to send a high energy radiation beam at a target with the express intent of CREATING an electron/positron pair. Ever heard of E=mc[sup]2[/sup]? Yeah you can use energy to create Matter.
Last time I checked, CONVERTING energy into matter wasn't "creating matter". The phrase "creating matter" implies that you just wave a magic wand and *POOF!* out pops some matter. Of course E = MC[sup]2[/sup] proves that energy can be converted into matter and vice-versa, however you cannot take nothing and from that nothing create something. Hence the phrase: "Matter cannot be created nor destroyed." You can convert matter into energy, but you're not "destroying" it.
No, you're annihilating it. And yes, it's a conversion but it is creating matter where there was none before.

I'm sorry to tell you but high school physics isn't always correct, matter can be created, Even if you're going with the "it's a conversion" for pair production go look up virtual particles. Particles that exist on such short time frames they can violate matter never being created, aswell as energy can never be created.
 

ChildishLegacy

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1) Ever heard of E = mc^2? or maybe even E^2 = m^2c^4 + p^2c^2?
The title of your thread suggests that we didn't already know that we could create matter with energy.

2) This mathematical 'proof' is very low level algebra and doesn't explain why 0.99999...=1, it just shows it. It's to do with the nature of infinity, if you have infinite 9s after the decimal point, its the same thing as saying 1, the SAME THING, it's not 2 different numbers equal to each other, it's just a different way of writing 1, a terrible way of writing it though, as this thread shows, it is deceiving to many people. I blame the teaching of maths mainly through decimals and not fractions, which are a lot easier to understand as 1/3 is defined as 1/3 *3 = 1, and there's no confusion with it being 0.33333333.... etc.
 

Makhiel

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Dec 15, 2010
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Shadowkire said:
Interesting, let us try that again.
x = .9999_
times 10 10x = 9.9999_0 <- remember the rule of using the same number of decimal places, the 0 represents that last decimal place(important for future mathing)
-x 9x = -x + 1.1111_0
/9 x = (-x/9) + 1.1111_0
Replace .9999_ = (-.9999_/9) + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = -.1111_ + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = .9999_

Holy crap! You mean to tell me a number equals itself(and not some other number) when someone who follows the rules of mathematics(ALL OF THEM!!) does a proof?!?!?!
The stuff with same number of decimal places doesn't really work the way you describe once you reach infinity. ;)
 

cookyy2k

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dvd_72 said:
I was talking about spontaneous matter-antimatter annihilations that happen out in deep space. Basically a large amount of energy is "borrowed" from nothing for a short time, creating a particle and its antiparticle. The two then quickly annihilate, returning the "borrowed" energy. As long as this happens in a short enough time to fall within the "bounds" of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, it works. Anything longer than that and you break one of the most fundamental laws of the universe. Blasted thrill seekers.

This is a severely simplified picture of what happens, and the numbers can get kinda messy, but a little research should clear all that right up ;)
I think you're mixing up pair production and virtual particles a tad.

in pair production the matter/anti-matter pair you create using the energy can exist indefinitely, as long as you don't allow them to annihilate. The virtual particles is the "borrowed" energy case where it has to exist for tiny amounts of time before popping back out of existence.
 

Shadowkire

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Apr 4, 2009
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Makhiel said:
Shadowkire said:
Interesting, let us try that again.
x = .9999_
times 10 10x = 9.9999_0 <- remember the rule of using the same number of decimal places, the 0 represents that last decimal place(important for future mathing)
-x 9x = -x + 1.1111_0
/9 x = (-x/9) + 1.1111_0
Replace .9999_ = (-.9999_/9) + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = -.1111_ + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = .9999_

Holy crap! You mean to tell me a number equals itself(and not some other number) when someone who follows the rules of mathematics(ALL OF THEM!!) does a proof?!?!?!
The stuff with same number of decimal places doesn't really work the way you describe once you reach infinity. ;)
Actually is does, oh and thanks for falling into my trap.

Let us assume the OP(and other poorly educated people out there) are correct:

1 = .999_

Well any number subtracted by itself equals 0.
1 - .999_ = 0
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.

(1/&) x & = 0
(1 x &)/& = 0

1 = 0

Oh no, looks like we are destroying realty(but of course it is impossible for you to be wrong so this must be correct).

And as we all know, any number multiplied by 1 equals itself.

1 x ? = ? <- ? being used as a variable representing any number

of course don't forget 1 = 0 and the law of multiplying by 0:

0 x ? = 0

The only logical outcome(assuming you aren't completely and totally wrong) is that all numbers are equal to zero.

Or you are a poorly educated individual.
 

cookyy2k

Senior Member
Aug 14, 2009
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Shadowkire said:
Makhiel said:
Shadowkire said:
Interesting, let us try that again.
x = .9999_
times 10 10x = 9.9999_0 <- remember the rule of using the same number of decimal places, the 0 represents that last decimal place(important for future mathing)
-x 9x = -x + 1.1111_0
/9 x = (-x/9) + 1.1111_0
Replace .9999_ = (-.9999_/9) + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = -.1111_ + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = .9999_

Holy crap! You mean to tell me a number equals itself(and not some other number) when someone who follows the rules of mathematics(ALL OF THEM!!) does a proof?!?!?!
The stuff with same number of decimal places doesn't really work the way you describe once you reach infinity. ;)
Actually is does, oh and thanks for falling into my trap.

Let us assume the OP(and other poorly educated people out there) are correct:

1 = .999_

Well any number subtracted by itself equals 0.
1 - .999_ = 0
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.

(1/&) x & = 0
(1 x &)/& = 0

1 = 0

Oh no, looks like we are destroying realty(but of course it is impossible for you to be wrong so this must be correct).

And as we all know, any number multiplied by 1 equals itself.

1 x ? = ? <- ? being used as a variable representing any number

of course don't forget 1 = 0 and the law of multiplying by 0:

0 x ? = 0

The only logical outcome(assuming you aren't completely and totally wrong) is that all numbers are equal to zero.

Or you are a poorly educated individual.
An infinitely large number multiplied by 0 is NOT 0, it is undefined.
 

Pebkio

The Purple Mage
Nov 9, 2009
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I am actually of the opinion that .999_ is not the same as 1... but that can't be proven by our math. According to our mathematical system, .999_ is 1. No that doesn't mean anything, because while our mathematical system is fantastically brilliant, it was still designed to explain something we already witness.

In other words, and over-simplified, our mathematical system is just another way to explain things... like religion. Again, I cannot over-state how much I agree with our system of math and in no way think it's as inaccurate as religion. It is a very very clever way of describing things. But it's still subject to the limitations on how we, as the best of our species, understands the universe.

In other words, again, we don't know even a tenth of the universe so all of our systems of understanding are probably flawed, at least a bit. We'll probably reach a point, mathematically, when we can understand how .999_ and 1 are not the same... in the far future.
 

RJ 17

The Sound of Silence
Nov 27, 2011
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cookyy2k said:
RJ 17 said:
cookyy2k said:
RJ 17 said:
snip

Of course matter canNOT be created. If you honestly clicked on this topic thinking that you'd find some brilliant proof via ALGEBRA, of all things, that one of the most basic laws of physics is wrong, then I honestly feel sorry for you. (This being a message to everyone, not specifically the person I just quoted)
Heh, I feel sorry for your ignorance. I spend a lot of my time building equipment to send a high energy radiation beam at a target with the express intent of CREATING an electron/positron pair. Ever heard of E=mc[sup]2[/sup]? Yeah you can use energy to create Matter.
Last time I checked, CONVERTING energy into matter wasn't "creating matter". The phrase "creating matter" implies that you just wave a magic wand and *POOF!* out pops some matter. Of course E = MC[sup]2[/sup] proves that energy can be converted into matter and vice-versa, however you cannot take nothing and from that nothing create something. Hence the phrase: "Matter cannot be created nor destroyed." You can convert matter into energy, but you're not "destroying" it.
No, you're annihilating it. And yes, it's a conversion but it is creating matter where there was none before.

I'm sorry to tell you but high school physics isn't always correct, matter can be created, Even if you're going with the "it's a conversion" for pair production go look up virtual particles. Particles that exist on such short time frames they can violate matter never being created, aswell as energy can never be created.
I'm not going to get into an argument with you over this, all I'm saying is that the matter which is "created" with the process you're talking about exists for such short specs of time as to be scientifically insignificant. Are you searching for and creating new particles with particle accelerators? Yes. But they blink out of existence so fast that, as I recall, the only way to see they ever existed is by trying to measure the effect of their gravity. The universe neither gains nor losses anything with these conversations, and so the preservation of mass (I bet I'm misusing that phrase :p) is maintained. It's like the argument Hawking had with one of his greatest scientific rivals (I forget his name). Hawking argued that "information" is utterly destroyed and lost upon entering a black hole, this meant that matter could be destroyed. The other guy proved him wrong, stating that all information remains on the outer edge of a black hole.

If I'm still wrong about this, save your argument, as I'll concede and just say you're right. At this point anything I say is just stuff I heard that asian physics professor with the white hair say on Nat. Geo. or the Discovery Channel. :p
 

oktalist

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The_root_of_all_evil said:
Lukeje said:
(I've also noticed that you seem confused by the notion of mathematical equivalence. Saying that a is equivalent to b means that a=b if and only if b=a. Equivalence thus implies equality).
From what I can tell, the terminology has changed somewhat. My Maths training was back in the early 90s; pre-Windows 3.1. We had the three bar equals as equivalent, but it seems the approximation (curved upper bar) has taken over.
&#8801; equivalent to
&#8773; congruent with
&#8776; approximately equal to

These are three different concepts.

But .9rep is only equivalent to 1, where as 1 can be .9rep - the infinite repetition is a flag that it approximates for convenience - so it can be used but not without loss of accuracy.
Equivalent meaning the same, identical, exactly equal. Not approximate. The infinite repetition is a flag that it is an exact figure. If it was an approximation it would have to be a finite repetition.

geizr said:
oktalist said:
f(x) = 1 - 10-x
limx&#8594;&#8734; f(x) = 1
Your function only approaches 1 in the limit, but it never actually gets there. This is because n/(infinity) only approaches zero in the limit; it never actually gets there. However, for purposes of convenience, we often ignore that subtlety because it is below our error tolerance, but, when we need to be more mathematically precise, we can not make that assertion.
I was simply demonstrating that the limits process does not end up with a 0.000...1 left over, when you actually do it abstractly as you suggested. Limits actually have nothing to do with the 0.999... = 1 thing, because when you write 0.333... = 1/3 you are saying that there is an actual infinite number of 3's after the decimal point, rather than it just tending to an infinite number of 3's.

oktalist said:
Infinity doesn't really have a size, as such.
Infinity very much has a size, and that size can be different in different cases. That is why you can take the limit of a numerator and denominator both going to infinity and, yet, obtain a finite ratio. It's because they are different sized infinities.

oktalist said:
There is no "at the end". Recurring decimals are endless.
It doesn't matter how endless they are, you can always add one more digit to make a larger infinity. That's what happens when you multiply by 10.
There are some transfinites that can be said to be smaller or larger than other transfinites, but you seem to be talking about their sizes in the same way as one might compare the sizes of real numbers. You can't get from one infinite to another by adding or multiplying by a finite number. If you add one more digit to an infinite, you get the same infinite.

m + 1 = m for any transfinite m

0.999... is not a set. It's a number.
The digits that we use to represent numbers are sets. Each element in the set represents a particular fraction multiplied by some factor. The arithmetic operations with which we are familiar perform transformations on those elements, which can themselves be sets. When you multiply x = 0.999rep by 10, you shift all the elements upward and then have to add an extra empty set element at the very end to represent the digit that was vacated as a result of the multiplication.
If you have to add an "empty set" "at the end" for the digit that was vacated after the multiplication, why was there not an "empty set" at the beginning for the digit that was vacant before the multiplication?

"Empty set" is in inverted commas because the digit zero is not the empty set. "At the end" is in inverted commas because there is no end to an infinite set. You are free to invent whatever mapping you wish in order to map the decimal representations of numbers onto sets, but this in no way shows that numbers should necessarily embody any of the properties of sets.

Sets are not ordered, and cannot contain the same entity twice. You could invent the notation D(d,p) to mean the digit d at position p, so that 123.456 can be represented with the set { D(1,2), D(2,1), D(3,0), D(4,-1), D(5,-2), D(6,-3) }, but that's just an alternative representation of a number.

Just because the set { D(9,-1), D(9,-2), D(9,-3) } differs from the set { D(9,-1), D(9,-2), D(9,-3), D(0,-4), D(0,-5), D(0,-6) }, does nothing to suggest that .999 differs in any way from .999000

EDIT: Also, if you add/remove any finite number of elements to/from a countably infinite set (like .999...), you still have a countably infinite set, meaning it has the same cardinality.
 

irishda

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Dec 16, 2010
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cookyy2k said:
Shadowkire said:
Makhiel said:
Shadowkire said:
Interesting, let us try that again.
x = .9999_
times 10 10x = 9.9999_0 <- remember the rule of using the same number of decimal places, the 0 represents that last decimal place(important for future mathing)
-x 9x = -x + 1.1111_0
/9 x = (-x/9) + 1.1111_0
Replace .9999_ = (-.9999_/9) + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = -.1111_ + 1.1111_0
Resolve .9999_ = .9999_

Holy crap! You mean to tell me a number equals itself(and not some other number) when someone who follows the rules of mathematics(ALL OF THEM!!) does a proof?!?!?!
The stuff with same number of decimal places doesn't really work the way you describe once you reach infinity. ;)
Actually is does, oh and thanks for falling into my trap.

Let us assume the OP(and other poorly educated people out there) are correct:

1 = .999_

Well any number subtracted by itself equals 0.
1 - .999_ = 0
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.

(1/&) x & = 0
(1 x &)/& = 0

1 = 0

Oh no, looks like we are destroying realty(but of course it is impossible for you to be wrong so this must be correct).

And as we all know, any number multiplied by 1 equals itself.

1 x ? = ? <- ? being used as a variable representing any number

of course don't forget 1 = 0 and the law of multiplying by 0:

0 x ? = 0

The only logical outcome(assuming you aren't completely and totally wrong) is that all numbers are equal to zero.

Or you are a poorly educated individual.
An infinitely large number multiplied by 0 is NOT 0, it is undefined.
Regardless, the math for proving .999r=1 is still wrong, considering the equations are just proving that x=x
 

Olas

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Dec 24, 2011
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Lukeje said:
Saying that a is equivalent to b means that a=b if and only if b=a. Equivalence thus implies equality).
So equivalence equals equality? You just blew my mind. I suppose mathematically that would be written as. ===
 

oktalist

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Feb 16, 2009
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Shadowkire said:
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.
If that was true then you could do this:

1/& = 0

Multiply both sides by &

1 = 0

irishda said:
Regardless, the math for proving .999r=1 is still wrong, considering the equations are just proving that x=x
It's not wrong, it's just not a proof of .999... = 1. That doesn't mean that no proofs of .999... = 1 exist. Several do exist.
 

Lukeje

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Feb 6, 2008
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OlasDAlmighty said:
Lukeje said:
Saying that a is equivalent to b means that a=b if and only if b=a. Equivalence thus implies equality).
So equivalence equals equality? You just blew my mind. I suppose mathematically that would be written as. ===
Nah, it would be ===>= (using => for implies and == for equivalence).
 

Shadowkire

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Apr 4, 2009
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cookyy2k said:
An infinitely large number multiplied by 0 is NOT 0, it is undefined.
Sorry, you are correct, so let me redo that:

.000_1 = 0

Subtracting or adding 0 from/with any number equals that number

So .999_ - .000_1 must equal 1 or .999_...

.999_8 So .999_8 = 1

.999_8 - .000_1 = .999_7

Let us try this an infinite number of times, checking our answers along the way. Let us try it with addition as well. Every time it shows 1 equals a new number.

In fact, adding or subracting .000_1 an infinite amount of times will eventually return every single number as equaling 1. Which is false.
 

Makhiel

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Dec 15, 2010
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irishda said:
Regardless, the math for proving .999r=1 is still wrong, considering the equations are just proving that x=x
That's the point isn't it? They are one and the same number. :)

My previous argument still stands and you don't even have to multiply.
0.9 can be rewritten as 0.9000 (plus arbitrarily more zeros if you want) but you cannot slap more zeros to 0.9_ no matter what.

edit:
Shadowkire said:
cookyy2k said:
An infinitely large number multiplied by 0 is NOT 0, it is undefined.
Sorry, you are correct, so let me redo that:

.000_1 = 0

Subtracting or adding 0 from/with any number equals that number

So .999_ - .000_1 must equal 1 or .999_...

.999_8 So .999_8 = 1

.999_8 - .000_1 = .999_7

Let us try this an infinite number of times, checking our answers along the way. Let us try it with addition as well. Every time it shows 1 equals a new number.

In fact, adding or subracting .000_1 an infinite amount of times will eventually return every single number as equaling 1. Which is false.
How did 0.999_ suddenly became 0.999_9 ?
 

Wyes

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Aug 1, 2009
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irishda said:
Regardless, the math for proving .999r=1 is still wrong, considering the equations are just proving that x=x
Except that we are trying to prove x=x, that's the point of the exercise.
0.999... = 1 is a widely accepted mathematical fact. This is not a bunch of people on a forum going 'Look I'm a genius and I proved this new thing', it's a guy going 'Hey I learnt this and thought it was super cool it (which it is) but I overestimated its significance'

Personally I'm a much bigger fan of the simpler approach (which has been shown here before).

1/3 = 0.333...
1/3 * 3 = 0.333... * 3
3/3 = 0.999...
1 = 0.999...

It's really just as simple as that.

Now, I'm not going to go and call anyone an idiot for disbelieving this, it doesn't seem right, in a way it's nice to see so many people try to apply critical thinking to the problem, and not just assuming its correct (though let's face it, that's really coming about because they heard it from a guy on the internet).
 

Shadowkire

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oktalist said:
Shadowkire said:
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.
If that was true then you could do this:

1/& = 0

Multiply both sides by &

1 = 0
That was my point, until someone pointed out infinity doesn't work with normal math, that if 1 = .999_ then it follows that 1 = 0. I used that to point out the ridiculousness of the OP's proof.
 

Shadowkire

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Makhiel said:
Shadowkire said:
cookyy2k said:
An infinitely large number multiplied by 0 is NOT 0, it is undefined.
Sorry, you are correct, so let me redo that:

.000_1 = 0

Subtracting or adding 0 from/with any number equals that number

So .999_ - .000_1 must equal 1 or .999_...

.999_8 So .999_8 = 1

.999_8 - .000_1 = .999_7

Let us try this an infinite number of times, checking our answers along the way. Let us try it with addition as well. Every time it shows 1 equals a new number.

In fact, adding or subracting .000_1 an infinite amount of times will eventually return every single number as equaling 1. Which is false.
How did 0.999_ suddenly became 0.999_9 ?
the underscore is my way of saying "repeating", the number after the underscore is my way of saying "at the end of this infinitely repeating number is an 8, or a 7."

Yes I am aware of how odd it is to try an place a number at the end of an infinite.
 

Wyes

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Shadowkire said:
oktalist said:
Shadowkire said:
.000_1 = 0
But .000_1 is such a messy way of typing that number, so let us clean it up. It basically means an infinitely small number so using & as a symbol for an infinitely large number:

1/& = 0

Now we all know any number multiplied by 0 equals 0, even an infinitely large number.
If that was true then you could do this:

1/& = 0

Multiply both sides by &

1 = 0
That was my point, until someone pointed out infinity doesn't work with normal math, that if 1 = .999_ then it follows that 1 = 0. I used that to point out the ridiculousness of the OP's proof.
The OP's proof is not a good one, I feel it over complicates it, but one can replicate the results using other, much simpler processes.

EDIT: Actually the wiki article [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0.999...] really covers this pretty well.