Physicist Maria Goeppert Mayer was born #OTD in 1906. She developed the nuclear shell model of the nucleus, for which she was awarded the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Image: APS
Physicist and professor at a school on the north side of Chicago. Black holes, quantum gravity, cosmology. Rocky Top, Tar Heel. Science, dogs, lake photos. Faves are spooky action at a distance, boosts are Lorentz transformations to another inertial frame. Opinions are mine, not my employer’s. #Physics #BlackHoles #Gravity #SciComm #Dogs
Level 14 Prof of Physics, Neutral Good, S:11 I:16 W:15 D:11 C:12 Ch:11, HP: 68, THAC0: 11, Equipment: Vorpal Chalk, Periapt of Tenure, Tweed Jacket (Cursed)
Physicist Maria Goeppert Mayer was born #OTD in 1906. She developed the nuclear shell model of the nucleus, for which she was awarded the 1963 Nobel Prize in Physics.
Image: APS
I don't know if the implication is that Rudberg introduced the notation; I can't check because I don't have access to a copy of the thesis.
The notation is normally associated with Penrose, who completed his dissertation in 1957 but wasn't yet working on relativity afaik.
This is either a lovely little coincidence, or a very thoughtful bit of poetic notation, I don't know which.
I saw it mentioned in the context of Hans Rudberg's 1957 thesis "The compactification of a Lorentz space and some remarks on the foundation of the theory of conformal relativity."
Relativists use a script letter ℐ with + or - to denote the two light cones comprising the conformal boundary of Minkowski space. ℐ is a script "I" so it is pronounced "scri."
Today I learned that the Polish word "skraj," pronounced about the same way, means "edge," as in a boundary.
"skraj lasu" means "edge of the wood."