Talk:Relativistic heat conduction

Latest comment: 2 years ago by QuilloWiki in topic Massive removal

Massive removal

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I removed the references to the pet-theory of Ali-Zhang. The page was almost surely written by the authors of such a disastrous paper. It is better to delete and restart with this page than spreading false, unclear and non-accepted theories. Relativistic heat conduction has a great history made by great physicists and mathematicians (Cattaneo, Cercignani, Carter, Israel, Stewart, Eckart, Landau and many other great minds): this page cannot be the marketing page for obscure, unaccepted, irrelevant and unproven theories with no mathematical basis (go and see the original paper of Ali-Zhang, it's just nonsense: try to publish such a piece of work on Classical and Quantum Gravity, Phys. Rev., Annals or any other good scientific peer-reviewed journal...).

It's ridiculous that it's lasted this long, just because the authors constantly revert back to the previous versions. Horep (talk) 15:38, 12 June 2020 (UTC)Reply
Since this "massive removal" of 2 years ago, the page improved a lot and it's now more than a "stub". There are references to high-quality peer-reviewed works and the information contained does not seem to be controversial anymore. Maybe the "warning" at the beginning of the page could be removed now. QuilloWiki (talk) 14:57, 8 October 2022 (UTC)Reply

Notation is Terrible

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Notation is terrible... do we still use ict?????? Javirl (talk) 11:43, 13 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Updates on rewrite/removal?

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Years later, this article is still an absolute disaster meant to promulgate a pet theory. It seems others have now noticed the same thing I noticed before, namely the author will revert *every* edit to this page to fit his/her agenda. How do we proceed in the face of such blatant disregard for the whole purpose of Wikipedia? Evilmathninja (talk) 01:29, 30 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Is there an HHC/RHC controversy?

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Somehow the article gives the impression that HHC and RHC are two different approaches. Actually, it's the same equation (the telegrapher's equation). The difference seems to be in the interpretation, in particular one of the auxiliary vector fields.

The inclusion of "criticisms of HHC" in the middle of the article (before the terminology RHC is even introduced) contributes to this impression. It also makes the article look like a ping-pong argumentation that culminates in RHC. In addition, the inclusion of so much "criticism" makes it appear that RHC is a quasi-mystical proposal struggling for mainstream acceptance, rather than simply an interesting PDE. It might be better to move the controversies, if any, to the end of the article. 84.227.254.143 (talk) 14:46, 30 March 2014 (UTC)Reply

Capitalization / reverted edits

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I noticed that my edits to write Relativistic Heat Conduction as relativistic heat conduction were reverted. However, I don't see the reason to capitalize them, as the expression is not a proper noun. Note also that in the first reference cited (Y.M. Ali, L.C. Zhang, Relativistic heat conduction, Int. J. Heat Mass Trans. 48 (2005) 2397. - see just before the defintion of eqn. 16), the words are written in lower case. Also, for reference, Wikipedia:Manual of Style (capital letters) outlines the various cases where capitalization is generally appropriate, and this doesn't appear to be one of them. What is the reason for capitalizing them this way? Thanks! Dhollm (talk) 07:02, 16 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

Maybe someone wants to make the article look like it's written by a slightly illiterate kook? Honestly, it's an interesting equation, why not write it in regular English? 89.217.30.136 (talk) 22:12, 28 February 2015 (UTC)Reply
It appears the original author of this page does not understand Wikipedia well. The history of the page is plagued with reverts on anything that differs from the original. As a result, I'd say there's currently no point in attempting to contribute to this page. EDIT: It also appears that this entire page might just be a tool in the promulgation of a pet theory. Indeed, there are many references to the same works of Ali & Zhang, Ali lists this very Wikipedia article as a publication, of which he claims to be the author: http://yasserali.org/?cat=13 . Evilmathninja (talk) 21:51, 28 September 2015 (UTC)Reply

An article which constitutes self-promotion

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Apart from the fact that this article violates the basic tenet of Wikipedia in that an author cannot indulge in self-promotion, it is completely wrong and should be removed without delay Bernhlav (talk) 15:41, 25 December 2015 (UTC)Bernhlav.Reply

I disagree. I think it should be transformed by MASSIVE editing into something decent. Of course, maybe it's easier simply to start over, given the presence of an unseen Author. 178.39.122.125 (talk) 10:34, 20 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
Pursuant to my comment from 21:51, 28 September 2015 (UTC), I completely agree here. This article serves no purpose but promulgate a pet theory of no value. Evilmathninja (talk) 05:16, 9 February 2017 (UTC)Reply

Hyperbolic heat conduction

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Admittedly I didn't look very hard, but I didn't find any Wikipedia article specifically about a dissipative wave equation, other than the "telegrapher's equation", as mentioned. But that article is about the one-dimensional case and is focused on the transmission line model. It might or might not be appropriate to dump the 3-D non-electric case into that article. Either way it would be nice to separate out some of this mathematics from the various other claims in this article. --God made the integers (talk) 02:10, 13 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

You have a good point that it is not very well-covered in other articles.
But I wouldn't recommend putting this stuff into the telegrapher's equation article. That article is well-focused in a defined area of engineering with a deep history, many players, and well-known applications. This article is still looking for its identity.
Usually, a dissipative wave equation is treated as a modified wave equation. This is quite natural, since microscopically, its behavior is dominated by the highest order symbol.
Yet I would love to see more information about the other perspective, namely the interpretation as a heat conduction equation that respects relativity. This sounds like a research project. Scholarly research or -- original research --? 178.39.122.125 (talk) 10:14, 20 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

Alternatives?

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The (non-relativistic) heat equation wiki article says both a hyperbolic model as well as nonlinear models can impose a finite heat transmission speed (cf. Porous Medium Equation). This article might benefit from a compare/contrast of different competing models. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.129.193.69 (talk) 21:46, 15 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

Yet if the parameters are chosen to correspond to a physically realistic application, the porous medium equation will have a maximum transmission speed that is much lower than the speed of light. Indeed, it covers "seeping" in the literal sense! I cannot imagine that goes very fast even if there is some kind of advance wicking. Also, the nonlinearity is not inserted purely in order to get finite propagation speed, or not only for this reason, but in order to capture various properties of the material and the medium. So the motivation is entirely different. The porous medium equation, unlike the relativistic heat equation, has a rich literature.
On the other hand, the relativistic heat equation (dissipative wave equation) is truly a hyperbolic equation without a true microscopic smoothing effect at the symbol level -- high Fourier modes do not decay fast like with parabolic. For this reason, I'd characterize the relativistic heat equation and the porous medium equation as being rather different, like apples and oranges. But this is probably the bird's eye comparison that's needed. 178.39.122.125 (talk) 10:27, 20 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

Should NOT be linked from main "Thermal Conduction" page

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This is clearly personal and unverified work (with questionable references), which is fine, and the page need not be orphaned entirely - however it should not be linked from the "Overview" of the Thermal Conduction page - as it's heavily misleading when "pushed" at such an early point in the Thermal Conduction article. I can only assume the author of this page linked it here, but this is inappropriate until all of the many issues with this page are resolved. I hope someone will consider moving the link much further down that page, if not removing it completely. I also agree with the other talk page comments here. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 220.240.123.254 (talk) 17:34, 25 June 2019 (UTC)Reply