Editing 849: Complex Conjugate

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The title text notes that you can make this joke in class every time a calculation is performed that drops the imaginary part from a complex number, but warns that it would be so annoying that the professor will eventually find a way to have the class without you in it. Because nonreal numbers are often considered to have no physical significance, turning them into real numbers to produce a final answer is so common that this joke would quickly become tedious.
 
The title text notes that you can make this joke in class every time a calculation is performed that drops the imaginary part from a complex number, but warns that it would be so annoying that the professor will eventually find a way to have the class without you in it. Because nonreal numbers are often considered to have no physical significance, turning them into real numbers to produce a final answer is so common that this joke would quickly become tedious.
  
The wave function shown on Cueball's board is the {{w|Schrödinger_equation|time-dependent Schrödinger equation}} <math>i\hbar\dfrac{\partial}{\partial t} = \hat{H}\Psi</math>, a {{w|Differential equation|differential equation}} that the {{w|Wavefunction|wavefunction}} Ψ, which determines the possible positions of a quantum particle over time, always satisfies. The {{w|Derivative#Partial_derivatives|derivative}} should be written with ∂Ψ on the top; the omission of the Ψ may be a mistake.
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The wave function shown on Cueball's board is the {{w|Schrödinger_equation|time-dependent Schrödinger equation}} <math>i\hbar\dfrac{\partial \Psi}{\partial t} = \hat{H}\Psi</math>, a {{w|Differential equation|differential equation}} that the {{w|Wavefunction|wavefunction}} Ψ, which determines the possible positions of a quantum particle over time, always satisfies. The {{w|Derivative#Partial_derivatives|derivative}} should be written with ∂Ψ on the top; the omission of the Ψ may be a mistake.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==

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