what happened to our dry summer season, the maths/scientists ALL got it wrong, it hasnt stopped raining. 🫣our farmers are not happy.
after studying met ,predicting weather is nothing more than a guess.
The problem with mathematical definitions on Wikipedia is that you have to be a mathematician to understand them.
They are written as precise and dry as possible - which in general, is no use to someone trying to learn / understand a concept.
The best teachers teach the concept first and then the definition. The worst teachers just try and ram facts / definitions down one's throat.
The thing about mathematics is that it mostly builds on previous concepts - you can't side step into half way along.
None the less I love it - but I am no mathematician.
I thought that it was much less than that and my new buddy ChatGPT 4 agrees:
"Tetrachromacy in humans is quite rare, especially in its functional form where it results in a significantly expanded color perception beyond the typical human range. In humans, tetrachromacy occurs most often in women, as the gene for the extra cone type is located on the X chromosome. Estimates suggest that 2% to 3% of the world's female population might have a fourth cone type, potentially enabling tetrachromacy."
I was wrong it was up to 12% of the female population may have the gene
One of the problems is how do you test for this other than genetic testing or dissection.
Next is how can a person tell if they have this gene if they have observed color this way all their life.
Don't :) After few unsuccessful attempts I at last began to understand your 'infinite dimensional spectral densities' (as an infinite set of all possible spectral density functions over entire visible spectrum) - and now you turn my understanding upside down again :(
🙃
The uncertainty principal limits the number of distinguishable measurements that we can make of photons of a given momentum (and thus energy/wavelength) within a locational constraint (such as a pixel). So in fact the spectral density is only infinite if the sensor is infinitely large.
This discussion is getting very complicated. The Raw-file contains all the electrical information of the sensor, which mains also the color-info. But Raw is not a bitmap. Only after developing in a Raw-converter the pixels are fixed in place, brightness and color. What you see as a RAW-file is always a virtual interpretation, and how it shows depends of the profile/ preset used by the software (mostly converters). A JPG is a fixed pixel-array and looks the same in different software (browsers, keynote, office, macos, windows ect.
The question is the number of distinguishable data points, which is indeed theoretically limited by the uncertainty principle - and makes the ultimate dimensionality not infinite. In practice, there are plenty on other limits (such as read and shot noise) which come into play well before the uncertainty principle.
IMO Heisenberg uncertainly principle (HUP) does not change anything here - set of visible wavelengths (interval on ℝ) is uncountably infnite and set of overlapping intervals on it (assuming HUP changes points to intervals) is uncountably infinite too.