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5:50 AM
2
Q: Remove [tag:slick-proof] or make it a synonym of [tag:alternative-proof]

LSpice@YCor made a suggestion in an answer to another post (What is the intended use of the (proofs) tag?) a bit over a year ago. It received several upvotes, but does not appear to have been acted upon. I thought it might receive more attention here: It's not exactly about the original question, bu...

Merged. All options here are "meta tags". Ideally, these would not exist at all. Can you imagine a MO user who is systematically interested in all alternative or all slick proofs? I can't but in this case, I can imagine a MO user doing a one-time systematic search for alternative proofs but the tag alone will not fully capture all cases and the user should probably use another kind of filtering. In any case, that's enough for not deleting entirely. — François G. Dorais ♦ 9 hours ago
6
Q: Proof without words for surface area of a sphere

Sudeep KamathI love the book Proofs Without Words by Roger B. Nelsen. One of the proofs I liked the most was this: Area under one arch of a cycloid is 3 times the area of the wheel that traces it. You break the cycloid in to three parts and show that each part has an area equal to that of the wheel. I have a...

23
Q: Slick proof of Stirling's Formula?

Franz LemmermeyerIn Upper Limit on the Central Binomial Coefficient, Noam Elkies and David Speyer have given a nice proof that the central binomial coefficient $\binom{2n}{n} \sim \frac{4^n}{\sqrt{\pi n}}$. This can be used to derive Stirling's formula $$ a_n = \frac{n!e^n}{n^n \sqrt{n}} \sim \sqrt{2\pi} $$ by sh...

21
Q: Mathematical Writing: Proof Outlines/Overview in a Paper

Sam OTWhile my question topic is that of mathematical writing of papers, which is a broad subject, the particular question is specific. I am writing a paper, in which we have a section called "Outline of Proof". (It's Section 2.) The outline is fairly informal, and we omit some technical details, makin...

11
Q: Reference for a nice proof of "undetermined coefficients"

Ryan ReichI'm teaching an honors differential equations class and have been using linear algebra heavily. I thought it would be interesting to include a proof of the method of undetermined coefficients along the lines described below, which I figured is already known. Nonetheless, Google turns up no proo...

The question Mathematical Writing: Proof Outlines/Overview in a Paper would probably deserve a different choice of tags. (The tag does not fit there. It has no top-level tag - although probably only would fit here.)
The for was empty and there was no Taxonomist badge: Wayback Machine, Google Cache.
@MartinSleziak I have added to one more question. (So that it won't be removed by the script.)
12
Q: Applications of topological chiral homology and factorization algebras (aka higher Hochschild cohomology)

Jacob BellI recently heard a talk about these topics and found them very interesting. The talk was centered on the formal structure and didn't really focus on examples. So my question is: what is your favorite application of topological chiral homology? (or its other variants and specialisations)

 
6:41 AM
@MartinSleziak The tag now has two questions:
2
Q: Deformation of Display on Zink's paper

Qirui LiI am going to compute some intersection numbers on certain RZ spaces and therefore need to fully understand the deformation of $p$-divisible groups. This can be understood as deformation of displays, where displays are generalized notions of Dieudonné modules. The question is about the paper Tho...

4
Q: The unit root subspace of a genus-2 odd degree hyperelliptic curve of semistable reduction

E. KayaLet $K$ be a finite extension of $\mathbb{Q}_p$. If $A_K$ is a semistable Abelian variety over $K$, then we have a Frobenius endomorphism on $H_{dR}^1(A_K)$, whose definition depends on a choice of a branch of the $p$-adic logarithm on $K^\times$. The unit root subspace $W$ of $H_{dR}^1(A_K)$ is ...

@MartinSleziak I see that there is also a tag-excerpt and a tag-wiki for . The tag now has three questions.
@IosifPinelis you've just created the tag differential-inequalities; would you create a tag excerpt as well? — YCor Aug 23 '20 at 15:21
@YCor : I have done that -- my first tag excerpt. Do you have any comments on it? — Iosif Pinelis Aug 23 '20 at 15:33
Looks OK, thanks — YCor Aug 23 '20 at 15:58
1
Q: Trace entropies

GianfrancoI'm studying relationships between trace entropy functionals and combinatorics and I'm faced with the following problem. Lets $\mathcal {D}$ be the following differential operator $1 -x\cdot \cfrac{d}{dx}$ i.e. $\mathcal {D} g = g - x\cdot g'$. For $m\ge 0$ integer, if $\Phi_m(x) := x\cdot \log(x...

1
Q: Mean Value Inequality with Linear Term

dylanI am having trouble proving this modified mean-value inequality. Suppose that $\Delta u+cu\ge 0$ for $u:\mathbb{R}^n\to [0,\infty).$ Prove that there exists constants $r_0,C>0$ depending only on $c$ so that $$u(0)\le \frac{C}{r^n}\int_{B(r)}u\,\mathrm{dVol},$$ for all $r\le r_0$. This was mention...

12
Q: Modified energy method for transformed Fokker-Planck equation (tricky integration by parts…)

Fei CaoI came across Villani's paper titled "Hypocoercive diffusion operators" and couldn't figure out a computation that is skipped in that paper. Specifically, consider the following transformed Fokker-Planck equation, where $h(t,x,v)$ is the unknown, $(x,v) \in \mathbb{R}^n \times \mathbb{R}^n$, $V(x...

@MartinSleziak The tag was deleted. Probably by the script, since nothing is shown in the revision history: mathoverflow.net/posts/363595/revisions
6
Q: Is it ever useful to consider a long exact sequence as a chain complex?

John Wiltshire-GordonHere are two common ways of obtaining chain complexes with vanishing homology: Chain complexes that compute the reduced homology of a contractible space Chain complexes that arise as a "long exact sequence in homology" induced by a short exact sequence of chain complexes These two examples seem...

@MartinSleziak The tag now has four questions.
53
Q: Nontrivial question about Fibonacci numbers?

DonaldI'm looking for a nontrivial, but not super difficult question concerning Fibonacci numbers. It should be at a level suitable for an undergraduate course. Here is a (not so good) example of the sort of thing I am looking for. a) Prove that every positive integer can be represented in binary o...

26
Q: Is 8 the largest cube in the Fibonacci sequence?

Pratik PoddarCan you prove that 8 is the largest cube in the Fibonacci sequence?

2
Q: Can all (inverse) trigonometric functions with periodic iterates be characterized?

Max MullerI wonder whether all (composites of) trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions with periodic functional iterations can be found. In order to specify what I mean by that, let's introduce some notation first. Let $f^{[n]} (x)$ denote the function $f$ that has been iterated $n$ times with it...

-3
Q: Modular forms and Fibonacci primes

Sylvain JULIENDisclaimer: this question is a "big picture" one aiming at shedding light on something I've thought of for some time and seems to be also a matter of investigation by number theorists. I've just dowloaded a recent (May 2020) pdf: http://davidlowryduda.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/darmouth2020....

@MartinSleziak I have added to one more question:
1
Q: Length of a module and Frobenius map

CuspLet $(R,m)$ be a regular local ring of dimension $d$ and char $p>0.$ Let $F^e:R\longrightarrow R$ defined by $r\longrightarrow r^{p^e}$be the Frobenius map. How to compute $l(R/m^{[p^e]})?.$ I know the answer is $p^{ed}$ but I do not know how to prove it.

5
Q: What are some compact Hessian manifolds?

Gabe KIn case this is too general, here is a more specific question. Is there a hyperbolic threefold which admits a Hessian metric (hyperbolic or otherwise)? Background A Hessian manifold is a Riemannian manifold which admits an atlas of coordinate charts whose transition maps are affine (i.e. $x \ma...

Gabe K: I see that you have created (hessian-manifolds) tag. It might be useful to create also tag-wiki or at least tag-excerpt. It might help other users to use the tag correctly. (This is probably not a problem here, since the tag name seems to be descriptive enough.) Another reason is that the tags used on only one question are automatically deleted after certain time unless they have tag-wiki. — Martin Sleziak 35 secs ago
@MartinSleziak The tag now has 15 questions.
5
Q: Can a nonstandard model of $\mathsf{PA}$ be "$\Delta^1_1$-well-ordered?"

Noah SchweberThis was asked and bountied at MSE with no response: My question is the following: Is there a nonstandard model $\mathcal{M}\models\mathsf{PA}$ such that $\mathcal{M}$ has no $\Delta^1_1$-with-parameters-definable nonempty proper successor-closed initial segments? Here "$\Delta^1_1$" is meant i...

14
Q: How special is first-order $\mathsf{PA}$?

Noah SchweberThis is a modified version of a question which was asked and bountied at MSE without success. Below, "$\mathsf{PA}$" refers to first-order Peano arithmetic. There are various "schematic" theories out there, like $\mathsf{PA}$ and $\mathsf{ZFC}$, which basically consist of three components: a "base"

16
Q: Vopenka's Principle for non-first-order logics

Noah Schweber(For simplicity, the background theory for this post is NBG, a set theory directly treating proper classes which is a conservative extension of ZFC.) Vopenka's Principle ($VP$) states that, given any proper class $\mathcal{C}$ of structures in the same (set-sized, relational) signature $\Sigma$,...

18
Q: Algebrization of second-order logic

nikmilIs there an algebrization of second-order logic, analogous to Boolean algebras for propositional logic and cylindric and polyadic algebras for first-order logic?

18
Q: What sort of cardinal number is the Löwenheim-Skolem number for second-order logic?

Thomas BenjaminIn their paper "On Löwenheim-Skolem-Tarski numbers for extensions of first order logic", Magidor and Väänänen make the following statement: "For second order logic, $LS(L^{2})$ [the Löwenheim-Skolem number for second order logic--my comment] is the supremum of $\Pi_{2}$-definable ordinals..., wh...

13
Q: Does Foundation increase the strength of second-order logic?

Elliot GlazerThinking about the recent threads on structural consequences of the Axiom of Foundation (AF) over ZF-AF, I've been trying to find some conservativity result which explains why AF doesn't seem to have consequences in "ordinary mathematics." Here's a candidate that came to mind. Let's call a sente...

10
Q: Categoricity in second order logic

Carlos SáezHi, It's shown by an easy cardinality argument that there are complete second-order theories that are not categorical (have more than one model up to isomorphism). Anyone knows of a concrete example of such a theory? Thanks in advance

 
 
3 hours later…
10:05 AM
@MartinSleziak The tag now has a tag-excerpt (created by YCor) and it has grown to three questions.
2
Q: Generality of construction for $\omega$-REA arithmetic degrees

Peter GerdesSo a common method used to construct non-zero $\omega$-REA arithmetic degrees with various properties is to build an $\omega$-REA operator $J$ satisfying the constraints that (for all $X$) $$\tag{1} J(X') \equiv_T J(X) \oplus X'$$ $$\tag{2} J(X) >_T X$$ Inductively, 1 implies that $J(X^n) \equiv_...

1
Q: Computable in $\omega$-REA degree but not double jump of finitely many columns

Peter GerdesSuppose that $A$ is an $\omega$-REA set (so $A^{[n]}$ is r.e. in the prior columns). It is a well-known result that if each column of $A$ is computable then $A \leq_T \emptyset^2$ ($\emptyset^2$ can recover the computable index for each column from indices of prior columns and thus compute $A$)....

2
Q: Arithmetic non-trivial 2-l.u.b

Peter GerdesRemember a degree $\mathbb{d}$ is the $n$-lub of $\mathbb{c}_j$ in the Turing degrees if it is the least element (not merely a minimal element) set of $\mathbb{c}^{(n)}$ such that $\mathbb{c}$ computes every $\mathbb{c}_j$. It is non-trivial if it's not the $n$-th jump of a finite join of the d...

A new tag was created. (The question where it was creates has no top-level tag.)
0
Q: A set of divergent integrals that I think, equal to $-\gamma$

AnixxSo, we take $\frac{\text{sgn}(x-1)}{x}$ and apply $\mathcal{L}_t[t f(t)](x)$ four times. The transform is known to keep area under the curve. These integrals, I think, are equal to minus Euler-Mascheroni constant. Since they all have infinite parts that cancel each other, their values are finite....

 

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