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21:01
@PaulPlummer Okay thanks; probably it was just an "oubli". After all, "homeomorphism on its image" wouldn't be as useful a notion if it depended on the space surrounding the image :D
21:19
Meeeh. I finally got a desktop for my office; and I want to install GAP...
But they're probably going to release version 4.8.7 any day now and the only way to update is pretty much a reinstall afaik
@DanielFischer Please, and sorry by asking here, but if can you answer about an example of a complex-valued square integrable function $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{C}$? I believe that it means the following, I should be able to show that $\int_{\mathbb{C}}\left|f(s)\right|^2ds=\int_{\mathbb{C}}f(s)\overline{f(s)}ds$ is finite . Thanks.
Last night dream: A challenge on finding an uncountable pairwise ordered sequence of integers. 5 days' later, the challenge host reveal an unexpected answer:

6,5,4,3,1,0,0..,5,3,1,0,0..,4,3,2,1,0,0,0..,16,5,2,1,0,0…

He then said that the lesson he want to get through to the students is that while he requires consecutive terms to be ordered in a way such that the preceding term is larger than the next term, he never said that every possible pairs in the sequence must have the same ordering, hence the answer need not be a chain (CR). The answer he given is actually a general ordering (GO).
Reality check: That stuff, if it ever makes sense, will be some weird poset consists of union of many posets with different types of ordering. The resulting sequence is then one which have many types of ordered relations chained together in one expression
even then, 0 > 0 does not make sense for any ordering relations
also in maths, there is no such thing called "general ordering"
@user243301 The domain of the function is $\mathbb{R}$, so you integrate over $\mathbb{R}$, not over $\mathbb{C}$. Apart from that, you're right, supposing the measurability of the function is clear. Then you have to show that $$\int_{-\infty}^{+\infty} \lvert f(x)\rvert^2\,dx < +\infty.$$
21:49
@DanielFischer thanks and sorry I was very wrong integrating over $\mathbb{C}$, it was the main problem to find examples...
Can anyone please clarify something in this question? Given vector $A= (2,-1,-1)$ and vector $C=(0,1,1)$, $C$ rotates about $A$ with an angular velocity of 2 rad/s . Find the velocity of the head of $C$. As velocity is the cross product of angular velocity $w$ and $r$ and $w$ is in the direction of $A$, so the velocity should be a cross product of $A$ and $C$? If so, where does the angular velocity 2 rad/s fit in?
22:13
The tip of the vector C (which if it is a position vector, is (0,1,1)) is actually rotating in a circular motion with vector A as the rotation axis. Therefore your r is actually the perpendicular distance of the tip of C from the line spanned from A (which can be obtained by computing C-proj(C)_A). Now the angular velocity vector is mutually orthogonal to the r vector, thus the direction is clear (indeed w has the same direction as A). Hence multiplying r by w gives the velocity of the tip
22:28
@Secret Can you explain what you mean by C-proj(C)_A? I don't understand the notation.
@Akiva They do indeed
On what conditions is a real function a derivative of another ? Is it enough for it to satisfy the IVT ?
And hi @Ted
salut @Astyx
Comment vas-tu ?
Maintenant je me trouve un an âgé de plus :P
Joyeux anniversaire !
22:38
Merci bien :)
Tu as soufflé les bougies ce midi ?
Rien d'intéressant se passe ici?
Pas de bougies, merci.
Ici où ?
Dans le chat, bien sûr?
Je ne sais pas je viens d'arriver
22:40
@Secret I still don't get where the angular velocity 2 rad/s comes in, given that vectors A and C are omega and r
Enfin si, j'ai posé une question super intéressante sur les dérivées de fonctions :p
Tu es sûr qu'elle soit tellement intéressante?
Assez pour que je me la sois posée disons (ce qui n'est évidemment pas suffisant)
Après les questions que je me pose à 23h30 sont pas forcément les meilleures
You need an absolutely continuous function for the Lebesgue version of the first fundamental theorem of calculus to work, I believe.
$f(x)=\begin{cases} \sin(1/x), & x\ne 0 \\ 0, & x=0\end{cases}$ satisfies the intermediate value property. Is it a derivative?
You're missing a $
22:47
LOL, thanks.
Sorry, I lost my internet connection
Likely story :D
:p
Anyways, why isn't this function a derivative ?
Well, give me the function.
But a derivative does not have to be continuous does it ?
I see the problem with the function you defined above
22:57
No, a derivative does not have to be continuous.
And doesn't absolute continuity imply continuity ? I think I misunderstood what you said
Yeah, absolute continuity implies continuity. The Lebesgue stuff tells you that it has to be absolutely continuous a.e., I guess.
But I'm just thinking about old-style Riemann here.
"a.e." ?
almost everywhere
Oh right
Anyways, I'm not going to waste too much of your time on your birthday :)
23:00
If you define $g(x)=\int_a^x f(t)\,dt$, then $g$ can be differentiable but have $g'(b)\ne f(b)$, of course, for certain $b$.
Yup
I'm back from a hike and lunch and now have to get ready to go out to drinks and dinner with other friends. It is a tough life.
It sucks to have friends, doesn't it ? :p
Ne sois pas jaloux, enfin :P
Au moins moi je peut rester dormir dans mon lit pendant les prochaines heures ... na !
23:04
Il faut te dire bonne nuit, alors :)
Oui, merci :) Bonne fin de journée à toi ! Et merci pour l'aide :)
À la prochaine !
À la prochaine.
Hey!
@Astyx I remember one of my analysis teachers (one of the best classes I ever had) gave us a paper that talked about how it is difficult to classify which functions are derivatives
23:23
@Astyx I found the paper. It is Derivatives why they elude classification by Andrew Bruckner
23:47
@Paradox101 wait, so your problem specifically said that C is r, and not the distance of the tip of C from A is r?
It looks like the same author has a more recent survey paper written 20 years later: The problem of characterizing derivatives revisited @Astyx

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