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12:18 AM
Any geometers in the house?
 
@Ted!
Come on over! :P
Also hey @Astyx
 
I'm being told that "A scheme of dimension $n$ has finite degree over $\Bbb C^n_x$", but I don't know what $\Bbb C^n_x$ is :(
($x$ has usually been used in this context as shorthand for the variables $x_1,\dots, x_n$, if that matters)
 
Yikes, it was down for a second
And @EricStucky maybe it's alternate notation for $\mathbb{C}[x]$?
 
12:43 AM
LOL, what's up, @EricStucky?
Oh, algebraic geometry. That's presumably the local ring at $x$.
 
12:54 AM
Lol, I was super wrong there
 
Well, Demonark, I may not be right, but you have a lot more math yet to learn :P
Soon you'll be ahead of me.
 
Well, the first thing you said is definitely true :P
 
 
3 hours later…
4:07 AM
wondering what a nice term would be for a G-set X (a group action of G on X) which makes G isomorphic to a number of copies of a coset space G/H.
every G-set is isomorphic to a bunch of disjoint copies of coset spaces, but not necessarily with respect to the same subgroups
G/H and G/K are G-set isomorphic iff H~K are conjugate
every element of G/H has stabilizer a conjugate of H
an action is free (aka semiregular) if X is a bunch of copies of G
an action is trivial if X is a bunch of copies of G/G=1
an action is regular if X is just a single copy of G, also called a homogeneous G-space
an action is transitive if it is a copy of just a single coset space G/H
apparently the term semifree is already taken, and means is a bunch of copies of G and G/G=1 but nothing in between
also the term half-transitive means X is a bunch of orbits of the same size, but that's not to say the orbits are they same kind
so I guess what I want is weaker than semifree but stronger than half-transitive
since "regular" is weaker than free and stronger than transitive, I would've wanted "semiregular," but that's already a term for free
 
multiply-something?
(say, multiply-free)
 
4:23 AM
if were a finite number of copies, n-free might be a good idea
like 2-transitive, 3-transitive etc. special cases of multiply-transitive
 
and there's countably-free for a countably-infinite number of copies, I guess.
 
ah, maybe I should just say G-bundle. duh.
that covers the case of lie groups and the copies being "glued together" continuously too
 
point.
 
 
1 hour later…
6:02 AM
> It is unknown if there are infinitely many partition numbers divisible by 3, although it is known that there are infinitely many divisible by 2.
What?
 
> What?
are you asking why such a simple claim isn't confirmed or disproved yet?
 
@arctictern yes
 
6:52 AM
I liked this: "Meditate and study and it will eventually make sense" From this comment by fleablood.
 
7:07 AM
[Random]
We knew that $2 < e < 3$
and we also knew that the exponential function $a^x$ with fixed $a$ is nondecreasing in the ordinals
Therefore:
$2^{\omega} \leq e^{\omega} \leq 3 ^{\omega}$
We also knew that this is the same as
$\sup (2^n|n\in\Bbb{N}) \leq \sup (e^n|n\in\Bbb{N}) \leq \sup (3^n|n\in\Bbb{N})$
evaluating these, we get:
$\omega \leq \sup (e^n|n\in\Bbb{N}) \leq \omega$
and thus: $e^{\omega} = \omega$ by sandwich theorem
Now, the inverse function of $e^x$, $\ln x$ is also nondecreasing
and thus we have $\omega = \ln \omega$
 
7:35 AM
Now in order to continue, a revision on the proof that $\ln ab = \ln a + \ln b$ is needed as ordinals may break it
ok, it indeed breaks is, because two ordinals $\alpha$ and $\beta$ don't commute in general
 
hello guys, I got an equation with two constants a and b. y = ax^2 + bx + 10 which has a minimum at (3, -8).. How do I go about to set a and b?
 
complete the square, then it becomes obvious on what to set for x to minimise the value of y. With that, the relation of a,b with the minimum can be obtained
 
Excuse me but what do you mean by complete the square?
 
rewrite ax^2+bx+c in the form a(x-h)^2+k, it's a concept taught in intermediate algebra
you could also use calculus
 
ty forgot that
 
7:49 AM
hmm... the class of ordinals don't really form a vector space because addition don't commute, which means I cannot use this en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
 
also no additive inverses
lol at BCH
did not expect that
 
anybody could help with a math question I have not received yet a very satisfying answer it about finding the upper bound for the magnitude of the error in an approximation (with using integrals) math.stackexchange.com/questions/2366517/…
correction without using integrals
 
Hmm... it is easy to define exponentiation to base $e$ by using the fact that the exponential function is nondecreasing and the sandwich theorem above. For that we can establish that:
$e^{\omega}=\omega$
And thus $\alpha^{e^{\omega}}=\alpha^{\omega}$
and $\omega^{\alpha} = (e^{\omega})^{\alpha} = e^{\omega \alpha}$
what is less obvious though, is the value of $e^{\omega + n}$. Suppose $n < \omega$ then we know from the well ordering of ordinals $ \omega < \omega +n$. Now since exponentiation by any finite base is nondecreasing, we have $m < \omega,m^{\omega} \leq m^{\omega +n} \implies \omega \leq m^{\omega +n}$ so we only have a lower bound of the value of $e^{\omega + n}$
uh wait a sec..., maybe we can use $m^{\omega 2}$ as an upper bound...
so we have $\omega \leq m^{\omega +n} \leq \omega^2$
let me check how $e^{ab}= (e^a)^b$ is proved...
 
8:18 AM
How could we prove that feet of perpendicular from a point on the circumcircle of a triangle on the sides are collinear?
 
Hmm... $e^{\omega}n = e^{\omega}e^{\ln n}$, does not seemed very helpful
Actually, I think I need to revise how $a^{\beta\gamma} = (\alpha^{\beta})^{\gamma}$ is proved in the ordinals, that might give me some idea on how to handle the base $e$. Clearly the bounds $2 < e < 3$ is needed for some sandwich theorem
 
@MaryStar It seems that this is Theorem 2.51 in Coxeter's Geometry Revisited and probably can be found also in a few other books.
Perhaps also the Wikipedia article might be helpful: Simson line.
 
8:50 AM
Ah ok! Thanks!!!
I have also an other question. We have the triangle ABC. We have that $X\in AC$, $Y\in BC$ and $Z=AY\cap BX$, where $X,Y\neq A,B,C$. I want to show that AB is parallel to XY iff $\frac{|CX|}{|CA|}=\frac{|ZB|}{|ZX|}=1$. Could you give me a hint? @MartinSleziak
When AB is parallel to XY then we have that then AZB and ZXY are congruent. What do we get from that? @MartinSleziak
Does someone of you have an idea?
 
For everyone that was interested I just created a room for the set theory study group, I've set it to gallery mode so that you have to ask to talk, do that if you're interested! The plan is to follow Kunen's book Set Theory: An Introduction To Independence Proofs.
2
We'll decide the details of how we want to organise this study group in the room I made for it. (tagging some people that I think were interested @Mike @Balarka @Dami @Astyx @Perturbative @Akiva)
 
9:06 AM
so that's why all those error cancallations when doing some physics modelling...
 
Hello @Secret !! D you have an idea about my question above?
 
@AlessandroCodenotti I would be interested in that.
@MaryStar I am not too good in geometry. Let's hope you'll have more luck with somebody else.
 
@MartinSleziak Ok
When we have that $\frac{|CX|}{|CA|}=1$ do we not get that X=A?
 
9:23 AM
It is easy to see that if AB // XY there is a pair of similar triangles, but it is not very obvious to me yet why the ratios between them must be 1:2 to obtain the required ratio of |CX|/|CA|=1
 
But wouldn't |CX|/|CA|=1 mean that |CX|=|CA| and so that X=A? @Secret
 
I mean, we can easily draw a pair of triangles sharing the same angle such that $\frac{|CX|}{|CA|}=\frac{|ZB|}{|ZX|}=1$ is false, so I felt like there is something else missing about the condition of Z to force the ratio to be 1:2

That will seemed so since $CX \subset CA$ based on what is give by the question, do you have to have the original question somewhere?
 
how should I go about solving r^2 +r - 6 = 0?
 
@sockevalley factorise: $(r+3)(r-2) = r^2 + r - 6$
 
wise
ty
 
9:31 AM
np
 
That is the whole exercise statement. We have from the 2 congruences that BZ/ZX=AC/XC, right? Maybe the 1 is wring.

how could we show the other diection? Knowing that BZ/ZX=AC/XC holds how can we show that AB is parallel to XY?
 
@LastIronStar. Do you have any future advice on patterns when you can solve an equation by factorizing?
 
@MartinSleziak I had to leave for a moment, I just added you to the room
 
Thanks!
I should have noticed that instead of pinging you here, I simply should have requested access over there.
 
9:46 AM
@sockevalley you might want to check out E.J.Barbeau's book titled "Polynomials"
 
If $AB\parallel XY$, then since $BX \cap AY = Z$, $Z$ is colinear separately with $BX$ and $AY$. This means by opposite angles, $\angle BZA = \angle XZY$, by alternate angles for a pair of parallel line segments, $\angle BAZ = \angle XYZ$. Thus y interior angle of triangles the remaining pair of angles are equal. This means $\triangle ABZ \sim \triangle XYZ$. Now from the previous discussion, $\triangle ABC \sim \triangle XYZ$ and thus we have:

\begin{align}
\frac{XY}{AB} = \frac{YC}{BC} = \frac{CX}{CA}\\
I think the converse $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC} \implies AB \parallel XY$ may not necessary be true, for example we can have:
 
@Secret I see!!
 
@Last
@LastIronStar Cheers, I will look into it. I am facinated on how big math really is. I always get amazed by all the previous discoveries that they present in this book for instance.
 
haha yeah, math is a vast playground
 
Unless $\triangle ABZ \cong \triangle XYZ$ there is no way from the given $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC}$ we can deduce that $AB \parallel XY$
 
10:00 AM
Ahh so the statement cannot be just $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC}$ without equal to $1$, right?
 
I mean you can have triangles like these. Here, the pair of right angled triangles cannot have length ratios of 1
if $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC}=1$ then X=A which the question said it is not allowed thus I don't know what that question is trying to say
sorry wrong pics:
which means, I suspect you cannot have $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC} = 1$ unless the question is ok to have a pair of degenerate triangles
You can obviously have $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC} = m, m \neq 1$ though
 
Ah ok!! When we have that $\frac{BZ}{ZX} = \frac{AC}{XC} = m, m \neq 1$ how can we conclude that $AB \parallel XY$ ?
 
10:20 AM
ok I have no idea, I don't think that is a sufficient condition to prove $AB \parallel XY$
 
Ah ok, no problem. Thank you for your help!!
 
10:42 AM
[Random] Is context of a situation a computable function, even if we allow infinitely many arguments and parameters?
 
 
2 hours later…
12:35 PM
in English Language & Usage, 1 hour ago, by Ghalib
I think avatars are sticking in chat today. There aren't as many people as we see here.
the "leave" option doesn't work
 
user84215
12:51 PM
Why are people not interested in LTD: Topology ? Is it a bad idea ? Or, is its subject not interesting? Or ... ?
 
 
2 hours later…
3:24 PM
@Alessandro Thanks for notifying me! I'll jump on in the set theory chat once I get back home (in 8? days)
 
are you at the diff geo workshop now? How is it going?
 
Can anybody here figure out what is the equation of the following curve?
 
hasn't started yet; tomorrow I get my accommodation stuff straight and it starts the day after, @Alessandro
 
ah, I see, what's the target audience?
I mean is it an introductory thing or a grad students workshop?
 
hm, hard to say. they say i should know basic riemannian geometry; probably 1st year grad.
a bunch of undergrads are coming too so idk
 
3:31 PM
I see, sounds nice, how long will it be?
 
A week
 
4:08 PM
A finite dimensional real associative algebra with identity is a division algebra iff it has no zero divisors. One direction (divsion algebra$\implies$ no zero divisors) holds for infinite dimensional algebras as well, while the other doesn't, but I can't find a counterexample, any ideas?
 
To clarify: There's an infinite dimensional real associative algebra with identity without zero divisors that's not a division algebra.
 
Or, to use the actual definition of division algebra
replace the part after 'divisors' with "for which not every element is invertible."
(I am, to be clear, not attempting to answer the question but just making clear what's being asked.)
 
the proof in the finite dimensional case uses the fact that if $A$ is the algebra without zero divisors then the map $A\to A$ that sends $a\mapsto ax$ for a fixed $x\in A\setminus\{0\}$ is injective, since its kernel is just $\{0\}$ (because $x$ isn't a zero divisor) and it must also be surjective since the dimension is finite
 
Hmm. But of course that last bit fails in infinite dimensions.
@AlessandroCodenotti Hm! Found a short article on JSTOR (jstor.org/stable/pdf/2321347.pdf) with the following sentence near the end:
"Also, there is an infinite dimensional algebra over the reals which has no zero divisors, yet is not a division algebra; it is the algebra of polynomials."
 
4:22 PM
oh, that makes a lot of sense, nice find!
 
I am a google-fu master.
 
indeed
they say that's a great skill to have in mathematics :P
 
5:02 PM
Let $\sigma_g$ be a reflection along a line and $\delta_Z$ a reflection around a point Z. The composition of reflection around a point is the composition of two reflections along perpendicular lines, a and b. So, we have that $\sigma_g\circ\delta_Z$ is equal to $\sigma_g\circ\sigma_a\circ\sigma_b$. This composition is a reflection if g is not parallel to a or b. Is this correct?
 
5:26 PM
Quick question about function notation if I'm considering equations of form F(y/x) then does this follow: y/x * (-gamma + delta x)/(alpha - beta y) = F(y/x) since this is just some multiple of y/x and hence it's F(y/x) or am I misunderstanding the notation F(y/x)?
 
Simple check: Both (x,y)=(1,2) and (x,y)=(2,4) have y/x=2. So if F is a function of y/x alone then both options should give the same answer.
 
5:44 PM
Someone could help me with my first question here?? Thanks
 
That's true for the first term clearly since it's just y/x but not the term with greek constants. So, no? To make sure I understand considering ky/x = F(y/x) then we have 2k for both pairs of coordinates. Whereas the term with greek constants differs => not F(y/x).
 
6:19 PM
Hey there everybody!
 
How goes it?
 
Suppose $\Bbb F$ is a field and $R$ is an integral domain which is also a finite dimensional $\Bbb F$-vector space, does it always hold that $R=\Bbb F[\alpha]$ for some $\alpha\in R$?
I'm 99% confident that this is true, so it's probably false
$R$ should actually be a field, pick a nonzero $r\in R$ and consider $\{1,r,r^2,\cdots,r^{n}\}$ (where $n=\text{dim}_{\Bbb F}(R)$), this set is linearly dependent so there exist $c_i\in\Bbb F$ such that $\sum\limits_{i=0}^nc_ir^i=0$, bring $c_0$ to the right side, multiply by $-c_0$ and you factor an $r$ on the left side
 
Well hmm, if it's a finite field that'll make R a field as well
Oh lol
 
6:34 PM
@Alessandro You know the primitive element theorem?
 
I might have heard of it
 
I know how Astyx feels
 
I just looked it up, I'm having troubles understanding the definition of a separable extension, but it's dinner time so I'll look at it later
 
@Pythonista Exactly so. (Sorry for the delay.)
Another way to look at it is to let z=y/x -> y=zx. Then (y/x)*(-c+dx)/(a-by)=z*(-c+dx)/(a-b z*x), which isn't a function of just z=y/x.
 
6:51 PM
@Semiclassical Thanks for the input. Thought I had finally found canonical coordinates, but wasn't sure about F(y/x). This system is proving to be difficult.
 
What system are you working on?
 
2-D Lotka-Volterra. Attempting to use symmetry methods (Lie groups / infinitesimal generators) on it.
 
Gotcha.
It'd be F(y/x) if the second term were like (ax+by)/(cx+dy).
But without those factors x,y on top/bottom to balance the others out, nope.
 
Just a quick question: Is tensor multiplication commutative? Is the following statement true?
$$g^{ij}A_j = A_j g^{ij}$$
 
Depends what you're doing. But typically the matrix elements are just real (maybe complex) numbers and they commute just fine.
 
7:04 PM
OK, thanks
 
@Balarka I don't understand how can $K/F$ be a finite degree extension yet there are infinitely many intermediate fields
ah, no, wait I got it, infinitely many intermediate fields is very different from an infinite tower of extensions ending in $K$ :P
 
free to play games with ads? annoying, but understandable. free to play game that just keeps playing the same ad over and over? irritating
 
well anyway putting those algebraic problems aside for a moment the only associative, unital, commutative, finite dimensional division algebras over a field are just the field extensions
(this was all motivated by trying to find a generalization of Frobenius theorem to fields different from $\Bbb R$)
 
7:26 PM
My attempts: Found $cos 2\alpha/cos 2\theta = (1-ab)/(ab-1)$
Tried to multiply to get ab and then simplify. Result: Failure
Tried to add using a+b. Result: Failure
Tried to subtract a from b. Result: Failure
Unable to eliminate theta
Can someone please provide any hint?
 
tbh I'd try to use geometry here rather than trig identities.
 
@Semiclassical I won't have time for geometry during exam.
 
well, do you know how to do the tangent addition formula?
 
@Semiclassical Yes.
 
Okay. Let $t=\tan \theta,s=\tan\alpha$.
Using the tangent addition formula, you can write $a$ in terms of $s,t$ and similarly for $b$.
 
7:33 PM
@AlessandroCodenotti Wait wha
 
If you can then eliminate $t$ and simplify, you'll be done
 
@Semiclassical Okay. Let me try.
 
you have $K/F$ an extension and infinitely many fields for which $K\supseteq E\supseteq F$ holds
 
At least based on the typical meanings of the words involved that sounds odd to my ears
Oh wait you mean like
You can sorta have infinitely many paths of length 2 between $F$ and $K$?
 
7:34 PM
Oh okay I can buy that
 
I misinterpreted it at first
 
Lol, I mean, as did I.
 
@Semiclassical Not possible.
 
Hm, I wonder if there's some easy classification of noncommutative division algebras over a field
 
Considering I just did it myself, it certainly is.
 
7:40 PM
@Semiclassical $2s = b-a + bts +ats$?
 
No.
What is the tangent addition formula for $\tan(\theta-\alpha)$?
 
@Semiclassical $(t-s)/(1+ts)$
 
Right. So that's $a$. What about $b$?
 
@Semiclassical b= $(t+s)/(1-ts)$
 
With parens yes.
How do you eliminate $s$ from those equations?
 
7:43 PM
@Semiclassical There are 2 equations and 4 variables so it'd be difficult to eliminate s
 
Sure, but only one of them needs to be eliminated.
Suppose you solve both equations separately for $s$. What do you get?
 
Just a minute
 
erk, I contradicted myself. I should've said to solve each equation for $t=\tan\theta$, since that's the one you need to eliminate.
 
I solved for s :(
Anyway, I'll do that again for t
@Semiclassical $t =(a+s)/(1-as)$ and $t = (b-s)/(1+bs)$
 
right. so then you've got $(a+s)/(1-as)=(b-s)/(1+bs)$
Which is in terms of $a,b$, and $s=\tan\alpha$.
So $t$ has been eliminated.
The only possible remaining task is to simplify that a bit, but I'm not sure what else one is expected to do.
 
7:51 PM
@Semiclassical But answer doesn't match
 
What's the answer?
 
$b-a = tan2\alpha(1+ab)$
 
parens, man.
 
@Semiclassical ?
 
oh, I see.
I'm not sure that's different, but it's not immediately obvious. Hrm.
I think what that answer reflects is that you can write $\tan(2\alpha)=\tan((\theta+\alpha)-(\theta-\alpha))$.
 
7:54 PM
then?
 
Hence you can use the addition formula on those two angles and evidently obtain $\dfrac{\tan(\theta+\alpha)-\tan(\theta-\alpha)}{1+\tan(\theta-\alpha)\tan( \theta +\alpha)}$
 
such a difficult question :'(
 
I say "evidently" because that's just me plugging the definitions of $a,b$ into $\tan2\alpha = (b-a)/(1+a b)$.
one can also write $\tan 2\alpha=\frac{2\tan\alpha}{1-\tan^2\alpha}=\frac{2s}{1-s^2}$
And it's plausible to me that one can rearrange $\frac{2s}{1-s^2}=\frac{b-a}{1+ab}$ into the form we had earlier.
But, uh, plausible is not the same as obvious.
one has $\frac{a+s}{1-as}=\frac{b-s}{1+bs}\implies (a+s)(1+bs)=(b-s)(1-as)\implies a+s+abs+bs^2=b-s-abs+as^2$
which you can further rearrange to $2s+2abs=b-a-bs^2+as^2$
 
@Semiclassical It's getting really complicated
 
and both sides factor to $(1+ab)2s=(b-a)(1-s^2)$
Which, hey, is equivalent to $\frac{2s}{1-s^2}=\frac{b-a}{1+ab}$ as desired.
So the two answers are equivalent. But while that's not difficult algebra, it's not exactly obvious.
So I'm not all that happy about that answer.
The way they probably expect you to solve it is like this:
 
8:02 PM
@Semiclassical They expected me to use the "trick" that you stated earlier that $tan 2\alpha = ...$
 
$$\tan(2\alpha)=\tan[(\theta+\alpha)-(\theta-\alpha)]=\frac{\tan(\theta+\alpha)-‌​\tan(\theta-\alpha)}{1+\tan(\theta+\alpha)\tan(\theta-\alpha)}=\frac{b-a}{1+ab}$$
the keys being 1) eliminating $\theta$ from $\theta+\alpha,\theta-\alpha$ means taking the difference of them, 2) being able to use the angle addition formula on that expression.
 
Yes, that's what I was expected to do but alas!
Thanks @Semiclassical :)
 
The Bernstein Polynominals B0,n-1 , .... , Bn-1,n-1 span the vector space of deg n-1 polynomials. I guess one proof this via induction, might be a bit tedious though. Does someone know/see another, preferable good approach?
 
How are the Bernstein polynomials defined?
 
8:10 PM
B i,n (x) = binom(n,i) *x (1-x)^(n-i) * x^i
 
fyi, you can turn on mathjax here using the link in the room desc
 
:-)
sec
 
so that's be $B_{i,n}(x)=\binom{n}{i}x(1-x)^{n-i}x^i$.
That doesn't quite match the Wikipedia definition, though.
 
that first $x$ shouldn't be there.
 
Right.
 
8:13 PM
ye, there is a typo, the additional "*x" is wrong
 
mmkay.
 
I doubt there's going to be a much easier approach than induction, tbh :/
 
Looking at the list of properties, the following seems useful: $b_{\nu,n-1}(x)=\frac{n-\nu}{n}b_{\nu,n}(x)+\frac{n-\nu}{n}b_{\nu+1,n}(x)$
 
recursivity (?) - btw. how to enable the mathjax format here?
 
Like I said, use the link in the room description and follow the instructions there.
[following up on what I was saying] Which means that the set $\{b_{\nu,n}(x)\}$ definitely spans $\{b_{\nu,n-1}(x)\}$
And that strikes me as enough for an inductive argument.
That seems a bit clumsy, but I dunno.
 
8:18 PM
That's pretty much it, yes.
 
ye, that would probably work
 
$$x^k = \sum_{i=k-1}^{n-1} \frac{\binom{i}{k}}{\binom{n}{k}} B_{i,n}(x)$$
 
One might be able to use the completeness relation somehow: $$\sum_{\nu=0}^n b_{\nu,n}(x)=\sum_{\nu=0}^n \binom{n}{\nu}x^\nu(1-x)^{n-\nu}=(x+(1-x))^n=1$$
(I'm using wikipedia's notation, so $b_{\nu,n}(x)$ instead of $B_{i,n}(x)$.)
 
8:32 PM
Ah, another idea:
 
Hey @Steamy
 
ohi
 
How's it going?
 
8:47 PM
Nothing much happening nowadays. Sleep, eat, research, goof off, vidya in some random order, I guess.
 
What's vidya?
 
video games
 
i'm on a paper.io run right now
 
Yo earlier this morning I reached 99.24% on paper-io and then accidentally ran into a wall @Semi
 
My supervisor is on holiday and probably won't bother coming to work or reply to mails till August 10-ish :P
 
8:58 PM
Good life choice @Steamy
 
So barely any pressure to work, I guess...
 
Hey chat
 
Cookie Clicker was updated recently so I've been occupied with that, too :P
ohi
 
damn
my best since I've been playing today is 41.06%
the ads are pretty irritating, though less so since i've muted that tab
 
Best way to do it is to draw a thin strip around the board
Cookie clicker? Lol @Steamy, sounds intriguing
 
9:03 PM
lmao @Daminark
 
Though I probably shouldn't tack on any games yet
Hey @Perturbative
 
How's things going? @Daminark
 
Well, it is an idle game, technically
 
@SteamyRoot Everything's aight, how about you?
 
:^)
Wrong @
 
9:10 PM
@Daminark Got the flu at the moment, so haven't been doing much work, I need to post an update on the Diff Top/Diff Geom study group too
 
Whoops
And ack, that sucks
 
Battling the flu as it turns out is pretty easy, battling my Real Analysis lecturer on the other hand is turning out to be a pain
 
Oh, how's that shtick going?
 
I've decided to pop in maybe once a week, just to see what the dude is up to, and then do my own thing. Considering how he complained that he's 'sick of all his students', I figured one less student would improve his health a bit
 
howdy, Demonark and Perturb
 
9:17 PM
Hey hey! @TedShifrin
 
Hmm, has he been at least less fixated on talking about his hatred after day 1?
Hey @Ted!
 
<--- always hated his students
 
What'd they ever do to you?
Aside from shocking you by forgetting all the math they learned
@BalarkaSen
 
It's hippa who started all that, not Balarka.
 
Oh I know, just that Balarka is an opportunist wrt the meme
 
9:22 PM
hi @Ted
 
Actually haven't been to any lectures after Day 1, I went up and picked his course outline from his office, and then was outta there, but I've only been hearing complaints from my friends also doing the course
 
hi @Alessandro
 
Hey @Alessandro
 
Merp
 
With my teaching style, it was very difficult for students to miss multiple classes. Some felt that missing one already ruined things for them.
 
9:23 PM
hi chat
 
Some people literally read the book to the class, so ... if that's all ...
heya Eric
Eric, when's our Bryant seminar? :D
 
i think i can be ready to talk about Bryant by the end of the first week of august if i keep pace
 
I'm leaving for a week on Aug. 15.
 
@TedShifrin I've already gone through everything being covered in the course on my own, I'm not actually getting anything out of the lectures though
 
so @Ted I think I have enough in me to get through it by the 8th or something around then
as long as i dont get sidetracked by other stuff
 
9:28 PM
well, you always get sidetracked
 
i do have to give a lecture in two weeks so idk how much time ill have to prepare for that
ive been really good lately though!
ive been doing a lot of math
 
I've had some nice math to work on as well.
 
well, we can start to talk about it before I leave
 
ok cool
 
(Or, rather, i've had a good excuse to read up on math I've heard about before)
Though when I say math it tends to be physics math, though still more on the math side than the physics
 
9:30 PM
waits for a Semiclassic sentence without "though"s
 
pff, my name is basically an exercise in "although"
 
glances at the one in parentheses
:P
 
puts Demonark behind parentheses
 
( ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ )
 
(Demonark)
 
9:32 PM
i.e. "Though semiclassical methods are derived within quantum mechanics, the resulting formulae are usually expressed in terms of classical mechanics."
 
@Daminark what'd you guys do in friday lecture
I was busy and couldnt come
 
In complex analysis we did Laurent series, singularities, and behavior at infinity
 
ok and dynamics?
 
In dynamics we did some Ergodic theorems
von Neumann and Birkhoff
 
cool cool
 
9:43 PM
Yeah it was some pretty dank stuff
 
What results are there on classifications of finite dimensional associative division algebras over fields different from $\Bbb R$?
 
trying to understand all the different norms associated to current is a nightmare
 
LOL
I've been there ... but a long time ago.
 
How many different norms are there?
 
@Ted so you're not currently thinking about such things?
 
9:51 PM
I distribute my time differently
 
And a couple families of seminorms
Right now I'm dealing with like four very different ones
 
Huh, normally I wouldn't expect that
 
Demonark should try to compactify his remarks.
 
Okay I'm out of stuff at this point :P
 
We can only hope you're totally disconnected.
 
9:56 PM
Is that a technical thing or is totally just putting emphasis?
 
oh, it's a topology term.
 
Ah, I see
 
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