« first day (4438 days earlier)      last day (575 days later) » 

2:22 AM
too much excitement in here
 
2:53 AM
hi my real analysis book says 'Let $A \in \mathbf{Q}$ be a set that is bounded above such that whenever $x \in A$ and $t \in \mathbf{Q}$ with $t < x$, then $t \in A$. Suppose sup(A) is not in A. There exists a $y \in \mathbf{R}$ such that $A = \{ x \in \mathbf{Q}: x < y \}$'. I know that usually the rationals dont have the least upper bound property, but that they do when embedded in the reals. [...]
[...] but i dont get why, in this notation, it's not $y \in \mathbf{Q}$ because it says $x \in A$, which is a subset of $\mathbf{Q}$, so i feel this set $A$ is actually some rational number and every rational number less than it ?
 
What does $A \in \mathbb{Q}$ mean?
 
ack does it not evaluate? sorry about that
 
presumably you meant $\subset$?
 
it's boldface in latex so it makes it like the bold R, Q, Z, etc. that i think usually denote reals, integers, blah blah
so like A subset of the rationals
 
i'm not sure what you are asking above.
If $y$ is an upper bound then so will any rational greater than $y$.
 
2:59 AM
why, specifically in this case, is the upper bound y in the reals, why is it not in the rationals ?
 
they stated that $\sup A$ is not in $A$.
 
why is it not purely in the rationals
i think a key part of this statement is that y is in the reals, but i dont see why, based on the notation they chose, it's not purely within rationals
since they made x be in A which is of rationals
 
i'm not sure why you say that $y$ is not in the rationals, it could be.
 
yes but what i mean by purely is that it cannot be irrational
 
$(-\infty, 2)\cap \mathbb{Q}$ and $(-\infty, \sqrt{2})\cap \mathbb{Q}$ would seem to be examples that satisfy the properties.
 
3:06 AM
no because square root of two is not rational, so it cannot be an x so it would not be in this set
which is what i was anticipating when emphasizing in this notation
or maybe im missing something?
 
i'm not sure why you say those sets cannot be examples of $A$ with the requisite properties.
 
it says that A is a set in the rationals
then x draws from A
 
the above are both subsets of the rationals
 
so sqrt 2 could never be an x
right?
 
i don't know what you mean by that
both of the above sets satisfy all stated conditions. one had a rational $\sup$ and the other doesn't.
 
3:11 AM
it says in the passage i inserted that A is bounded above such that whenever x is in A and t is in Q with t less than x, t is in A, so this set choosing rationals, then including everything beneath them
sqrt 2 would never be an x value because it cannot be chosen from a subset of rationals, right?
 
$\sqrt{2}$ cannot be an element of $A$ if that is what you are trying to say.
 
but i am still missing what it is that is bothering you about the statement.
 
it is crucial to the argument being made that the y they refer to is within reals, meaning it can be rational or irrational. under the notation they provided for A, y should only be rational
yes i know that rationals are reals but that's not the point of confusion
 
i give up.
i gave you an example where $y=2$.
and $y=\sqrt{2}$.
 
3:17 AM
:(
thanks for your time
 
you need to figure out why you think $(-\infty,\sqrt{2}) \cap \mathbb{Q}$ is not a candidate for $A$ (it is).
 
i dont have a problem with that
but you seem to not want to continue this conversation so i dont want to keep bothering you
 
well, i just gave you an example where the $y=\sqrt{2}$ but you seem to think that this implies that $y$ should be rational and i do not follow.
 
let me clarify something: based on the passage i wrote, does this mean take a subset of the rationals, now for any x in this set, every rational below it is also in this set?
i might just be misreading because based on what youre saying, this is not what the passage is saying & then this would be my problem
referring to this: "
hi my real analysis book says 'Let $A \in \mathbf{Q}$ be a set that is bounded above such that whenever $x \in A$ and $t \in \mathbf{Q}$ with $t < x$, then $t \in A$. Suppose sup(A) is not in A. There exists a $y \in \mathbf{R}$ such that $A = \{ x \in \mathbf{Q}: x < y \}$'. I know that usually the rationals dont have the least upper bound property, but that they do when embedded in the reals. [...]"
 
Again, I presume you mean $A \subset \mathbb{Q}$.
It says that if $x \in A$ then $(-\infty, x) \cap \mathbb{Q} \subset A$.
If $\sup A$ is not in $A$ then $A$ must have the form $(-\infty,y) \cap \mathbb{Q}$.
But this does not mean that $y$ cannot be $\sqrt{2}$ or $2$.
 
3:37 AM
yes so $(-\infty, x) \cap \mathbb{Q} \subset A$
does this not imply that the sup is x?
 
no, it says nothing about the $\sup$ other than $x \le \sup A$.
if $y=\sup A$ was in $A$, then it must have the form $(-\infty, y] \cap \mathbb{Q}$.
 
oh oh so its like A is bounded, but we know nothing about that bound its just saying the set A contains every rational below it's elements?
i think i see now
 
well, the $\sup$ can be rational or not.
Note that both $(-\infty,2) \cap \mathbb{Q}$ and $(-\infty,2] \cap \mathbb{Q}$ seem to be valid examples of $A$. But the first does not contain its $\sup$.
 
right right i see now
thanks
whoooooo
 
good luck
 
 
1 hour later…
5:03 AM
@TedShifrin Hi, I think could solve the problem. The key idea was to see $H_{f\circ g}(a)=J_{g}^{\top}(a) H_{f}(b)J_{g}(a)$ using the fact $b$ is a critical point of $f$. Then since $J_{g}(a)$ is inversible and the Hessians they are symmetric so the rank of $H_{f}(b)$ is the same of the rank of the Hessian of $H_{f\circ g}(a)$.
 
 
2 hours later…
7:05 AM
Is it possible to make text collapsible in posts? I know we can use spoilers (>!), but I'm looking to collapse multiple lines and would preferably like something toggleable, e.g. meta.stackoverflow.com/a/352631/10841085
 
7:23 AM
I am curious if T(0)<Tair then why is it strictly increasing for all t?
I think it is true for a small neighborhood of t=0
but I wonder how it is true for all t
 
k is negative, i guess?
 
yes k is negative
oh she yes
 
dT/dt is a continuous function that is positive in a neighborhood of 0 by some reasoning that it sounds like you already know. the constant function T(t) = Tair is another solution to the differential equation, so taking for granted that the graphs od distinct solutions never cross, the graph of your T(t) doesn't cross the line y = Tair
 
I forgot it won't change sign
 
so T(t) < Tair for all t and that tells you that dT/dt stays positive
yeah
 
7:38 AM
yes I see the curve going up not touching tair
 
 
1 hour later…
9:03 AM
Hi again
I don't understand why do they use same probability density function for x and y coordinates to get the probability for the point inside area.
 
Why does the last equality hold? (By taking complex conjugate ~)
 
 
3 hours later…
12:01 PM
It doesn't hold for all n
 
Consider the sequence $3,31,331,3331,...$. Which value in the sequence is prime?
I have confirmed so far that the first 5 terms of the sequence are not prime, but I don't know what to do from there.
This question is a proof by counter example.
 
12:19 PM
@Jakobian Yes it's for $n>0$, but ignore the question.
 
Correction, first term is 31.
 
@Ajay There's something drastically wrong with your primality test.
 
What do you mean?
 
31 is surely prime!
 
Oh shoot, the question is which term is not prime!
dammit
 
12:24 PM
Ah, ok. My Sage code shows some terms which are prime.
 
The thing is, i'm not allowed to use any calculator, I have to do this by hand.
I saw a few answers here on MSE, but i'm not sure how they established the general term of the sequence.
61
A: 31,331,3331, 33331,333331,3333331,33333331 are prime

TBrendle333333331 is not prime; it is divisible by 17. This does not require a computer. Euler did calculations like this all the time. What's more, in your sequence 31, 331, 3331, 33331, …, every 15th number is divisible by 31. Proof: An noted in lab bhattacharjee's answer, the sequence has the form ...

 
That code can go a lot higher, but it will get slow for huge terms because it's using a provable prime test. However, Sage can also use a probababilistic test which is quite fast.
@Ajay Fair enough. But it's nice to have a computed list to check your hand calculations against.
 
Sure is, i'm learning how to use mathematica on a pi-top currently. I'm thinking of learning sage soon too.
would be nice to generate lists without having to scroll through wikipedia
 
here is a larger list of the primes of this form.
 
Are you familiar with Fermat's little theorem, and Euler's theorem? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_theorem
 
12:33 PM
PARI/GP is a good tool to create such lists and it is far more flexible than the online tools.
 
Sage is fun. It's free, and I can use it on my phone without installing anything. But you do need to learn the basics of Python before starting on Sage.
 
No, i'm not familiar with modular arithmetic.
 
And PARI/GP is MUCH easier to handle than Python
 
I learned python years ago along with scratch, java and R.
 
FWIW, Sage uses Pari for a lot of number theory stuff.
You can run Pari code inside Sage. But you can also run Pari/GP directly on SageMathCell.
@Ajay Oh. It's pretty hard to attack problems like this without modular arithmetic. It's not impossible, but you'll be re-inventing the wheel .
 
12:42 PM
Well I sorta lied, I did learn modular arithmetic and stuff like the Chinese remainder theorem. But that was more than a year ago and I practically don't remember anything.
I know how to do stuff like 10 mod 4, but I don't think that's enough to tackle this problem.
 
The above answer is only useful to prove some of those numbers composite (if one finds a small factor), if we want to find it out without electronic help. To prove a 7-digit number prime by hand is already cumbersome and very time consuming , even if you would apply modern tests. The largest prime found by hand was the $39$ - digit number $2^{127}-1$
 
Fred Cole, IIRC.
 
And probably the most spectacular prime factorization by hand was that of $2^{67}-1$ , the sundays of three years were required !
 
Actually, he did a factorization of a large Mersenne number by hand in the early 20th century.
Yeah, that's the one I was thinking about.
Sorry. Frank Cole.
80
A: What's the famous story about a mathematician who gave a talk without saying a word?

ConifoldYou are most likely referring to the 1903 presentation by American mathematician Frank Cole. The original false conjecture was that the 67-th Mersenne number $M_{67}:=2^{67}-1$ is prime, and it goes back to the preface to Mersenne's own Cogitata Physica-Mathematica (1644). However, Cole was alrea...

 
Ok help me out here, from reading wikipedia i think I should take mod 17 of every term of the sequence. Would that work>
?
 
12:52 PM
what does the fox say
 
If I do 333333331 mod 17 I get 0. I assume this means that it's not prime as it has a divisor other than 1 and itself.
so taking mod 17 of the 8th term.
 
The question you linked earlier says "every 15th number is divisible by 31". That might be easier to prove, and to work with.
 
I heard from a stroy (can anyone say whether it is true or not ?) where a student checked the primality of the rep-units (again) and discovered a probable prime (not discovered before!) that turned out to be prime , namely $R_{317}$.
 
What i'm thinking about is how I would do a question like this in an exam setting.
I wouldn't know facts like that.
 
1:09 PM
@Ajay If you got a question like that in an exam it would be expected that you've been taught Fermat's little theorem & Euler's theorem.
 
I disagree. This was the quesiton that appeared on my test.
I recently had a unit test on proofs, sequences and series and binomial theorem.
SO i'm curious as to how one would do this without uni math.
 
If you want to explore this stuff, start with something a bit simpler. It can be shown that if n has no factors of 2 or 5 then the decimal of 1/n is purely periodic. That is, it doesn't have an initial non-periodic part. And by the pigeon-hole principle, the length of the period must be less than n. If n is prime, then the period divides n-1.
Eg, 1/13 = 0.076923076923... and 1/7 = 0.142857142857... So 7 and 13 must divide 999999
 
Where does 999999 come from?
I see what you mean by the decimals being periodic, but I don't understand what you mean in the last 2 sentences.
 
1:27 PM
The length of the period of 1/7 is 6. 1000000×1/7 - 1/7 = 142857. So (1000000-1)/7 = 142857
If you do long division of 1/7, there are 6 possible remainders. Zero can't be a remainder, because that would give a terminating decimal. And as soon as we get a remainder that we got earlier, then the cycle of quotient digits repeats.
For a purely periodic reciprocal, the first remainder that repeats is 1. Play with some small examples on paper.
 
1:52 PM
Always find it a bit irritating when an answer is accepted and then unaccepted later without and explanation or obvious reason.
 
Sometimes that happens because the OP doesn't realise they can only accept one answer.
What's even more irritating is when they get 3 or 4 decent answers, but instead of accepting one of them they write their own answer that badly mashes together the separate answers in a way that demonstrates that they don't really understand those answers. And then they accept their own answer.
 
2:20 PM
@PM2Ring This is called "rep-hunting". Self-answers are very rarely the proper way , only if the author has made progress making further efforts obsolete.
 
2:34 PM
I don't mind self-answers if the OP has done a good job of summarising / synthesising the other answers. Or if it's a question & answer pair specifically created as a canonical question. But otherwise, self-answers tend to be very low quality, and pure rep-hunting, which rightly attract copious downvotes.
 
@PM2Ring Oh I see, so the length of the period is how you got 999999.
It even works for 1/14
Sorry, it works for 888888
1/21 works too
 
If it is understandable that is fine, but just unaccepting without comment and doing nothing else is irritating
 
I think it works something like this: Since 1/14 = 0.07142857142 has a length of 6, we can do a 6 digit value, but since there is a zero beforehand, we go down by 1, so instead of 999999, we do 888888.
idk if that logic even makes sense but it seems to work somehow.
24 works for 888888 too.
 
2:53 PM
@Ajay 1/14 = (5/7)/10, and that 10 gives us the leading zero. Similarly, 1/6 = (5/3)/10 and 1/6 = 0.1666...
 
Please would someone let me know why the following was downvoted?
-1
Q: Understanding $\mathcal V(I)$, $\mathcal I(X)$, and their relationship to each other.

ShaunThe Details: Since definitions vary: A topological space $(X,\tau)$ is a set $\tau$ of subsets of $X$, called closed subsets, such that $\varnothing, X\in\tau$, The intersection $$\bigcap_{i\in I}X_i$$ of any closed subsets $(X_i)_{i\in I}$ is closed, where $I$ is arbitrary, and The union of fi...

 
@Shaun Only the downvoter knows.
 
Thank you, @XanderHenderson.
 
As a general matter of style, it takes you a long time to get to the question. I would typically put the question right up at the top, and then explain the details.
 
I'm sure some votes are accidental. It's very easy to do on a phone, especially when scrolling one-handed.
A few months ago, when I finished reading a good answer, I scrolled up to upvote it and was horrified to see that I'd already downvoted. Luckily, I was able to reverse it in time. And now I try to be more careful while scrolling.
 
3:10 PM
While I think that the case @PM2Ring describes is a bit of an unusual edge case, I'll amend my previous statement:
If anyone knows, only the downvoter knows.
 
$\mathcal V(I)$ is usually called the variety associated to $I$. The game is to go back and forth between algebra (polynomial ideals) and geometry (subvarieties of $k^n$).
 
3:35 PM
i think there should be varieties of downvotes: the 'i'm having a bad day' downvote, the 'you annoyed me so i am getting back at you' downvote, the 'there's something wrong with the answer' downvote, etc. that would be so much better.
 
@copper A variety of downvotes? Far from a radical ideal.
 
:-)
 
I wish the system made it impossible for you to leave a comment if you downvote, and vice versa. Then people would be more likely to leave comments on downvoted posts, since the OP would know that the commenter wasn't the downvoter, so the OP wouldn't have a reason to revenge-downvote them.
 
3:59 PM
PM2 I rarely downvote, but when I do it’s because OP is totally unresponsive to my comments.
2
 
i rarely downvote, but when i do it's usually old posts by ted shifrin, in retaliation for something unrelated or imagined that took place on this chat
 
I don't downvote much on Math.SE. I'm fairly ruthless downvoting bad answers on Physics.SE.
On Physics.SE we get answers by people attempting to promote crackpot theories, usually their own pet theory, but not always.
We don't seem to get many cranks on Math.SE. Sure, there's the occasional person who's baffled by stuff related to limits, and can't accept derivatives or 1 = 0.999... But we don't get many people with purported proofs of classic things like squaring the circle or duplicating the cube.
 
yes, and the cranks that do appear tend to be obsessed with very individual, specific things, and not 'famous' problems or anything that would attract a lot of casual attention
 
4:14 PM
@PM2Ring There are a lot of "proofs" of the Collatz conjecture. And the occasional "proof" of the Riemann hypothesis.
 
Ah, ok. I guess I've seen a few attempts on Collatz. And a couple on the Riemann, before they get deleted.
 
oh yeah, collatz. i'm surprised it gets as much attention as it does.
 
i was so exhausted this morning i nearly Collatz
 
Compared to the Riemann hypothesis, it's pretty easy to understand the Collatz conjecture. And if you know a little number theory you might be hopeful that you can stumble across a proof. But the fact that experts haven't made much progress on it should be a clue...
 
it doesn't seem that amenable to playing with symbolic formulas, which is what a lot of people seem to like. that's what surprises me.
although i guess on the other hand, it is fairly easy to experiment with after 5 seconds of learning any programming language.
 
4:24 PM
@PM2Ring This is true of many things in number theory: it is relatively easy to state the conjecture, and devilishly difficult to provide a proof.
Fermat's last theorem falls into that category, as does the twin prime conjecture, and Goldbach's conjecture.
 
At least with twin primes & Goldbach's there are various avenues of attack that people have tried. With Collatz, it's much harder, due to the problem Leslie mentioned.
FWIW, a decade or so ago I constructed a pattern in Conway's Game of Life that produces Collatz sequences in binary, using streams of gliders for the bit strings. :)
 
5:10 PM
@copper.hat smack
@Shaun Did you see what I wrote to you?
 
it means i have arrived when i get a smack from Ted
 
Indeed!
 
@Shaun looks like you got a fan
 
5:26 PM
shaun has made a powerful enemy
 
who dat?
 
whoever's downvoting shaun's stuff. didn't he have some the other day too?
 
shaun of the dead
 
Ok so coming back to what I was writing previously, $(\ker T)^\perp = \overline{T^*(Y^*)}^{w^*}$ and so $((\ker T)^\perp)^\perp = (T^*(Y^*))^\perp = \ker T^{*}$ and the image being finite dimensional is not necessary for this to hold (this is because $Z^\perp = (\overline{Z}^{w^})^\perp$)
I'm not even sure why it doesn't render. Perhaps overload of asterisks
 
f(x) = 0.5x^3 - 5

Now if you imagine x^3, you need to first stretch and only then shift downwards, right?

or else it will be 0,5(x³ -5)

But you could also "first shift" by making the coordinate origin (0, -5), then from there go left and right and imagine a new coordinate system where thats the origin
in that case, you would first shift, right?
Why are you allowed to do that?
 
5:31 PM
anyway. What matters is that finite-dimensionality of the image doesn't add anything
 
@ILikeMathematics Yes, although I would not say "stretch" when the factor has absolute value less than $1$. But you're right. Shift down afterwards.
 
@TedShifrin But you could also first shift and only then stretch by making the new origin (0, -5), right?
Treat (0, -5) as the new origin and go left and right from there to plot the graph
 
jakobian: here's an overload of asterisks:
 
but why
I've thought about if triple duals etc. have a purpose but I figured out they don't. Why consider them?
 
i dunno, ask sakai
 
5:46 PM
It's very difficult to find hard copy of Dummit and Foote's algebra book.
It's available online at amount equivalent to about 220 USD.
 
you can always read something different
 
koro i'm seeing a number of used copies on bookfinder.com in the $30-50 US range. it looks like some are duplicate listings of the same book through multiple sellers, and i dunno about shipping or the reliability of any individual seller. i've had some luck with bookfinder before.
i'm generally surprised though, it does looks like most used copies are... not priced like used books.
 
6:14 PM
Leslie, I'm not sure what happened to the prices in last few months.
It was about 8$ few months back!!
 
inflation probably heh
 
I'm sure I'll get the book at reasonable price in Delhi.
But it's too far from my location.
anyways, I don't understand the importance of Monotone class theorem.
 
It's important because measure theory has this dumb thing to itself, that you can't prove obvious things unless you use something like monotone class theorem
 
I suppose you are referring to proving the uniqueness of extension of a measure from semi algebra S to sigma algebra generated by S.
If yes, then that's what caused me this confusion. I'll explain:-
 
No, I'm referring to everything in measure theory
The situation doesn't appear just once, it will keep on repeating itself. And you'll have to use the theorem again and again if you want to be theoretically correct
or some equivalent to it
 
6:25 PM
Suppose that we have a set X, semi algebra S on X and a measure $\mu$ on S. Then, 1) $\mu$ is extended naturally to A(S) (the algebra generated by S).
2) To extend $\mu$ to F(A(S)) (the sigma algebra generated by S), we do the following steps:
2a) Define outer-measure $\mu^*$ on P(X), 2b) Define M:=the set of all measurable sets, 2c) Show that M is a sigma algebra, 2d) Show that restriction of $\mu^{*}$ to M is actually a measure.
3) The restriction of measure obtained in 2c) to F(A(S)) turns out to be an extension of $\mu$.
I want to ask: why is monotone class theorem required at all here? 4) can be proven without it.
 
i wouldn't say it's "required," it's a technical tool that people like using because it is applicable frequently enough that it saves time in the long run to use it instead of ad hoc approaches
it unifies a lot of annoying technical details into one annoying technical detail
 
Leslie, I asked this question because in my class the teacher said seemed to imply that "it's very very difficult to prove 4) without knowing Monotone class theorem."
 
i would just ignore that
all of that stuff was known before halmos (or whoever the MCT guy was), the foundational papers don't use it or other machinery and often have accessible proofs
 
@TedShifrin Yes, and thank you :)
 
but the early papers tend to be kinda ad hoc
 
6:32 PM
@leslietownes thanks a lot :-).
 
i think there's at least one modern measure theory book that doesn't introduce the notion of monotone classes but i don't remember which one
 
Folland.
 
Folland isn't really a measure theory book, is it?
 
Folland's book proves 4) without using Monotone class theorem.
 
Unless Folland made a book about measure theory that I don't know
 
6:34 PM
i don't think of folland's real analysis book as a measure theory book but i guess it counts for purposes of my above observation
it does include abstract measure theory to the point where you might want to use monotone classes, and then doesn't use them
 
But then there is a theorem (2.36 if I recall correctly) in the book that does use monotone class theorem, which is introduced right before the theorem.
 
oh, how dare he
 
@Jakobian Real analysis modern techniques and their applications
 
For me measure theory is really hard. But I don't know any good books for it that I could learn from. Only this one comes to mind link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-540-34514-5
I heard it's more of a reference than a book for reading. But I had success with those type of books the most, I suppose
 
i never had to learn or teach from it, but i liked terence tao's book when i looked at it
generally though diving too deep into measure theory is a waste of time, it's just tons of annoying little tricks and constructions that are only useful in measure theory
read the hypotheses and the theorems but not the proofs
 
6:43 PM
well, I would like to eventually at least understand what geometric measure theory is about
 
no you wouldn't
 
Dieudonné?
 
6:49 PM
Well, right now I'm not going to change the books I'm reading. Banach spaces are fun and I don't intend on changing, for now
 
7:31 PM
How do I show that $|\sin z| \le |z\cos z|$ for $z=x+iy$ such that $\max(|x|,|y|) = n\pi$, with $n>0$ an integer?
 
8:08 PM
@Astyx Yuck. Where did this come from?
 
when it's |x| that's n pi, doesn't it pop out of the addition formulas? (i don't see this helping if it's |y| that's n pi)
 
@TedShifrin step to prove that all fixed points of $\tan z$ are real using Rouché's theorem
 
maybe pop out is too strong a word, but i get sin(z) = (-1)^n i sinh(y) and cos(z) = (-1)^n i cosh(y), and the quotient is tanh(y), and |tanh(y)| <= |y| from the power series for tan being alternating with decreasing positive coefficients, so |tan(z)| <= |y| <= |z|
 
Isn't it easier than that, leslie? Don't we just know that $|\sinh y|\le \cosh y$ regardless of the $|z|$?
 
that's not using that n is nonzero, where just |tanh(y)| <= 1 (from sech^2 + tanh^2 = 1) would be enough
 
8:16 PM
Yeah I was hoping there was an easy way of seeing that
 
right, the hard case is when |z| is small but nonzero and that's ruled out by n being nonzero
 
Oh, right. When $|z|$ is small, I'm an idiot.
But, yeah, that's immediate. But it's a total mess with $y$ controlled.
@Astyx Why does one think to use Rouché for that?
 
No clue
but it works
I'm guessing one rather thinks what they could use Rouché on
 
I don't see it.
 
You don't see how to use it or how to think to use it?
 
8:23 PM
I don't see how to use it.
 
Rouché tells you $\tan z -z$ have the same values of zeroes - poles as z in the square $\max(|x|,|y|) = n\pi$
There are precisely 2n poles for $\tan z -z$ in there, and 2n+1 real zeroes
since z only have one zero and no pole, you see that these are all the zeroes
QED
 
Ah, provided you can get the estimate on the boundary — which we can't.
 
Yep
 
8:38 PM
Apparently it's not even close for $y$ fixed
 
@ILikeMathematics That doesn’t work. You have to shift down by 10 and then rescale by .5. Shifting and rescaling do not commute.
@Astyx i find that quite credible.
 
8:59 PM
Hey everyone!
 
Hi Demonark
 
How are you doing?
 
9:17 PM
Hey Amin
 
How's it going Astyx
 
good good
hby?
 
Doing alright, bit sick unfortunately
But so it goes. Thanks
 
I was sick this weekend
common cold probably
it wasn't fun
 
9:34 PM
Yeah never a good time
 

« first day (4438 days earlier)      last day (575 days later) »