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00:24
Hi, I am trying to understand this part of the following proof: $m(A_n)^{1/p}\leq C m(A_n)^{1/q}$. But I cannot follow it. Can you explain me that part?
71
A: $L^p$ and $L^q$ space inclusion

Davide GiraudoIn Rudin's book Real an complex analysis, we can find the following result, shown by Alfonso Villani: Let $(X,\mathcal B,m)$ be a $\sigma$-finite measure space, where $m$ is a non-negative measure. Then the following conditions are equivalent: We have $L^p(X,\mathcal B,m)\supset L^q(X...

If this it is true for $f=1_{A_n}$ then is it also true for $f$?
 
3 hours later…
03:07
Answering machine message at a mathematics department : "The number you have dialed is imaginary, please rotate the keypad 90 degrees and try again."
03:28
@ioch nope. Only snakes.
@Xander I saw a snake walking down the street earlier this afternoon. And a toucan — I think — driving by in a car.
Watch out he's a diamond back supporter
Well, these days neither state is high on my personal list, but Texas is down at the bottom with FL.
i programmed my outside light's brightness to ramp up & down to add some Halloween flavour
🎃🎃🎃
03:39
Does it moan, too, copper?
🎇🎆🎇🎆
unfortunately no, just myself
Well, we knew that.
at some point i wanted to have a gas power flame sort of thing outside but the regulatory issues were too much
think ring of fire
👻☠️👻☠️
03:41
for reasons unknown, our porch is currently infested with mosquitoes, never seen this density before
It’s the imaginary climate change.
just rotate right and it will all be real
Johnny Cash did a good ring of fire
for some reason i thought he served time in san quentin, but he didn't, he just played there
03:46
i'm off looking for psqs...
and trying to figure out how to work ansatz into a sentence
They're great for creating chatrooms if the OP is a willing leaner
Make sure you capitalize. You know … noun in German.
For those unable to afford online tutoring
i will capitalise appropriately...
would that make you an opportunistic capitalist 🤔
04:00
a catalytic capitaliser
Suppose $G$ is a finite abelian group and $p|o(G),$ where $p$ is a prime number. Then there is an element $a\neq e\in G$ such that $a^p=e.$------- This is what the Cauchy's Theorem for Abelian Groups say. My question is, does it also gurantee somehow, that $a^m\neq e(,m\in\Bbb Z)$ when $m\lt p$ ?
You know enough to answer that.
@ThomasFinley Have you heard of Bezout's Identity?
@robjohn yes.
@TedShifrin ha ha, the point is I last worked with group theory one year and 6 months ago, and while doing ring theory, I needed this theorem, so I am in need of clarifications here.
No excuses. Figure it out.
If you think you belong doing research, stop asking us for help and work on it.
This is completely elementary.
04:13
@ThomasFinley If $m\lt p$, what can you say about $m$ and $p$?
@robjohn We can say that $gcd(m,p)=1.$
04:25
@TedShifrin Maybe I have figured it: No, $a^m=e$ when $m\lt p$ and $a\neq e$ can never be true if $a^p=e.$ This is because, say $a^p=e$ and $\exists m\lt p$ such that $a^m=p$ then, $o(a)\lt p$. We call $o(a)=m'\lt p$ and note that, $a^b=e$ for some integer $$ iff $m'|b$ which means that, $m'|p$ as, $a^p=e$ which further implies that, $m'=1$ and so, $a^{m'}=a^1=e=a,$ a contradiction because $a\neq e$ by assumption. ------ This ends the argument. @robjohn Is it correct?
Oh, I made a typo. That should be $a^m=e$
04:41
@ThomasFinley you can edit your comments for a few mins after entering them.
@ThomasFinley If $a^m=e$ and $a^p=e$, where $p$ is prime and $m\lt p$, what is also true?
@copper.hat I checked it, but the time was over :/
@robjohn I didnot get what you are saying. Are you saying that my argument has a flaw?
@robjohn Here is a repost of my argument with the typo fixed: $a^m=e$ when $m\lt p$ and $a\neq e$ can never be true if $a^p=e.$ This is because, say $a^p=e$ and $\exists m\lt p$ such that $a^m=p$ then, $o(a)\lt p$. We call $o(a)=m'\lt p$ and note that, $a^b=e$ for some integer $b$ iff $m'|b$ which means that, $m'|p$ as, $a^p=e$ which further implies that, $m'=1$ and so, $a^{m'}=a^1=e=a,$ a contradiction because $a\neq e$ by assumption.
05:06
You say that $a^b=e$ iff $m'\vert b$. Why?
@robjohn This is because of the theorem: "Let G be a group, and let g ∈ G have order m. Then $g^n = e$ if and only if m divides n."
1 hour ago, by Ted Shifrin
If you think you belong doing research, stop asking us for help and work on it.
@user726941 If you think, you understand what I am saying then stop posting things in here that is irrelevant at the moment and work on understanding the conversation.
TedShifrin said it to me, when I was asking for the clarifications. Presently, as things went, I solved the problem and now, robjohn inquires something about my approach, to which I am replying now.
So the message you posted here becomes totally irrelevant, out of context and weird.
05:22
The basic thing I was trying to get to was to say that if $a^m=e$ and $a^p=e$ was that since $(m,p)=1$, we have $x,y\in\mathbb{Z}$ so that $xm+yp=1$. This means that $e=(a^m)^x(a^p)^y=a^1$
@robjohn Ah, that's a simpler approach.
1 hour ago, by robjohn
@ThomasFinley Have you heard of Bezout's Identity?
Very important^
and basic
:-)
@user726941 yeah, but as I did, this can be verified using Bezout's identity as well ;)
I've used Bernoulli and Bezout to prove many things.
@robjohn Bernoulli's inequality?
05:29
$(1+x)^m\ge1+mx$ where $m\ge1$ or $m\le0$
it is reversed if $0\le m\le1$
If it's the inequality, then I can agree with you as well. They both are really handy tools.
@robjohn oh, yeah I agree.
0
Q: A tight positivity conjecture about sums over divisors of square-free integers.

TheGhostOfGaussPossessesMeLet $p_n$ be the $n$th prime number and all variables, unless otherwise specified, are natural numbers. Conjecture: For all fixed $k \geq 0$ and square-free $n \gt k$, the following function evaluates to a positive integer: $$F(n) = \sum_{d \mid n} \mu(d) \sum_{a^2 = 1\mod d, \ \\ 0 \leq a \lt d...

Hi, @Koro @shintuku
This is a conjecture of mine I just discovered using some code verification
You can change the inner group and also the numerator to different things for different problems
But the sum's always got to be over square-free ints
@LukasHeger I started the chapter on complex integration, will ping you soon. I should pay you for last time at least since you did take some time to create problems
I don't like those problems though. Let's start out next on the integral theorems etc.
The meat of $\Bbb{C}$ analysis
06:03
I find Munkres manifolds text to be very chatty.
So much verbose
this text, is it talking to you right now?
Lot of statements in the book seem to be bloated with verbose to the point that the presentation becomes sleep inducing.
06:27
@Koro pretty soon you'll get into cohomology, that's exciting!
06:43
K made some edits, the conjecture is starting to make more sense. No tight constant present
$$F(n,m) = \sum_{d \mid n} \mu(d) \sum_{a^2 = 1\mod d, \ \\ 0 \leq a \lt d}\left\lfloor\frac{m-a}{d} \right\rfloor$$ always positive!
It's the texts that talk to me after I close the book that worry me @leslietownes
or that creep into my dreams...
If you could only remember them lol
psychologists say that memory is the residue of thought
Hopefully they're residues modulo a large prime number so that you have inverses
They justify memorization by saying that if you don't remember it you haven't thought about it enough
07:01
$क^2+ख^2+2.क.ख=(क+ख)^2$ :-)
Looks like a perfect square trinomial to me
I thought latex won't render it but it does.
$$क^2 - ख^2 = (क +ख)(क - ख)$$
:)
Let $फ :म \to \mathbb र$ be a map. (goes well with \mathbb too)
@ioch it means those equations are circular will tell you nothing that you don’t already know about the diagram, because that’s not how they’re meant to be solved
07:15
Or you could've made an algebraic mistake setting them up
Or that, depends on the problem. We can’t give a meaningful answer without seeing it
Exactly
If you want to hand-wave go to the physics chatroom please
Or be a cheerleader
Or that^
07:32
> The opposite of hand-waving in mathematics (and related fields) is sometimes called nose-following, which refers to the unimaginative development of a narrow line of reasoning that—while correct—can also end up making the subject dry and uninteresting.
07:48
@Koro 2.क.ख is the extra energy
08:33
@TheGhostOfGaussPossessesMe thanks for the feedback. How do you want us to proceed? Should I do exercises on complex integration? If yes, do you want more computational exercises or more proofs? I'm also fine with just answering questions, if you prefer that
Let's work with questions at first, then we'll see what exercises @LukasHeger
and proofs too
So no need to create anything yet
Just wait! I want to read a little into the integration parts
@Shaun thanks for the alignment of my equations :)
@Peter did you see my comment in some post about the $X^2 + 1 \in \Bbb{P}$ i.o. problem?
The comment is in contradiction with the answer given
So is that problem solved or ...?
I think most think that it's unsolved, I do too
08:48
I wanted to look up the latest status in wikipedia , but aborted because of an annoying donation appeal. The last time I looked up Bunyakovsky conjecture , the claim was that no poylnomial with degree 2 or more has been solved. No idea why the paper claims otherwise.
The iceland mathematician made an astonishing discovery but it does not cover the claimed proof , as I mentioned.
😎
@Peter have you seen this yet (mine): math.stackexchange.com/questions/4798144/…
It relates to twin primes, but I failed to mention that because of bad rap
It actually relates to many problems, many problems have counting functions of this form
Not yet carefully read. The expression is complicated.
Yes it is. But also it's quite simple! :> Simple but very hard to deal with
You can use other groups of units modulo the $d$
those would be for other problems. The $a^2 = 1$ group is for twin primes
cosets of the group is for $2k$-separated primes for $k \geq 1$
They touch on such functions in sieve theory but never attack them directly / with arithmetic functionology
As we know sieve theory suffers from "parity problem" and even Zhang noted his approach can't quite reach twin primes, i.e. has the theoretical limit of $k = 3$
I want to use multiplicativity, but it seems hopeless heere
Maybe , it is worth mentioning that the twin prime conjecture is open , but the not much easier claim that infinite many prime gaps do not exceed 246 , is proven ! For me, absolutely baffling.
Yes, it is!
Very strange
09:04
Similar baffling that the weak Goldbach conjecture is proven , but the strong still open. What makes the strong conjecture so more difficult than the weak conjecture ?
Ikr. And why can't they find some reasoning on top of those results that finishes it u
up
Certainly a proof could gain a lot of footing if that were possible
Ikr ? I know some chat-abbreviations , but not this.
I know, right
It's the primes. They're maddening 😆
And that we do not know whether there are infinite many NON-Wieferich primes is the weirdest I ever heard.
You have unique factorization multiplicatively, but when you add those generators, essentially change the operation, we can't figure out the problems
Terry Tao will prove these problems one day :)
09:10
The one with the famous arithmetic-progression-proof ? In fact , he is a candidate to solve this , if it is even feasible.
Yes he's worked on several of those arithmetic progression problems
He met Erdos as a kid
His book "Additive Combinatorics" is pretty awesome
Erdoes was a truely fascinating mathematician. Many beatiful conjectures , some solved.
Erdos invented the probablistic method
It's like probablistic vs deterministic algorithms. Sometimes probablistic algorithms are just easier to code for certain problems or out perform their deterministic counterparts
It is also a very useful tool to estimate the expected number of primes one finds in some project or to predict how many prime factors will be in a particular range if one tries to factor numbers.
09:28
@Koro $\unicode{x0915}^2+\unicode{x0916}^2+2\cdot\unicode{x0915}\cdot\unicode{x0916}=(\unicode{x0915}+\unicode{x0916})^2$
10:01
@robjohn cool :-), how did you create/find the codes?
found it :)
10:24
math gurus: if an integrand have singularity (or not defined) at a point, say x0. Does this mean the antiderivative will also have singularity or not be defined at same point? I can't find counter example. For example integral of 1/x is ln(x) and both of these "blow" up at x=0. same for integral of 1/x^2. Same for integral 1/sin(x) and so on. Is this true in general?
$1/\sqrt{x}$
@Astyx thanks. Good counter example. So just because the integrand has singularity at one point, this does not mean the antiderivative will also. got it.
Glad to help
11:10
@Nasser this is the reason why Riemann integration sucks. You can only integrate bounded things
@Jakobian at school that is all what I learned :) I am not math major.
11:44
@Nasser $\log(x)$ blows up at $x=0$, but the integral $x\log(x)-x$ does not.
$x^{-a}$ for $0\lt a\lt1$ blows up at $x=0$, but $\frac1{1-a}x^{1-a}$ does not.
@robjohn but x*ln(x) is not defined at x=0 ?
the integral is $0$ as is the limit
blowing up at $0$ has nothing to do with the value at $0$.
@TheGhostOfGaussPossessesMe No worries :)
12:07
@Koro that's a nice identity using variables from Hindi language. Long back my primary education was in Hindi, but I never saw any variable names in Hindi. In particular polynomials were always in variable $x$.
Mad
Mad
12:21
"A topological manifold of dimension n is a nonempty Hausdorff space M satisfying the second axiom of countability axiom, such that any
point p ∈ M admits an open neighborhood U and a homeomorphism ϕ : U → V
to an open subset V ⊂ R
n. We call (U, ϕ) a chart of M."
Does the part of "Such that, ... " follow from the previous attributes,or is it part of the definition?
@ParamanandSingh Hi. Do you know about SL Loney's trigonometry book? At my school library long ago, I found the book in hindi. There I learned that स्पर्शज्या (अ)= ज्या(अ)/कोज्या(अ)
And numbers 1,2,3,... were also written in hindi.
I couldn't find any x, y etc. in the book.
in hindi books also, there write sin x, cos x etc. but in that book everything was in hindi.
Mad
Mad
Apparently it does not follow, this is a different requirement.
@Mad it's a part of the definition.
Also, your definition as written is wrong.
Mad
Mad
@Koro how come?
you should say clearly where V lies.
Mad
Mad
12:33
R^n?
exactly.
Mad
Mad
its just copy paste error.
for every p, there is an open set U in M and an open set V in R^n such that...
@ParamanandSingh I vaguely remember that very old Maths books from author Dr. Harswaroop Sharma were completely in hindi.
I also want to learn topological terminologies in hindi but I couldn't find any topology book in hindi. I know it exists because I saw one mathematics question paper in which translation of 'compact set, closed set' etc. was written. This means there are some people who write that exam in hindi.
sadly, I don't remember the name of the exam.
 
2 hours later…
14:23
I have that $u_m\in H^1(U)$, $||u_m||_{L^2(B_1)}=1$ and $||\nabla u_m||_{L^2(B_1)}\to0$. The books says that there exists a constant $u_0\in H^1(B_1)$ such that $u_m\rightharpoonup u_0$ in $H^1(B_1)$ and $u_m\to u_0$ in $L^2(B_1)$. But I am only getting subsequence. Can you please check my ideas?
First, the sequence is bounded in $H^1$ so it has a weakly convergent subsequence in $H^1$. Now Rellich Kondrashov says that this subsequence has another subsequence which converges in $L^2$ (it'll converge to the same function). Now using the definition of weak derivative we get that weak derivative of the limit function is $0$ which means the limit is constant everywhere.
15:12
How can I show that if $B$ is open then $B\cap\overline{A}\subset \overline{B\cap A}$? I've seen this proof: https://math.stackexchange.com/a/3027499/967766 but I don't think it's correct since $s$ isn't arbitrary. I've tried the following:

Let $x\in B\cap\overline{A}$. Then since $x\in\overline{A}$, we have that $\forall r>0 \ B(x;r)\cap A\neq\varnothing$. But $x\in B$ also so $B(x;r)\cap A\cap B\neq \varnothing$. Since $r$ was arbitrary, $x\in\overline{A\cap B}$.

But I suppose it's wrong since I didn't use that $B$ was open.
Edit: I can understand the proof using just open sets but I can't figure out how it works using balls in $\mathbb{R}^n$
You know that $B(x,r)\cap A\neq\varnothing$ since $x\in \overline{A}$, and you know that $B(x,r)\cap B\neq\varnothing$, since $x\in B$, but how are you jumping to $B(x,r)\cap A\cap B\neq\varnothing$?
@AlessandroCodenotti Oh okay. For some reason I thought that the intersection should have contained the center but that's clearly not true. Thank you.
15:52
I'm reading a soft introduction to complex analysis and I have a basic question. What does it mean for a (line) integral to be "locally independent of the path"? In particular, what does the word "locally" mean in this context?
16:17
I still can't figure out why this proof works:

Let $x\in {\overline A}\cap B$. Since $B$ is open, we can chose $r > 0$ such that $B_{r}(x)\subset B$. For some $0 < s < r$ we still have $B_s(x)\cap B\neq\emptyset$ and since $x\in\overline A$, then $B_s(x)\cap A\neq\emptyset$. Thus $B_s(x)\cap(A\cap B)\neq\emptyset$.

We have just shown $x\in \overline{A \cap B}.$

What happens if $s\geq r$? Couldn't the intersection be empty then? I'd really appreciate some help.
@sunny it means that the line integral over two homotopic paths is the same
that's what they mean at least
7
Q: If $0<A\le x_n\le B~~ (\forall n)$, and $\lim_{n\to\infty}\sqrt[n]{x_1x_2\cdots x_n}=A$. Prove $\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{x_1+x_2+\cdots+x_n}{n}=A.$

mengdie1982Problem Assume $ 0<A \le x_n\le B~~ (\forall n)$, and $\displaystyle \lim_{n \to \infty}\sqrt[n]{x_1x_2\cdots x_n}=A$. Prove $\displaystyle\lim_{n \to \infty}\frac{x_1+x_2+\cdots+x_n}{n}=A.$ Is it true or not ? Probably it holds, but seems to be difficult to prove. If we consider using the squee...

16:48
@sunny Locally means locally: If you wiggle the path a little bit, the integral won't change. But consider, for example, integrating $\int dz/z$. If you change your path from $A$ to $B$ so that now it winds an extra time around the origin, the integral will change.
hi, what are some techniques to prove that a space (of function) is closed?
makes sense 🤸‍♂️
@Sine Too broad a question. Take a convergent sequence?
I'm struggling to prove that $V=\{f\in L^2 | \, xf \in L^2 \}$ with the norm $\|f \|^2=\int (1+x^2)|f|^2 $ is a Banach space
the integral is over $\Bbb R$
17:03
If $f_n\in L^2$ and $f_n\to f$ in $L^2$, then we know $f\in L^2$. Note that convergence in your norm implies convergence in the $L^2$ norm.
but should't I take $f_n \in V$?
Of course, you take $f_n\in V$.
I need to leave now. Good luck :)
Ok, I'll wait for your help :)
@SineoftheTime I thought you did that already
I didn't manage to solve it
17:11
I think you want to follow Ted's advice. Given a Cauchy sequence $f_n$ in $V$, take limit of $f_n$ in $L^2$, call it $f$. Then show $\|f_n-f\|\to 0$
This is the "obvious" candidate for the limit
Ok, I'm trying to do it. I'll let you know
you also have some limit $g$ of $xf_n$ (in $L^2$), might be good thing to consider
We then show that $g = xf$ or something
Yeah I'll let you do this one
17:27
@Jakobian can you check if my proof is correct? It'll take my some time to write it
sure
$f=\lim_{n\to \infty}f_n$ in $L^2$ and $g=\lim_{n\to \infty} xf_n=xf$. That means $\|f-f_n \|_2<\epsilon_1$ and $\| xf_n-xf\|_2<\epsilon_2$. Now $\|f-f_n \|_V=(\int |f-f_n|^2 +x^2|f-f_n|^2 )^{1/2}\le \|f-f_n \|_2+\|xf-xf_n \|_2<\epsilon_1+\epsilon_2$
Justify that $g = xf$
$\lim_{n\to \infty} xf_n=x\lim_{n\to \infty}f_n=xf$ (?)
The limit is in $L^2$. What makes you think you can just take $x$ out of the limit
17:37
oh right, I'm dealing with convergence in norm
So I should prove that there's also pointwise convergence?
There will be no pointwise convergence
we're not even dealing with functions, but equivalence classes of them
you're right
however, you can use that there is a subsequence which almost surely converges
what do you mean by almost surely
This will mean there is a subsequence $n_k$ such that $f_{n_k}\to f$ and $xf_{n_k}\to g$ almost surely
well, I'm usually just saying almost surely, its just from probability
almost everywhere
17:43
ah ok
hence $xf=g$ almost surely (?)
anyway, you can see this means that $xf = g$ almost everywhere, that is as equivalence classes
$xf = g$ in $L^2$ lets say
ok
the final part of the proof is right?
Did you know that lemma we used about existence of subsequence which converges almost surely?
@SineoftheTime well its certainly not written like an analysis proof
What are epsilons, what are $n$
I know what you're trying to do but you're not doing it right
I'd really wouldn't even bother
We've proven $f\in V$ already so we might write $\|f-f_n\|_V \leq \|f-f_n\|_2 + \|xf-xf_n\|_2\to 0$
just arrow that it converges to $0$
17:48
So the epsilon are not important
You can do without them, yes
ok makes sense
X4J
X4J
I saw this question:
Suppose $T: \mathbb{R}^{n} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^{n}$ is a linear transformation with $0 < dimKer(T)$.
Is it possible that there exists $u_1, u_2 \in \mathbb{R}^{n}$ s.t $u_1$ is the only vector that satisfies $T(u_1) = u_2$ ?

Trying to answer this, my only intuition was that if by the way of contradiction the argument is true then $(T(e_1), \dots, T(e_n))$ are independent since otherwise we would have two different representations in respect of $(e_1, \dots, e_n)$ for $u_2$ and so for $u_1$ and that would imply that there are two vectors that satisfy this, which is a
18:05
@X4J if $T(x) = u$ has solutions in $x$, then fixing one such solution say $u_0$, gives us that the set of al solutions is $u_0+\text{ker}(T)$
this of course means, there will always be more than two
X4J
X4J
18:22
@Jakobian This is very obvious when you represent it as solutions to an equation, thanks. Thing is, I am not sure if the intuition\idea I described above is actually true (this is also a different perspective than the one you represent I guess)
18:36
The thing with intution is that its yours and not mine
19:03
@X4J I didn't read your whole argument. It seems so convoluted and complicated. Just use the meaning of $\ker T$. If $u_1$ satisfies $Tu_1=u_2$, then so does $u_1+v$ for $v\in \ker T$. Also, a bit of advice. Do NOT use the same letter for elements of domain and range. That leads to confusion (for you and for the reader). Use $u$'s for elements of the domain and some other letter, say $z$, for an element of the range.
Yeah, see, when I look at your argument, you're using the same basis for domain and range. The argument should work for $T\colon\Bbb R^n\to\Bbb R^m$ with $m$ different from $n$ and then you'd have to take different bases for domain and range. It isn't about bases and representations of vectors with respect to bases. It's purely about the linear map $T$, which you are ignoring.
I don't see what your intuition is intuition about here, at all.
19:42
Alas! @TedShifrin, where is the Great Pumpkin/Great Gourd, with the mean face?
@amWhy robjohn had a wonderful Halloween nom-de-plume, but I haven't seen him today.
I missed my chance, yesterday. Looks like he was shaped like a pumpkin pie?
@copper.hat Can you explain yourself better please? Explain yourself with a practical example relating to goals. Anyway I saw your reply. I left you a comment because something isn't right. Thank you
X4J
X4J
20:01
@TedShifrin Thanks for tip. And yes, I probably didn't understand it and so my attempt to prove it is incorrect
20:26
No candy, no halloween for me.
21:24
Awww.
21:43
@冥王Hades Do Japanese do trick n' treating on Halloween? Couldn't you have participated, or was it all kids and you would have stood out?
22:03
@GratefulDisciple I could have participated but, like an old phone, I quickly run out of "social battery" as soon as I step outside my home
22:18
@冥王Hades Not even with a Hades costume? Wouldn't you feel more comfortable not having to be yourself?

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