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01:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

01:07
@TedShifrin
Howdy.
It seems I may have converted my integral equation into an integro-differential equation...... bad times
01:23
@KevinDriscoll Run. Don't look back.
Haha, that's my plan
I'm not positive yet though, need to do more calculating
01:50
@IanMateus Do you know about differential forms?
 
1 hour later…
03:15
@Peter: You rang?
@TedShifrin Yes!
=D
I have worked the properties of the exterior derivative already.
How was tennis? I play at 8 am, so only here briefly ....
Ok ....
@TedShifrin Good. I have changed from low pressure to full pressure balls and my "student" (??) is doing awesome. I am very happy.
Plus, I get to hit the ball harder and faster, which makes things less boring.
Heh!
Young kid?
@TedShifrin Nope, he's 50.
03:17
Oh ... I've always used regulation balls :)
@TedShifrin What is that?
Penn balls they use for matches ... No low pressure nonsense :)
@TedShifrin Oh, sure! But you must understand that low pressure balls are fantabolous for starters.
Specially in a fast surface.
That must have been invented long after I startedv:D
@TedShifrin Yes, sure.
I think the French started the "Play and Stay" wave.
And the "new wave" of teaching, the one I learned.
03:20
I like faster ... Then I can hit volley winners sometimes :)
@TedShifrin Heh, sure. Today I got to do some awesome shots and serves. Sent a cone flying =)
Ok, back to your question.
@TedShifrin I am facing the "Poincaré Lemma".
Yes ...
@TedShifrin Well, the proof is some humongous computation. What I am trying is to see how things work in small cases so to understand what is going on.
So I am trying to work out the case $\omega$ is a $1$-form $$=\sum_{i=1}^n\omega_i dx_i$$
03:22
The case for 1-forms is done explicitly in my book.
If I am not doing things incorrectly $$d\omega=\sum_{i<j} (D_i\omega_j-D_j\omega_i)dx_i\wedge dx_j$$
@TedShifrin Oh! Let me look.
Better to write $a_i$ for the coefficients so you don't get confused.
Oh wait ... By Poincaré lemma I thought you meant the converse. You mean $d^2=0$?
What fo you mean?
Do
@TedShifrin I mean that any closed form on a star shaped open set is exact.
Ok, good. We agree. And, yes, I do exactly that in section 8.3.
Apparently this has some higher analog when we have a "contractible manifold".
@TedShifrin OK. I was having a hard time finding it.
Do you know you can give "hyperlinked" indexes to pdfs?
03:26
Yes ... And I have the general case as an exercise in section 8.7, Inthink
@TedShifrin OK.
Yes, but this is only a .pdf for you. The LaTeX file was used by the publisher to make the book.
@TedShifrin Ah, OK. =) Sorry.
(Now I feel bad)
After I sent it, I discovered a bad page break :)
Have you found it?
The page in 8.3, I mean ....
@TedShifrin Can I show you my computations?
03:31
Proposition 3.3 in chap 8 ... It'll be torture to type and read at this hour. If you email it to me, I'll get back to you after tennis :)
@TedShifrin Wait, how is it near 8 a.m. there?
No, no, it's bedtime :)
OK. I'll TeX 'em up.
@TedShifrin Ah. OK. It is 12:30 here.
You're still young ... You don't need sleep :) I'm old and have had cancer and heart surgeries ... SomI do :D
I'll get back to you in the morning ...
@TedShifrin Sleep tight, Ted. I was just telling you what timezone I was in. =)
03:34
Yeah, you're east of me, but I never visualize it that way.
Night night :)
Really? 12:30 in Argentina? I thought it wouldve been the same as eastern time
guess you're more west of me than I imagined
@KevinDriscoll I'm in Buenos Aires which is basically coastline.
@skullpatrol Thank you. The GNs had their snipers ready to fire.
03:39
I had an arugment about grammar the other day
Who won?
It was kinda stupid
We both lost
I lost respect for them because I think its silly ot have a prejudice toward "correct English" when plenty of intelligent people grow up in the South or black communities speaking non-standard english
it doesn't affec the quality of their ideas, so its just a bad prejudice imo
Agreed.
He lost respect for me because I cant see the value in putting effort into how you say things and conforming to the established standard to make sure htat you are understood and as clear as possible
hmmm...
...yep, you both lost respect.
03:43
Hi all.
I understand though. I'm sure its statistically true that the people who regularly speak non-standard English dialects have a lower IQ than people who usually use standard english. I just don't think the difference is that large. And the actual ideas someone uses will tell you ll you need otr know about their intelligence. No need to treat their dialect as a proxy
I remember seeing some really nicely handwritten course notes a while back. The prof used different colors and drew nice pictures. I'm pretty sure they're known for being so nicely handwritten. Does anyone know who they're by?
@AntonioVargas No clue, braw.
No sorry I don't
@PeterTamaroff You should be ashamed of that language :-P
@KevinDriscoll Haters gonna hate.
03:48
@PeterTamaroff Love it!
Personally, I prefer 'breh'
to 'braw' or 'brah'
@KevinDriscoll I approve.
04:00
UH OH. I do not approve of 2 delta funcitons multiplied together
Lucking I think they can be integrated individually because htey dont share all the same variables
Luckily*
@KevinDriscoll You can edit your messages.
AH yes I keep forgetting, thanks
04:23
hello world
04:41
does anyone want to talk real analysis?
@Crypto Maybe?
I'm an undergrad and I'm taking a real analysis course right now and the lectures seem a but scattered, I just want to talk about some definitions
@Crypto OK.
most recently we've been talking about lim sup
I have a general idea of what it means, the largest subsequential limit
is there anything else to it, excuse me if this is too broad
@Crypto What do you mean by "is there anything else to it"? What do you know about the $\limsup$?
04:55
I know that it is the largest of subsequence of a given sequence, assuming that this given sequence is bounded
sorry largest limit of all subsequence
s
@Crypto OK.
And what else do you know?
that's all
@Crypto Well, there are "more things" to the $\limsup$. You can seach MSE about it, and come back with questions.
y do we study the lim sup of a set
Crypto, my understanding is that if the lim sup is finite
then you can say a lot of nice thing about the object
05:09
@Crypto Of a set? You mean $$\limsup\limits_{n\to\infty}A_n:=\bigcap_{n\geqslant 1}\bigcup_{k\geqslant n}A_k$$?
Success for Poincaré in the case $\ell =1$! @TedShifrin Hope you get happy when you read this.
05:53
@PeterTamaroff I'm happy for you
@KevinDriscoll Here's the code. You can paste it in MSE I guess.
@KevinDriscoll Did you get it?
I do see it, ya. But I'm quite sure I wouldn't understand any of it
There are some details I leave out because I think Ted has Spivak's book.
But they only concern the definition of $I$.
@KevinDriscoll Well, it is "simply" a version of $$\int_0^1 f'(tx)dt=f(x)$$ assuming $f(0)=0$ on steriods.
As Spivak says, "A somewhat involved calculation shows..."
That is really what it is. The wit is in the definition of $I\omega$.
Just takes a while to 'turn the crank'?
@KevinDriscoll Aha.
But, note how the case $\ell =1$ is slightly involved. I will look at $\ell =2$ tomorrow, for the knack of it.
06:06
Haha, yes. I hate it when the simplest case is complicated
Leaves little hope for the harder ones
@KevinDriscoll Heh, well, I think it is a matter of getting used to that.
Remember when the binomial theorem looked like some weird thing? If you're OK with it try a proof by induction on the multinomial theorem! =)
Good point
I think i'll file that under "things I probably can't do"
I'm quite bad at mathematical induction
I have very little experience with it
@KevinDriscoll "I'm quite bad at mathematical induction" + "I have very little experience with it" = My point exactly.
Haha, true
06:14
I. Don't. Understand. @PeterTamaroff
@KevinDriscoll What is there to understand?
Uuuumm, exactly?
@KevinDriscoll What are you asking now?
I have to go. It is late.
I must chill meh brainz.
Bye byes.
@N3buchadnezzar What does $PV$ mean in sos440's solution?
Positive Value?
@JayeshBadwaik Principal Value
In complex analysis, the principal values of a multivalued function are the values along one chosen branch of that function, so that it is single-valued. Motivation Consider the complex logarithm function log z. It is defined as the complex number w such that :e^w = z\,\! Now, for example, say we wish to find log i. This means we want to solve :e^w = i\,\! for w. Clearly iπ/2 is a solution. But is it the only solution? Of course, there are other solutions, which is evidenced by considering the position of i in the complex plane and in particular its argument arg i. We can rotate count...
07:26
Ohh, I see.
I did not know the standard notation.
 
2 hours later…
09:22
do you think i should add some more details here
09:41
perhaps expand on what you mean by "use the binomial theorem"
are you talking about using the newton-binomial series? the power is fractional. or the geometric sum formula perhaps.
one can view it as $x(1+7/x+O(x^{-2}))^{1/5}-1)=x(1+\frac{7}{5}x^{-1}+O(x^{-2})-1)=7/5+O(x^{-1})$
i just use $a-b=\frac{a^2-b^2}{a+b}$
how?
(blah^2/5 - blah^2/5) / (blah^1/5 + blah^1/5) does not seem very simplified
oh right we should use something different
I would use $(1+c\epsilon+O(\epsilon^2))^\alpha=1+\alpha c\epsilon+O(\epsilon^2)$, which is newton-binomial or taylor series
yeah that is neater
09:56
also the limit looks pretty much the same as x-> -inf
I did want to use $(x^4+x^3y+x^2y^2+xy^3+y^4)(x-y)=x^5-y^5$
that might be doable
yes, indeed
you will simply move the limit down to a denominator and it will work out to 1+1+1+1+1
but you want to call it the geometric sum formula rather than binomial theorem
it is nearly the same as binomial just more complicated :D
oh yes geometric sum formula might be better
newton binomial series is a bit to much for a calculus isn't it ? Although we proved it there :D
10:05
nah man, newton is cool
sure but it is cheating a bit isn't it =
 
2 hours later…
11:44
When our math teacher said, "We can go home but quietly... "
:D
 
1 hour later…
13:02
Math, not meth!
13:16
Anyone aware of some question about sums of rationals and irrational numbers?
most of them?
any question about sums whose terms are reals?
or perhaps you're talking about the fact that
rational+rational=rational
rational+irrational=irrational
irrational+irrational=either
then what more do you want to be said about it?
But why is that? I have an intuitive answer in mind but I don't know if it's good enough.
The aperiodicity of a number summed with the periodicity of a number yields an aperiodic number, but I have no proof for that.
the first is obvious, the second is obvious by contradiction, the third is obvious by cancellation/amplification
thinking in terms of decimal expansions can be a useful tool but it is hardly a universal go-to
13:24
Yes.
if rational+irrational=rational then irrational=rational-rational=rational, a contradiction
thus rational+irrational=irrational
also irrational+(itself)=2x(that same irrational)=irrational, whereas rational+(-itself)=0 is rational
if you have familiarity with vector spaces, the rationals are a subspace of R and the irrationals are their complement
so ultimately this is a general fact about vector spaces (or even modules)
hhh
hhh
What is the name of this matrix operation?

$A=\begin{pmatix} 1 & 2 & 3 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 \end{pmatrix}, SomeOperation(A)=\begin{pmatrix}1*2*3 \\ 1*1*1\end{pmatrix}$, what is the operation SomeOperation?
Some sort of rowwise multiplication?
hmm the latex isn't working for some reason
but anyway the answer is that that operation is too unnatural to have a name
hhh
hhh
13:34
Moved the question here so easier to see the question.
you can use {\rm text} or \textrm{blah} to make non-italicized text in equations. also many prefer \cdot for multiplication over *, the star symbol is clunky and deprecated
13:54
@anon Man this shit about qcqs morphisms is confusing
 
2 hours later…
user87637
15:36
@user38268 Why do you keep saying shit? LOL.
16:02
@PeterTamaroff probably not, unless you ask for elementary manipulations over some specific extensions of differentials (which I have been doing for a while). Why?
 
1 hour later…
17:10
Anybody here?
If I need to find the line that is Intersection of two planes , how do I do it?
cross product of planes' normals yields line's direction
Hi @robjohn how are you?
@skullpatrol I'm fine, how are you?
@robjohn Fine, thanks :-)
18:21
@anon Dude.
$$d\left( {\sum\limits_{i = 1}^n {{\omega _i}d{x_i}} } \right) = \sum\limits_{i < j} {\left( {{D_i}{\omega _j} - {D_j}{\omega _i}} \right)d{x_i} \wedge d{x_j}} $$
Right or left?
@PeterTamaroff: You have mail!
@TedShifrin I have read it!
So I am going over it.
To see what is wrong.
Okey dokey :)
I think you're off by a sign in the definition of $I(d\omega)$. I don't have Spivak's book here at home. I know how I usually do it, however.
@TedShifrin Oh.
Let me show you the definition.
Hmm...is Spivak's book closer to a Real Analysis curriculum rather than an introductory calculus course ? Just curious. I've heard great things.
18:35
@AmberRoxanna Which of his books?
Different book, Amber.
But, yes, Calculus is a bit tough for students who've never had calculus, and it is a true mathematics text, not a calculus text.
@TedShifrin Indeed. Awesome book.
OK, and I was referring to his standard book titled "Calculus"
@AmberRoxanna If you can read it, it is very very good.
For those capable...
18:38
I have successfully taught a few students who've never had calculus the course using that book, but they were extremely talented. Generally, the students who take the course have had high school calculus first.
I'm not smart enough for that book even though I learned calculus on my own.
...for those not capable, it would be a waste of time, in my opinion.
Hmm, @PeterTamaroff. Then your signs are all backwards on your second line, so the mistake has to come somewhere next.
@AmberRoxanna: Most students need a teacher teaching them that course. I find that a lot of folks on this site are trying to do self-study of things they do not have the background or maturity to do ... I've seen that a lot this summer.
@TedShifrin Very true.
Don't say "you're not smart enough"
18:41
@PeterTamaroff: No, I was right. Check your signs from the definition.
@AmberRoxanna: But I would agree with @skullpatrol. You may very well be plenty smart and, if you're motivated and have the right guidance (teacher) you'd probably do great with it. But my experience with students in that course and in the multivariable analogue of it I wrote/teach all the time is that you must be really interested in understanding/doing proofs and in working hard.
@TedShifrin Hope I am not the case. =D
@TedShifrin Well, at least most universities offer courses in introductory proof techniques.
You need the background and/or maturity
@AmberRoxanna I am compelled to ask what's the need to include so many pictures of yourself in your profile. Specially when you're this young.
@PeterTamaroff Oh, I really didn't have anything better to do.
18:45
;-)
Um, no, Peter, I'm NOT talking about you at all. You know tons of analysis, BTW, from what I've read from you. There are a gaggle of students trying to do Guillemin & Pollack's Differential Topology without knowing multivariable analysis (e.g., what you're doing in Spivak). And they've been trying to get us to do literally all their homework/test questions.
@TedShifrin lol
@TedShifrin I am just teasing Ted!
@PeterTamaroff: OK, I was right originally. Look carefully at his definition and what you wrote. You're off by a sign!
@TedShifrin OK!
Rewrites.
@AmberRoxanna So you're in highschool being taught that?
Or just reading on your own?
18:46
OK, somehow I didn't think you were lacking in self-belief ... But we all make silly sign errors ... or not so silly ones. And in complex geometry, keeping track of $\sqrt{-1}$ versus $1/\sqrt{-1}$ is enough to drive one batty.
@PeterTamaroff just reading on my own, mostly on the bus or train rides. When ever i get a bit of free time here and there
@AmberRoxanna Welcome to the chatroom :D
@TedShifrin Heh, true.
@AmberRoxanna Ah, that's great.
Well, I hope you find my answer to your question useful.
@AmberRoxanna: I'm teaching a very talented high school senior a one-on-one Spivak course this very year. We've made it through some of the hardest theoretical material just fine so far. Now we're getting to derivatives.
@PeterTamaroff Looks fine to me...
18:48
@robjohn You can go ahead and delete my comment then.
Do we all get to delete @PeterTamaroff? :D
@PeterTamaroff thank you for answering
@TedShifrin I think only mods have Godly powers here.
Oh, good :P I hope never to be one of those.
@AmberRoxanna What grade are you in?
18:51
@skullpatrol 10
Wow ... and you've done calculus some already?
*some calculus
;-)
I meant it as an adverb, not adjective :P
@TedShifrin yes, it's really not a big deal. I find it easier than pre-calculus actually.
Manipulating formulas, or actually doing interesting application/word-problems?
18:53
@PeterTamaroff I didn't see that there were three pictures there...
@PeterTamaroff some idiot decided to delete my question. I should slap them now.
@AmberRoxanna No, the question is being closed as a duplicate. It is no big deal. Now I see you kinda asked this before.
We don't "slap" here
@AmberRoxanna And careful: we know each other here! =)
@skullpatrol: Speak for yourself :D
18:54
Yes Sir...sorry
@TedShifrin Heh.
@PeterTamaroff: You can tell I'm the typical boring math prof :P
@TedShifrin I had a teacher that threw chalks at us. I was hilarous. "You there shut up: BAM!"
@TedShifrin I want to be a math professor but not a boring one.
who says x and writes y
18:56
Great, @AmberRoxanna. We certainly don't need more boring ones. @PeterTamaroff: I used to throw chalk, but I almost hit a guy in the eye, and immediately stopped doing it.
Now I throw puns, among other things.
2
@skullpatrol I'm guilty of that
@skullpatrol: What level are you?
banana
um ... that was a serious question :)
18:58
@skullpatrol that's a level ?
Probably in his video game mind, @AmberRoxanna :P
@skullpatrol do you want a banana ? lol
@TedShifrin Ah, found the mistake. Bahoolas.
You agree with what I said a hundred lines up? :)
Where is Jasper when you need him?
01:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

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