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20:00
@masfenix So $e^{-\frac{1}{x}}$ doesn't work because $x e^{-\frac{1}{x}}$ is unbounded as $x \to -\infty$
So, it's not true that $1-\frac{1}{2}+\frac{2}{3}-\frac{1}{3}+\frac{2}{4}-\frac{1}{4}+\frac{2}{5}-\frac{1}{5}+\frac{2}{6}-\frac{1}{6}+\cdots = \sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{n+1}$?
@Alizter Just like you always do.
@ped How do I always do?
@Twink The right hand side is $+\infty$. Can you show the left hand side also is?
I mean, it's not so direct?
20:01
so when you say decrease, you mean the function and the derivatives go to zero as x -> infinity? correct? But if you can find a polynomial $P(x)$ such that if you multiply this polynomial by this function (or its derivatives) then it doesn't go to zero then the function is not a Schwartz function, correct?
well if the left side is equal to the right side
@masfenix Correct. $e^{- x^2}$ is the prototypical example of a Schwartz function
then it is $+\infty$
@Twink Well, how can you justify it?
@Alizter It is a real number, is it not? Or a complex number, say.
Yeah so for my assignment, I have to prove that the function $\phi(x) = \exp{\frac{-1}{1-|x|^2}}$ belongs to $C_0^\infty$ for all $|x| < 1$ and is $0$ for $|x| \geq 1$.
20:03
Indeed, that is a Schwartz function because it is 0 everywhere outside 1
Now so I think I have to show that this function vanishes outside its compact support.
infact it is an even more special kind of thing called a 'bump function' which are essentially Schwartz functions with compact support
$1-\frac{1}{2}+\frac{2}{3}-\frac{1}{3}+\frac{2}{4}-\frac{1}{4}+\frac{2}{5}-\frac{1}{5}+\frac{2}{6}-\frac{1}{6}+\cdots =(1-\frac{1}{2})+(\frac{2}{3}-\frac{1}{3})+(\frac{2}{4}-\frac{1}{4})+(\frac{2}{5}-\frac{1}{5})+(\frac{2}{6}-\frac{1}{6})+\cdots = \frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{3}+\frac{1}{4}+\frac{1}{5}+\frac{1}{6}+\cdots = \sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{n+1}$?
so I am trying to show that first it is infinitely many times differentiable and then for each derivative, I need to show that it vanishes outside the compact set. Is my thinking correct, @KevinDriscoll
@PedroTamaroff Apologies of my unclear portrayal of thoughts. Let me start from a basic level: How, using set theory (ZFC), would you represent an operation such as 1+2?
20:05
@Twink Well, you must justify why introducing/removing parenthesis is legitimate.
that's what I'm asking you ¬¬!!
if it's possible or not
@masfenix The function $\phi$ that you gave is NOT 0 outside $\left|x\right| > 1$
You have to define the function to be $\phi$ inside $\pm 1$ and 0 outside
@Twink There are criterions for the finitary case, IIRC. Apostol explains this.
I cannot recall the claim exactly.
@kevin, that is exactly how it is stated in my book assignment problem
One first defines what it means to "introduce parenthesis".
20:07
ok
I'm gonna look for it
@Twink Let me find the section of the book.
@masfenix I mean if you just plug in $x =2$ you don't get 0
I think it is in his "Mathematical Analysis".
I don't have that book
@Alizter Via sets.
20:08
but I have some other good books
@KevinDriscoll, its defined to be 0 for all $|x| \geq 1$.
which surely include the criterion
@PedroTamaroff Would you care to demonstrate?
@Alizter: Do you know how to construct $\mathbb{N}$?
@masfenix Ah yes, precisely. The way you phrased it didn't seem to indicate that. It seemed like you were saying you wanted to show that $\exp{\frac{1}{1-\left|x\right|^2}}$ is 0 outside $\pm 1$
20:10
@Alizter If $S$ is a set, define $S^+=S\cup \{S\}$.
@FernandoMartin Yes
Oh no, sorry so yeah I am trying to show that the derivatives are all polynomials * the original function.
Then $0=\varnothing$. $1=0^+$; $2=1^+$, &c.
and that it vanishes outside the compact set , but I am not sure how
@masfenix So yes, you know that away from $\pm 1$ the function and all teh derivatives exist and are continuous so you need to concentrate on the points $\pm 1$ and show that the function and all its derivatives go to $0$ there
20:11
I see. okay, cool. I will work on that
Any hints? I found this which kinda answers my question math.stackexchange.com/questions/476195/…
OK but what am I doing when I say 1+2?
but I was wondering it there another way
In which case you have shown that the function that is $\phi$ side and $0$ outside is $C^{\infty}$
thank you
I thought it was in chinese xD
20:14
@masfenix Sorry, I don't think I could provide a proof that is sufficiently rigorous
@Alizter We define $n+1=n^{+}$
And $n+m^{+}=(n+m)^{+}$.
@Alizter Do you know about the principle of recursive definition?
@Alizter Well, that's how you define sum and product of natural numbers.
@KevinDriscoll thankyou for your help
@masfenix no problem
20:24
@ped what I don't get is that using your definition $2=1^+=\{\varnothing\}\cup\{\{\varnothing\}\}=\{\{\varnothing\}, \{\{\varnothing\}\}\}$
I'm gonna start a bounty for this question math.stackexchange.com/questions/507508/… in 6 hours
@Alizter Dude, your set is $\{\varnothing,\{\varnothing\}\}$.
Not what you wrote there.
$A\cup B=\{x:x\in A\vee x\in B\}$.
@PedroTamaroff OK that was confusing me
thanks for clearing that up
@Alizter: I like to think it as 2 = {0, 1}
Then $\mathbb{N}$ is well ordered with respect to $\in$
@FernandoMartin It is that.
$0=\varnothing,1=\{\varnothing\}$!
20:28
I know!
@FernandoMartin I know you know.
I know both of you know
Why "I like to think it..."?
but I didn't know
But it's more natural (for me) to type $2=\{0,1\}$ than $\{\emptyset, \{\emptyset\}\}$
20:28
@KevinDriscoll I know you know we know I know he knows.
Pedro I know you know Kevin knows you both know
Yes but did you all know that I didn't know that you all knew that I knew that both of them knew?
@PedroTamaroff is the : in your set builder the same as |
@KevinDriscoll I am cracking up right now.
I know that I know nothing
20:30
just fyi
@pedro If you can trick your opponent into anticipating your next statement by jumping 1 step ahead, you can then force them into a contradiction with that question
@alizter, I think so. Its 'such that'
Btw, the current definition of ordinals, which is exactly this thing (transitive sets well-ordered by inclusion) is due to von Neumann, when he was 19 years old!
19!
Ya, but when did he first bed a woman??? :-P
@FernandoMartin You told me that, let me star it to make us all feel like shit.
He was quite a player IIRC.
@KevinDriscoll how do you know he wasn't gay?
20:33
I don't know why that makes you all feel bad. I wouldn't trade what i was doing at 19 for von Neumann's life
@PedroTamaroff I am having trouble with $n+m^+=(n+m)^+$
the defintion of $lim sup_{n\rightarrow\infty} tn$ the supremum of all partial sums?
@Pedro: I saw your roar. I wonder if I can switch to Russian in here :)
@KevinDriscoll: You must be really interesting then! I'd certainly would
@TedShifrin Come againz?
20:34
@FernandoMartin ...... I'm the most interesting physics PhD student in the universe....
@TedShifrin I don't like Russia and you must know why
@KevinDriscoll I wouldn't trade my life for another person's life, but I'd certainly enjoy some changes in favour of my math, I guess.
Regarding my discussion with @Fernando earlier. But then thinking about typing our names.
@TedShifrin You know Russian?
privet!
20:35
@Twink Don't generalize.
yes, @Twink, I don't either. But my heritage is still 75% Russian, 25% Polish.
I said Russia not Russians @PedroTamaroff
ted so u can speak russian
@TedShifrin I came up with 2 possible definitions for $$F.P. \int_a^b \frac{1}{\left| x - c\right|} dx$$ but I'm not sure if they are equivalent or consistent
Yes, @Pedro, a bit. Studied it in college a little bit.
20:37
@TedShifrin why
@TedShifrin Cool. I have been told it is not easy.
I've heard Russian still uses CASE markers and word order is relatively free..... sounds like a mess
I don't like Putin and his stupid laws
that's it :D
@PedroTamaroff: Has Fava written something in Russian yet? :D
No one likes Putin, except for perhaps Putin himself
20:37
harasho
@FernandoMartin Nah. Pity.
I get all my news from the colbert report
Not much anymore, @Danny. Even my once fluent French is rusty, same for German :(
bljath
lol
@Ethan at least then you know half of it is a joke
20:38
6 cases in Russian, 5 in Latin, 4 in German
lol
@Kevin: $c \in (a,b)$, I presume?
@Ted indeed
@Ted I asked a question about it, but I think my definition is problematic
Dini's test is the bomb!
@KevinDriscoll Cannot you remove the $\log$ singularity or something?
20:41
I guess you know it already @PedroTamaroff
@FernandoMartin You mean for uniform convergence?
It is a special case of a more convoluted test.
Really? How's it called?
@PedroTamaroff Ya thats what I did.... but I'm not sure that its justified in the same way that removing the $\frac{1}{x}$ singularity is for the traditional Hadamard Finite Part
20:41
@FernandoMartin Dunno if it has a name.
What does it say then?
The HFP isn't just as hoc, its basically just meromorphic continution combined with contour integration. But I dont think that applies here.
Guys I'm gonna start a bounty for this question math.stackexchange.com/questions/507508/… in 6 hours, you may want to start formulating your answers :)
@FernandoMartin I'd have to check.
@Kevin: Seems to CPV doesn't exist for $\int_{-1}^1 dx/|x|$.
20:43
@Ted exactly
I didn't say it should always exist! I just wanted to allow higher than first-order poles!
Dr.ted ,or anyone else can you look at this question and possible help? i dont really understand the answer i got
2
Q: closed,bounded not compact

DannyHi I was asked to prove that: if $S =\{ x \in \Bbb R : d(x,0) = 1 \}$ then $S$ is a closed and bounded set. The set $S$ contains only two points: $-1,1$,(it should not be a problem to prove that is it closed and bounded)but it gets really confusing when iam also asked to show that $S$ is not com...

@PedroTamaroff: Ok, no worries
@TedShifrin but if you can find the finite part of $\int_{-1}^{1} \frac{dx}{x^2} dx$ it seems like you should be able to do it in this case as well, because the singularity is somehow not as bad
I was just glad it popped out in my topology coursework, haha
I don't think you can there, either, @Kevin. Infinite area with no sign cancellation.
@TedShifrin This is the essence of Hadamard Regularization though
@FernandoMartin There it is.
@PedroTamaroff: Thanks!
@TedShifrin Basically you treat $\frac{1}{x^2}$ as a generalized function that is equal to $\frac{1}{x^2}, \ x \neq 0$ and give it a value at $x=0$ so that the integral is well-defined
20:49
@Danny: He's talking about metric spaces of sequences (but using superscript notation because you might want to do sequences in that metric space, which would mean sequences consisting of sequences). Maybe it helps to think of a sequence as an infinite-tuple of real numbers?
they explain it a bit on Math Overflow but I don't really know all that much
can we get it from the start ted
what we are considering are the supremum metric
Hmmm @Kevin. Definitely out of the realm of Riemann integrals, so there! Let me look.
is the supremum metric right
Yes. @Pedro can also help you with analysis, along with lots of others. :)
20:53
Could someone help me understand this question: math.stackexchange.com/questions/476195/… Notice that in the main original question, the function is defined at $|x| < 1$ and 0 $|x| \geq 1$. But Peter in his answer changes these conditions
Are they talking about the same thing?
@Ted indeed. I've come to think this question isn't so trivial that I will appear stupid or lazy if I ask my advisor about it. Although I somehow doubt he can give em an answer that would satisfy me.
This is like renormalization you physicists do, @Kevin. Definitely not CPV, but thinking about a Laurent series here and taking the constant term at $0$. I need to think more about the distributional derivative. But I also need to work on preparing my own grad course, so I'm tabling until I have more time.
@Ted Indeed. I promise that it isn't totally ad hoc in the problem I am working on. We didn't just arbitrarily decide that the integral should be interpreted in a regularized sense. It arises naturally in the derivation of the associated integral equation. Anyway, I understand. Will let you know if I figure it out.
Hi, sorry guys did anyone get a chance to read my message or should I copy/paste it
what does he mean when he says $ e^{(k)}_ j=1$ if $j=k$
21:04
baila en la calle, de noche, baila en la calle, de dia
:D
@robjohn can I talk to you?
Ahh ZFC is messing with my head
@Ethan sure
in a separate chat?
for a second
@Alizter Don't worry about ZFC now! =D
21:13
There are always more things to learn.
@PedroTamaroff Thats what happens when you become curious when practicing limits. I should be studies in chaos theory. I diverged from my task so much.
@Alizter Shame on you! Nonlinear dynamics is so interesting
@Alizter Chaos theory?
@PedroTamaroff: Know anything about adjunction spaces?
21:17
@Alizter Very funny.
I'm studying them for my topology course. Really cool stuff.
@FernandoMartin What are those?
Basically it's the way to formalize the "gluing" of spaces
@FernandoMartin Right, guessed so.
Wedge products are a special case for instance.
21:21
@FernandoMartin be careful this almost sounds like.......... applied mathematics
Not products
Wedge unions
Don't know why I said products.
@FernandoMartin Dunno what those are.
Hmm, I thought we talked about them back in Rosario but that might have been Germán now that I think of it.
Basically it's gluing spaces via identifying a single point in each of them
for instance the wedge union of two circles is "8"
1700M CpS...... aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand its gone.
@PedroTamaroff Yao to you too
21:24
hahahah
@FernandoMartin Right.
Of course there's some detail "under the hood" to make everything formal but what's nice about it is that it's really geometrical
@FernandoMartin I like the constructions like the cone over a space; the suspension of space and such. Quotient spaces, aye?
@FernandoMartin Is the direct product of two hilbert spaces an example as well?
The cone over a space is an example of adjunction space. I don't know what a suspension is.
@KevinDriscoll: Adjunction spaces are certain quotients of coproducts of spaces
When I say "gluing" I think of quotienting out so I don't think direct products fit here
21:28
@FernandoMartin The cone over a space is a quotient too, $X\times[0,1]$ quote identifying $X\times \{0\}$ with a point.
You're using a function to identify points of the domain with points of the target.
The suspension is $X\times [0,1]$, and collapsing both endpoints, like two cones glued at $X$.
@PedroTamaroff: I see.
@FernandoMartin Here.
The book I read about topology had something about it, never did the exercises though.
I need to show that every function in the Schwartz space is in $L^p(R^n)$ any hints on how I can get started?
21:30
@FernandoMartin Cool thing: Let $SX$ denote the suspension of $X$.
Then $SS^{k}\simeq S^{k+1}$.
=D
The thing about adjunction spaces is that not only they're quotients: they're pushouts
@FernandoMartin Dunno what that is.
It can be assumed but how to prove that $\lim_{u\to0}(1+u)^{1/u}=\lim_{n\to\infty}\left(1+\frac1n\right)^n=e$
someone that can assist me with:
2
Q: closed,bounded not compact

DannyHi I was asked to prove that: if $S =\{ x \in \Bbb R : d(x,0) = 1 \}$ then $S$ is a closed and bounded set. The set $S$ contains only two points: $-1,1$,(it should not be a problem to prove that is it closed and bounded)but it gets really confusing when iam also asked to show that $S$ is not com...

Some categorical construction; it's not really important
21:33
@masfenix well I suppose you need to use the definition of the $L^p$ norm and then show that it is bounded for any member of a Schwartz space
@PedroTamaroff: That result about the suspension of circles is really cool
@masfenix intuitively this should be true because all members of the Schwartz space decrease VERY quickly at infinity
@KevinDriscoll I have no idea how to even begin showing that.
@PedroTamaroff: How did you prove it? I have a mapping $f:S^{k+1}\rightarrow SS^k$ that's continuous and bijective
Now since $S^{k+1}$ is compact
if I proved $SS^k$ is $T_2$ I'd be all set.
There was some proposition about when quotients are $T_2$
@FernandoMartin I never said I proved it.
=D
21:38
Hahah
@FernandoMartin On the cylinder, you need to be able to separate a face from nearby points using disjoint open sets.
Well, $SS^k$ must be $T_2$ since it's homeo to $S^{k+1}$...
@masfenix I'm not entirely sure.... you need to develop some kind of bound. For example for $L^p$ with $p>1$ then $\frac{1}{x^2 +1}$ is in that space (I think) @pedro will correct me if I am wrong
@KarlKronenfeld: Yes, I think that can be done. I was trying to do it as cleanly as possible.
@masfenix and then I guess the fact that any member of $S$ is $C^{\infty}$ and decreases faster than $\frac{1}{x^2 +1}$ also shows that members of $S$ are $L^p$ with $p>1$
21:40
By cleanly I mean without dealing with open sets and the like
@KevinDriscoll Sure.
@FernandoMartin Heh.. :)
@masfenix That is $\lim_{x \to \pm \infty} (x^2 +1) s(x) =0$ for $s(x) \in S$
@KevinDriscoll so what is the interpretation of the limit, what is that telling us?
@masfenix Basically that the $L^p$ norm with $p>1$ can't diverge because it converges for $\frac{1}{x^2 +1}$ and $s(x)$ is 'smaller' than that function at infinity
21:46
@masfenix That the function decreases damn fast.
@masfenix Sorry, I'm not a pure math person so I can't make this formal. Just trying to justify my intuition
3000M CpS.
@PedroTamaroff: How on Earth...
@PedroTamaroff What was it after 3 hours of play?
I've been playing for a day longer and I just have 1300M CpS
How did you do it?
21:48
(I am trying to decide if my strategy actually is any good)
OH JESUS NO! I just figured it out
you people are playing COOKIE CLICKER
@KevinDriscoll alright thanks, I am still pretty lost. Will work on it some more.
@PedroTamaroff could you help me formalize a proof for this? I want to show that every function in S is also in Lp
@KevinDriscoll: I'm deeply ashamed by my actions
@masfenix Sorry I can't be of more formal help.
@FernandoMartin I don't really understand the draw. I just worked on it a bit and then let it run in the background.....
Just wait for it...
21:54
@FernandoMartin No I mean this was weeks ago
Huh, well, don't know then
I let it run for a few days but...... I dunno it was just making more cookies
I was instantly hooked
Anything with achievements gets me hooked.
@masfenix What is S?
@PedroTamaroff Schwartz Space
21:55
@KevinDriscoll That tells me nothing.
@PedroTamaroff All functions that are $C^{\infty}$ and both the function and all derivatives decrease faster than any power of $x$
@KevinDriscoll Darn.
So what is the fuzz?
@PedroTamaroff Its the natural space for doing Fourier Transforms because it leaves the space invariant
@Pedro 'fuzz' ??
@PedroTamaroff I want to show that the every function is in Lp (or in other words, I want to show that Schwartz space is a subspace of Lp)

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