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00:02
@PedroTamaroff I'm not quite sure how to continue. Normally, the inverse of the matrix (working just in $\mathbb{R}$) is

$$\frac{1}{-15}\begin{pmatrix}1 & -1\\-19 & 4\end{pmatrix}$$ but now I'm left with $\frac{1}{-15}$ that makes no sense mod 26. Do I need to find the inverse of 11 mod 26?
@agent154 Yes, it does make sense!
Since 15 is relatively prime to 26, you can invert it.
well, $-15+26=11$ so I'd be inverting 11 right?
Sure you could have inverted 15 then negated as well. Either option works..
OK, thanks.
00:10
@agent154 This is the fancy way to invert stuff.
I'm wondering if I did something wrong. The result I got fits in with the first equation but not the second
@agent154 What do you mean?
I think I found the wrong inverse.
It's easy to check, just multiply your purported inverse by 11=-15
The resulting vector I got was

$$\begin{pmatrix}a\\b\end{pmatrix}=\begin{pmatrix}3\\15\end{pmatrix}$$
Nevermind, it's right... I made a stupid arithmetic error when verifying
Thanks for the help!
00:24
@KarlKronenfeld
You suggested showing any homomorphism $Z_2\otimes Z_2\to S_3$ is trivial, yes?
That's not true @Pedro
30 mins ago, by Karl Kronenfeld
@PedroTamaroff If you want to do it formally, just show that a direct summand collapses for any map $(\mathbb Z/2\mathbb Z)^{\oplus2}\to S_3$.
Just a direct summand collapses, not the whole group
Provided it goes well with inclusions, I take it.
Oh.
So $0\times Z_2$ and $Z_2\times 0$ will be in the kernel?
one or the other
00:27
BUNNY!
@FernandoMartin OK, suppose I have $\eta_1:Z_2\to S_3$ given by $0\to 1$ and $1\to (12)$, and $\eta_2:Z_2\to S_3$ with $1\to (13)$.
For instance, projecting to $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$ is non-trivial; then compose the projection with a non-trivial map $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}\rightarrow S_3$ and you have a non-trivial map from the product to $S_3$.
ok, you can factor that through the product
I want to show no homomorphism $\eta:Z_2\times Z_2\to S_3$ exists for which $\eta\iota_1=\eta_1$ and $\eta\iota_2=\eta_2$.
bunny!!! playbites @PedroTamaroff 's ear
ok, but those $\eta_1$ and $\eta_2$ won't work for this, since you can factor them through the product
choose $\eta_1$ to be non-trivial as well
00:32
@FernandoMartin Isn't $\eta_1$ nontrivial...?
@usukidoll Hello, hello.
Sorry, I totally misread what you said
You're right
yayayyaaayy! plays with @PedroTamaroff
Yes, what you said is right
for some reason I read what you wrote as $\eta_1$ being trivial and $\eta_2$ mapping $1\rightarrow (12)$
01:05
@Mike what year is it?
@Mike That's cool.
@robjohn Answer the ones that take a single line to answer, that way your effort:point ratio is super small
@Mike That's really neat
@Mike yeah, but there are those people who like to downvote high rep users who answer easy questions.
01:12
Ah, good point
Answer only hard questions, but answer them snarkily
@Mike cool geometry link
what do you mean snarkily?
with snark
like so
Making a square in 8 steps is killing me
lol noob
you need to cut back on a line
there was a question about that problem on se about a year ago
haha, found it.
15
Q: How can I construct a square using a compass and straight edge in only 8 moves?

fredleyI'm playing this addictive little compass and straight edge game: http://www.sciencevsmagic.net/geo/ I've been able to beat most of the challenges, but I can't construct a square in 8 moves. To clarify a move is: Drawing a line Drawing a circle Extending a line is not a move. Lines can onl...

@Mike
01:28
oh, i was just whining
i want to figure it out myself
thanks though
what are examples of mathematical objects coming from biology?
@user4140 Exponential growth.
@Mike YAY. I did the circle three pack.
The six pack should be the same but with an hexagon.
@PedroTamaroff I did that one in 10 moves... time to figure out what move I wasted
@PedroTamaroff lol, I meant the names
I don't get how you can do the circle pack 2 in under 5 moves
just drawing 3 circles takes up 3 moves
01:32
same as the square
@user4140 cellular blah
?
cellular homology
haha
I doubt the name comes from biology though
What about amoebas?
@FernandoMartin Took me 4 moves to make 3 circles, and then after that the fifth made my big circle
Takes longer to do it inside your starting circle, that took me 8 moves
01:34
Ahhh, I see
It isn't updating though
(the scoreboard, that is)
weird, it updates for me the moment i get it in that many moves
are you resetting after you finish a construction?
@PedroTamaroff !!!!
I'm still confused :(
now to do a circle pack 3 inside of the original circle...
01:39
With the rhat/r^2 thing.
I know that spherical isn't well defined
And I know you're dividing by zero
But I feel like it's something that shows up elsewhere too.
I don't know why you can't just take the divergence of rhat/r^2
Paste the problem here.
The one my confusion stemmed from?
Hello!
Sorry about the terrible quality
01:49
What is $e^{-r/\lambda}$ suppose to mean?
Is $r$ a vector?
@Mike
@@
I want to prove that if $G$ is abelian with $G\simeq \sum_{i\in I}G_i$ then $mG\simeq \sum_{i\in I}mG_i$.
For any integer $m$.
So I have an isomorphism $\eta:G\to\sum_{i\in I}G_i$.
@PedroTamaroff It's just the radial potential
@Anthony I don't know what that is. Is it a scalar function?
Yeah
Sorry
So grad of potential should give e field
01:54
Dunno man. Physics elude me.
and del of e field gives charge
Aight, but my point is, at some point, you get del of 1/r^2 I think
And using the spherical divergence formula, you get the wrong answer. I just don't know why you can't take the del of 1/r^2 using that formula!
I mean I know that everyone is saying spherical isn't defined at the origin, and that you divide by zero, but those don't seem like they are the reasons... I don't see why you can't take the divergence, just because it diverges!
You can take derivatives of things like ln(x) which diverge at zero.
@Mike So, this is what I have in mind.
@PedroTamaroff Isn't it sufficient ot just restrict your isomorphism?
Ah, nevermind, I see.
Go on.
We have the inclusion maps $\iota_i:G_i\to \sum G_i$. I want to define $\psi_i:mG\to mG_i$ by $mg\mapsto m \psi \iota_i(g)$.
Then since $\sum G_i$ is a coproduct, I can extend this to a map $\psi:m G\to \sum mG_i$.
That seems like the way to go.
You can, of course, also identify $G_i$ with a subgroup of $G$
which might help
But I think you're almost done with your approach
02:03
Don't coproducts work the other way around?
You're right
You can factor morphisms to groups through their product, and you can factor morphisms from groups through the coproduct
@FernandoMartin Sorry, should've put the guy in the other place.
The idea still holds.
I should have said $$\eta:\sum_{i\in I}G_i\to G$$
And now define $\psi_i:mG_i\to mG$ as follows.
Yeah
I need to get some reading done... after I draw this stupid circle 3-pack
02:06
$$\psi_i(m g_i)=m\; \eta\circ \iota_i (g_i)$$
Here $g_i\in G_i$ is a generic element.
good old "multiply by m"
Then I have a unique map $\psi :\sum_{i\in I}mG_i\to mG$ such that $\psi \iota_i=\psi_i$. Feeding an element $mg_i$, I get that $$\psi \circ \iota_i(mg_i)=m\eta\circ \iota_i(g_i)$$
@FernandoMartin So, that looks good yes?
Yes
What you said holds in $R$-modules as well
@FernandoMartin OK.
02:25
@FernandoMartin I am being stoopid I think,
$mG_i\leqslant G_i$ so $$\sum mG_i\leqslant \sum G_i$$ If $f:\sum G_i\to G$ is an isomorphism, define $f_m:\sum mG_i\to mG$ via $\{ma_i\}\mapsto m f(\{a_i\})$. @Mike
Then I claim ${\rm im}\; f_m=m{\rm im}\; f$ and $\ker f_m=\ker f$.
@anon
Why do you say you're being stupid?
I was overcomplicating things.
That video is hilarious.
Not really, your first approach is categorical
That sounds badass. Categorical!
Well, let me finish one of the approaches at least. =P
I've got a funny video, but I don't think this is the appropriate place for it
02:38
irony?
deal
@FernandoMartin I want to finish that approach.
I have show $\psi$ is an isomorphism.
Mike, is that a Fermat joke?
no
02:55
@FernandoMartin I think I have an idea?
@mixedmath Hello.
@PedroTamaroff Hiya
It's been a bit
Yeah.
I was guessing you could help me with what Fernando was suggesting. That is, giving a categorical proof that if I have an isomorphism $\eta:\sum G_i\to G$ of abelian groups I also have an isomorphism $\psi:\sum mG_i\to mG$ for any nonzero integer $m$.
I constructed $\psi$ already.
Now I have to show it is an iso.
I used $\sum G_i$ is a coproduct in $\bf Ab$.
I can repeat it for you: define first maps $\psi_i:mG_i\to mG$ by $$\psi_i(mg)=m \eta(\iota_i(g))$$
Where $\iota_i:G_i\to\sum G_i$ is the inclusion that comes with the coproduct.
Then I get a unique morphism $\psi :\sum mG_i\to mG$ such that $\psi\iota_i=\psi_i$.
I want to show this is an isomorphism.
Sorry, I wasn't around
Let's see
@FernandoMartin I wrote it all there.
Try to write an inverse for it
I don't think I can find a categorical way to describe the inverse though
03:04
Yeah. I was trying to do that =P
Hey everyone, I have a quick question. Tangent spaces are manifolds, right?
sure, since a tangent space is just a vector space
but that's not very interesting
if you mean to ask whether tangent bundles are manifolds, yes
Yeah, I know they are.
But I wanted to check tangent spaces themselves.
I tried googling it and was puzzled by the lack of yes/no answers.
I mean, I was pretty sure they are manifolds, but needed to check, just to be sure.
Thanks!
sure, every $\Bbb R^m$ is a manifold
they're locally euclidean (duh!) and second countable :)
Is there a way for me to see LaTeX code rendered here?
03:08
see the "LaTeX in chat" link on the rigt
I don't have that link.
Oh, I do.
:)
start ChatJax
you have to bookmark that link and then click the bookmark
Yeah, just did :)
Awesome, I was wondering how everyone here got along with all the $'s and LaTeX code, but nothing showing up haha.

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