I think Algebra I and Algebra II have the worst books in the Open University.
The only course with worse format representation is Java. But that doesn't really have any books (well it has one in English which you are not allowed to use really..)
@Studentmath how much did you find for P(Y≥5| X is even)? I've something ugly with lots of fraction, and very unsure of my method (11/12*20/49*(71/20)^5*20/29
Then you can solve it generally for $Y_i$, and you get the nice formula $(\frac{1}{i}-1)^4$ for each $P(Y_i \ge 5)$, and then you sum it up for 2, 4, 6 and get the 1/3. I think I did it right at least, getting the same results on your side?
@Studentmath well I don't see where your nice formula comes from :), all I have is $P(Y_i=1)=\frac{1}{6*i}$, $P(Y_i=2)=(1-\sum P(Y_i=1))\frac{1}{6*i}=\frac{71}{120}\frac{1}{6*i}$, $P(Y_i=n)=(\frac{71}{120})^{n-1}\frac{1}{6*i}$ then doing $P(Y_i\ge 5)$ is a geometric sum
@Studentmath thanks for that training, I find like you $P(Y_i=k)= P(Y_i\ne k-1)*\frac{1}{i} = \frac{1}{6}(\frac{i-1}{i})^{k-1}\frac{1}{i}$ and $P(Y_i\ge 5)=\frac{1}{6}(\frac{i-1}{i})^{4}$
@PranavArora well .. I didn't get selected in ISI the first year and I didn't sit for cmi exam (wasnt aware that there was something called the cmi :P) .. so I dropped a the year and tried again next year .. :)
@robjohn Moreover, I'm also interested in (this should be awesome) $$\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} (-1)^{n+1} \left(\zeta(2) - 1 - \frac{1}{2^2}-\cdots - \frac{1}{n^2} \right)^2$$
@robjohn I'm going to develop many such series, really many ...
The trivial variant gives us $$\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} (-1)^{n+1} \left(\zeta(2) - 1 - \frac{1}{2^2}-\cdots - \frac{1}{n^2} \right)=\frac{\zeta(2)}{4}$$
@robjohn I think the greatest achievement is not to compute these series, but to wisely apply them to different difficult integrals and series. This is the real marvellous thing in my opinion. They must be applied! :-)
@DavideGiraudo Because we don't have PM here, I will ask you here (I hope you will see this): do you know some "good" book for solving differential equations over distributions? I mean, I am interested in examples in general, because I can't find much of them on internet (my English is bad, I know)
anyone know of any text that explains why even though there is symplectic structure for the cotangent bundle, the tangent bundle does not have a symplectic structure?
I noticed that I can only perform certain actions such as commenting a finite number of times in a given period of time. Obviously, rate limiting is in place to prevent accidental misuse or intentional abuse of certain features.
Where else is rate limiting applied on Stack Exchange sites, and wh...
@N3buchadnezzar A similar pun can be made up, now I think about it. Why are there so few question in [elliptic-curves] these days? A : The question get a bad reduction sometimes.
Great, rapid french. And I'd never even know if I am being sneered at in your conversations. Further, I'd never know if you both are planning to spray Hypozen all over the New York city.
@BalarkaSen Suppose $G$ is a group that acts on a set, and that $H$ is a subgroup that acts transitively on this set. Then $G=H\,{\rm Stab}_G\; x$ for any $x\in X$.
@BalarkaSen The Frattini argument follows from the above with $X$ the Sylow $p$-subgroups of $H$ for some $H$ normal in $G$ (else $G$, the whole group cannot act on the Sylow subgroups by conjugation). Since ${\rm stab}\; P=N_G(P)$, $G=H N_G(P)$. Although innocent looking, this is a very useful result.
For example, it shows that $\Phi(G)$ is a nilpotent subgroup whenever $G$ is finite.
@seaturtles Sure, sure, the point is that one observes that, then observes that for an arbitrary $f$, $f-\sum f(e_i)\pi_i$ vanished on $\bigoplus\Bbb Z$.
And the sum makes sense, i.e. it is finite.
One concludes the injection $\bigoplus \Bbb Z\to {\rm Hom}(\prod \Bbb Z,\Bbb Z)$ which sends $\sum a_ie_i$ to $\sum a_i\pi_i$ is surjective.
This gives a proof that $\prod \Bbb Z$ is not a free $\Bbb Z$ module.