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17:01
@iwriteonbananas Elliptic curves, algebraic curves, some homology and cohomology and some algebraic number theory
Although, at the moment, mostly cohomology
@Krijn Cool, cohomology is fun.
r9m
r9m
@Superstar I did a rage quit on the series :( not gonna look at it again until I cool down :P
@iwriteonbananas: It's just what one needs to do to have a derivative
@r9m Hey, nice to see you around again! :D You're very powerful at calculation stuff, don't worry about that. Anybody can fail for a while. It's better to put it away for a while, and then return to it.
@MikeMiller right
17:12
so for instance on the level of functions $\nabla f$ is the Riemannian gradient, meaning you identify the 1-form $df$ with a vector field using the metric; This is not a terribly exciting result but it does tell us that this is basically judt differentiation
What's the Riemannian gradient?
Now suppose you'd like to take a second derivative. On the form side you might want to say "Well I'll just take $d\omega$. But when you're doing that to forms of positive rank this "more or less obviously" isn't what you want, since a function $f$ could be really wild ($e^z$, say) and its second derivarive $ddf$ should not really be zero.
@r9m have you seen my answer above? Initially after I posted it I received 3 downvotes. Then I thought to make a great favour to my downvoters: to also give them the possibility to take a bounty of 100 points from me.
r9m
r9m
@SuperstarMonica okay .. I got the idea .. but can't figure out if I am leaving a term somewhere that's creating all the mess .. I'll install mathematica sometime and recheck the whole calculation again :P
@iwriteonbananas: Do you know how to identify 1-forms with vector fields using the metric?
17:15
@MikeMiller Yeah, generally $TE\cong T^*E$ if $E$ is a bundle admitting a metric, right?
I'm sorry, I have a question.
If the geometrical interpretation of the derivative of a single (real) variable function in a given point $P$ is the angular coefficient of the tangent in $P$, what is the geometrical meaning/interpretation of the derivative of a two (real) variables function? (give both functions being real functions)
@iwriteonbananas Yes (which is every bundle you'll naturally encounter), but the isomorphism depends on the metric.
$\nabla f$ just means $(df)^\sharp$ or whatever symbol it is that means I pass to the vector field it corresponds to.
:26883681 It was about downvotes on purpose. Now I want them to teach me better solutions and then give them bounties, but it seems they delay with brilliant solutions.
I'm disappointed.
17:17
Note BTW that if you, like me, prefer forms to vector fields, you could instead consider the LC connection as something that takes sections $T^*M \to T^*M \otimes T^*M$.
@MikeMiller Ok,that's good to know
Where are my downvoters to give them bounties? That's the question!
:D
Now that is the second derivative we want. The reason we would get $ddf=0$ is because we skew-symmetrized in the definition of $d$, and mixed partials are equal, so everything died
@MikeMiller Shouldn't it be $\Gamma (T^*M)\to \Gamma (T^*M \otimes TM)$?
But $\nabla df$ is really rather rarely zero.
r9m
r9m
17:19
@SuperstarMonica sigh.. there's nothing new with these scenarios .. has happened to you in the past too .. why waste time (reputations too? :P )
@iwriteonbananas: Yiur second term is wrong. A connection is a map $\Gamma(E) \to \Gamma(E \otimes T^*M)$.
Right, whoops
@r9m I'm annoyed since this happened after I posted my solution in chat. I shouldn't be annoyed, you're right. My philosophy is that if anybody wants to give me lessons in math to do it, I'm ready to learn, I prefer lessons more than downvotes. :D
I agree @r9m
Any particular reason you prefer forms to vector fields, by the way?
r9m
r9m
17:22
@SuperstarMonica :-) .. more like lessons in 'how to please the spoon feeding league' :P
@iwriteonbananas: Now let me start working abstractly for a second. Given a connection $\nabla_E$ on $E$ on a Riemannian manifold, you get higher connections $E \otimes T^*M \to E \otimes T^*M \otimes T^*M$, eg, given by seconding $\sigma \otimes \omega \to \nabla_E \sigma \otimes \omega + \sigma \otimes \nabla_g \omega$
This means I can make sense of "$\nabla^2 \sigma$"
Ok, I haven't seen that before
You might have seen $d_A$ - I want to talk about that in a second
r9m
r9m
@Khallil yo!
17:24
Great to hear from you, @r9m!
We haven't been on together for a while!
How are you?
(haven't seen $d_A$ either :P)
Anyway, if I have a metric on $E$ and $M$, all of these tensor bundles have a metric, so I can obviously write down $\|\sigma \otimes \omega\|_{C^0}$ - just the max of the fiberwise norms of the sections
r9m
r9m
@Khallil good and alive! :) How're things going?
@Krijn I am now.
17:25
Why the $C^0$ index?
That's the name of the norm
Not too bad. Just been chilling out, @r9m. Been working but not hard :-)
Like in $\Bbb R^n$, $\|f\|_{C^0}$ is the sup norm
Oh, i've never seen that...only $\|f\|_\infty$
r9m
r9m
@Khallil (y) awesome! :)
17:26
Are you in your second semester now, @r9m?
r9m
r9m
@Khallil I completed my UG :-)
@iwriteonbananas: Different contexts. If your functions are continuous, then in the $C^0$ norm limits are the same thing as uniform limits of continuous functions
Ah wicked! Are you a working man now or postgrad, @r9m?
so it's a banach space in its own right
but you have a different sort of limit in $L^\infty$
now I finally know how to define $\|\sigma\|_{C^k}$. It's $$\|\sigma\|_{C^0} + \|\nabla \sigma\|_{C^0} + \dots + \|\nabla^k \sigma\|_{C^0}.$$ This is the notion of $C^k$ norm I've been after this whole time.
r9m
r9m
@Khallil waiting for application dates for a masters program again :P (failed in a course in the last UG sem and had to repeat that entire semester)
17:29
That's what I like about connections. They give me a way, on a manifold or even on a bundle on a manifold, to define the $C^k$ norm. Of course there are a lot more selling points but this is my starter package.
Sounds awesome. Wasn't the master in-built into the UG, @r9m?
@MikeMiller Cool, that's quite interesting
@BalarkaSen I was wondering, when two spaces have the same homology groups, what does this say about the spaces? What about cohomology for $G = \mathbb{Z}$ or even any $G$?
Now I'll stop after another minute, but there's another way to extend $\nabla$ to higher things
r9m
r9m
@Khallil nope .. 3 years UG course ..
17:30
@Krijn It doesn't say much.
I'm all ears.
You could have written $E \otimes T^*M$ as $\Omega^1(E)$; the usual name is "1-forms with values in $E$"
What are easy examples with the same (co)homology groups?
Ah I see. Is it uncommon where you are to do a 4 year UG/masters, @r9m?
r9m
r9m
@Khallil nope .. but my college didn't have a program like that ..
17:31
@Krijn $S^2 \vee S^4$ and $\Bbb {CP}^2$ works.
then $E \otimes \Lambda^k T^*M$ is called $\Omega^k(E)$, and rewriting my original connection as $d_A: \Omega^0(E) \to \Omega^1(E)$, I can easily extend this to higher forms by demanding the Leibniz rules hold: if $\omega \in \Omega^k(M)$, $\sigma \in \Gamma(E)$, then I demand
However, iirc, it is true that if X, Y are simply connected and f : X --> Y is a map inducing isom on all H_n's, then X and Y are homotopy equivalent. I think this was a corollary of Whitehead's theorem.
X, Y CW complex.
@BalarkaSen No, it's not true
Ok, now it is. Fun counterexample: The double comb space has vanishing homology, cohomology and homotopy groups in positive degrees, but it is not contractible.
$d_A(\omega \otimes \sigma) = d\omega \otimes \sigma + (-1)^k \omega \wedge d_A \sigma$
@MikeMiller Right
17:35
Just like $d$ is a skew-symmetrized derivative, this is a skew-symmetrized connection derivative
@iwriteonbananas :)
In the case $E=\Bbb R$, trivial connection $f \mapsto df$, you just recover $d$.
double comb space isn't a thing, sorry
:D
@iwriteonbananas: So if I know your type, you immediately want to try to define cohomology with this, yes?
@MikeMiller Sounds good!
17:37
I have some good news and some bad news.
Always start with the good news.
The good news is that $d_A^2$ is a tensor, meaning that $d_A^2 \omega$ depends only pointwise on $\omega$, not locally (like $d$ depends locally on the input $f$, but not pointwise)
The bad news is that it's usually not zero.
That's sad. Why does it matter that $d^2_A$ is a tensor?
(And what does the $_A$ mean?)
@Krijn The rationale behind the example I gave you is that cohomology as groups is not sufficient to tell you that the attaching map of the 4-cell in $\Bbb {CP}^2$, $S^3 \to S^2$, is not nullhomotopic.
17:41
@BalarkaSen nullhomotopic?
However you can show these two have nonisomorphic ring structure.
@Krijn Homotopic to constant map, i.e.
@iwriteonbananas: the real question is what does $d_A$ mean; that's just what I renamed my connection to, because we're changing our point of view. What you get is not a connection, it's an actual section of a certain tensor bundle
We call it $F_A = d_A^2 \in \Omega^2(\text{End}(E))$ (that's the endomorphism bundle of your bundle). This is known as the curvature of the connection.
@BalarkaSen I see
17:43
Gosh, we did define curvature in my lecture, but I haven't gotten to that yet. And it involved taking derivative twice.
Since $d^2=0$ is an instantiation of equality of mixed partials, the curvature o your connection says to what degree mixed partials are not equal with respect to $d_A$
@iwriteonbananas: I assume you defined curvature of a metric, rather than of a connection, yeah?
@MikeMiller No, we did it for a connection
oh
well there's this thing called the Riemann curvature tensor
have you heard of it?
it's of the form $R(v,w)x \in T_pM$, where $v,w,x \in T_pM$
Yeah, we defined that thing
well, it also satisfies $R(w,v)x = -R(v,w)x$... which is the same as $R$ being a 2-form with values in End(E)
x is the thing you plug into the endomorphism R(v,w); R(v,w)x is what you get out
17:45
Oh nice
and indeed, if you take $E = TM$, and $d_A$ the Levi-Civita connection, $F_A$ is the Riemann curvature tensor!
@MikeMiller Speaking of, that conservative fields are irrotational follows from the fact that mixed partials are equal for C^2 functions, assuming the other half of (1). So problem (2) is done.
That's quite awesome
@BalarkaSen: Correct. Any other progress?
I was gonna start working through everything we did on curvature in my course tomorrow; this will surely help put things in perspective.
17:47
@iwriteonbananas: A couple more quick things
1) Connections with $F_A = 0$ are called flat connections. On a Riemannian 4-manifold, I can define a Hodge star $\Omega^2(E) \to \Omega^2(E)$. It's also interesting to study anti-self-dual connections, meaning $*F_A = -F_A$. But that's a topic for another day.
@MikeMiller I think I have made some on the other half of (1). I'll think about it more carefully after dinner.
(The cohomologies you get from flat connections are mildly valuable but it's not really worth dwelling on. They're mainly good at telling you about flat connections.)
@MikeMiller Ok, sure
17:51
2) Given an automorphism $g$ of the bundle $E$, this induces a pushforward of the connection which I'll write as $A$ out of laziness, roughly given by $g A g^{-1} + g^{-1} dg$
this is a pretty darn interesting form for an automorphism to take - not just conjugation, but this weird extra action
(Do not worry about what the formula means too much)
Hmm, ok, I find 2) hard to parse
but in any case, it's usually pretty common to study connections modulo identifications by these automorphisms. That's because many equations that invoke them - the flatness equation $F_A = 0$, or the ASD equation $*F_A = -F_A$ - are preserved under automorphisms, meaning $F_{g(A)} = 0$ and $*F_{g(A)} = -F_{g(A)}$
@iwriteonbananas: The formula doesn't matter, just that it's weird-looking. It's more to the point that given an isomorphism of bundles (in particular, iso with yourself) you can always push the connection on the first bundle forward, through the iso, to the second
These autos are called gauge transformations, and if there's a gauge transformation taking one connection to another, they're called gauge equivalent
Yeah, right.
Ah, ok.
Now consider the subset of connections (Which you could, without much harm, topologize) and the subspace of flat connections. Mod out by gauge transformations.
You get a topological space.
What is this space? Well, that's sort of hard to answer. What's easier to answer is: what is the disjoint union of these spaces over all $G$-bundles $E$? (Where $G = SO(n)$ or something, say, to recover oriented real vector bundles of rank $n$)
Fact: $\text{Flat}(M,G)/\text{Gauge}$ - the disjoint union of these over all $G$-bundles over $M$ - is homeomorphic to $\text{Hom}(\pi_1 M, G)/\text{conjugacy}$
we've taken a very differential geometric object and found it's the same as a very representation-theoretic object.
Holy whack, that's hard to fathom
17:57
This fact led to a LOT of 3- and 4-manifold topology
this fact also causes me much consternation because those spaces kinda blow. usually very singular.
hehe, right.
there's this thing called the Casson invariant, obtained representation-theoretically... the idea is that $\text{Hom}(\pi_1 M, G)$ is actually obtained as the intersection of two subsets of $\text{Hom}(\pi_1 \Sigma_g, G)$ each isomorphic to $\text{Hom}(F_g, G)$
now one takes $G = SU(2)$ and says "OK, so they don't intersect well, let's perturb them until they do. That is, let's take an intersection number of these subvarieties."
(M here is an oriented 3-manifold. Actually I also demand that $H_1(M) = 0$ but don't worry about that.)
What's $\Sigma_g$ and $F_g$?
surface of genus g; free group on g letters
Oh, right
18:02
this comes from a heegaard splitting
one of my favorite papers takes this great invariant and says "Well, since this is the same as flat connections mod gauge, which are the critical points of the chern-simons functional, this invariant should really come from gauge theory"
And hence Taubes' "Casson's invariant and gauge theory was born"; and instanton Floer homology was not far off.
speaking of Taubes, I like his differential geometry book a lot
Does it cover the stuff I'm doing right now?
Yes, but it will end up less focused on Riemannian and more focused on general connections, since those are essential in gauge theory and he is a gauge theorist
It still has quite a lot of geometry in it.
Cool, I'll check it out. I find it useful to draw from multiple sources.
18:06
me too
when multiple sources exist at least
Luckily I have yet to run into the problem that there don't exist multiple sources
Actually, not true. Lück is the only source for L2 invariants lol
right
I don't really know your tastes really well. what are you into?
are you an undergrad?
Anyways, I appreciate the lecture. Gives me a fun outlook.
well, when you want to hear about gauge theory, you're always free to ask
@MikeMiller Yeah, I'm an undergrad. First and foremost, I enjoy algebraic topology. Diffgeo and L2 invariants is fun too.
I'm doing a seminar presentation on either cohomology operations or homotopy groups of spheres next semester, and I'll probably do my undergrad thesis on a topic related to that.
18:23
@iwriteonbananas: Maybe you can work to understand the recent paper about $S^{61}$.
So next year is your last?
@MikeMiller Indeed. What paper about $S^{61}$ are you referring to?
The only one.
They calculate that $\pi_{61}^{st}/J=0$, hence by classical results that the 61-sphere has a unique smooth stucture.
Oh, this must be it arxiv.org/abs/1601.02184
Pretty funny result
18:28
Not an isolated theorem
this is the last piece in the poincare conjecture puzzle in odd dimensions.
see here for further discussion
19:02
@DanielFischer, what is the difference between scanf("%d",&A[i]) and scanf("%d",A+i) ??
which is better?
@dREaM same
the computer does the same thing for both?
the pointer is actually at A[0], whether u order the processor to move i steps then addressing the variable, or addressing before moving i steps , same thing
but
between these two loops
for i=0->n A[i]
for i=0->n A=A+1 ;*A
second is faster
Which is a perpendicular vector to the tangent developable of a unit-speed curve γ?
so scanf("%d",A+i) is slightly faster=
?
19:07
@dREaM i wouldnt claim something beyond my knowledge, i see those are same
ok, thanks a lot
"slightly" i dunno exactly
u welcom
@dREaM Depends. What is A, a pointer or an array? If it's a pointer, both are the same, if it's an array, they are different.
I declared A as an array, int A[100] for example.
19:15
@dREaM Ah, sorry, they are equivalent nevertheless, confused some things.
oh, ok, thank you very much.
@BalarkaSen: So why are conservative vector fields the gradient of a function?
But if the compiler isn't completely brain-dead, both ways give the same machine code, @dREaM, no performance difference.
@DanielFischer u were assuming the <array> c++ structure ?
@MikeMiller Right, I think I have an idea. If $X : U \to \Bbb R^2$ is the conservative field, then $\int_\gamma X$ is independent of the $\gamma$ we choose as long as we fix the endpoints. Thus, choose $\gamma$ so that $\gamma(0) = 0$ (assuming $U$ contains $0$ WLOG) and $\gamma(1) = x \in U$ for some $x$.
I think $\int_\gamma X : U \to \Bbb R$ is the desired function the gradient of which is $X$.
19:19
@Idle001 No, I do only sane languages, so no C++. But I was confused and thought that for an array you'd add i times the size of the array (confuzzled with &A + i).
Well, one has to do this on each path-component, but otherwise correct.
How would you prove this?
@DanielFischer i would recommend dealing with c++ structures in case of huge arrays, their research integrated methods, value-accessing and sorting all optimised.
@Idle001 Heh, C++ is a pretty powerful and versatile language. Unfortunately, it's mind-bogglingly ugly, and all design decisions were to use the worst possible syntax.
Well, each coordinate of $\nabla \int_\gamma X : U \to \Bbb R^n$ is $D_{e_i} \int_\gamma X$. This is $\lim_{t \to 0} 1/t \int_{\gamma_i} X$ where $\gamma_i$ is the image of $\gamma|_{[x, x + te_i]}$, right? $e_i$ is the standard $i$-th basis vector. Once I parametrize that, it seems to boil down to derivative of $\int_0^t X(x + se_i) e_i ds$ with respect to $t$ at $0$ by chain rule. Which, by FTC, is the same as $X(x) e_i$.
Good answer: pick a local form for the paths (ie, straight lines) that makes the derivarive easy to compute.
19:28
Well, actually, I missed a subtlety there. For sufficiently small $t$, I can pick $\gamma|_{[x, x+te_i]}$ to be straightlines.
This is because $U$ is open, and there is a ball around $x$ contained in $U$. A ball is convex so we're done.
That's fine.
@MikeMiller Right.
So can you find an irrotational, not conservative, field on the pinctured plane?
@DanielFischer i know what u mean, and any language which is oo is like this, im still half the way exploing its ambiguous corners
Not sure. But that reminds me, I was going to ask whether the normalized version of the field you mentioned, i.e., $X(x, y) = (-y, x)$ (which is well defined on the R^2 - 0), is conservative.
19:32
What's the normalized version?
The vectors of $X$ get larger in magnitude as you go father away from origin. What if you normalize so that each vector has magnitude $1$?
Obviously not continuous on R^2, because of the wonkiness at origin. But well defined on R^2 - 0.
In formulas, I mean $X(\vec{x}) = 1/\|\vec{x}\| (-y, x)$.
Well, whether that's irrotational or conservative seem like good questions for you to answer.
Intuition says it's not irrotational. But not sure about conservative. I'll check it, give me a minute.
Well, you know conservative implies irrotational, so if you find it's not irrotational...
It'd have to be non-conservative, yeah.
19:38
@MikeMiller You know, I first misread, "conservative implies irrational" ;)
@DanielF: Also fairly easy to prove.
@Balarka so?
I'm a bit confused. I think I am messing baby calculus.
It says $X$ is irrotational.
:)
The infinitesimal "twisiness" of $(-y,x)$ comes from the fact that it's increasing on radial lines. When you stop that, it stops twisting.
That's weird.
So is it conservative?
19:55
I dunno. Give me a minute to check.
I would like to discuss something in algebraic coding theory
maybe I should post it on main
I have something I don't understand
0
Q: Parity check matrix intuition

L33terI am currently learning algebraic coding theory. There is something I would like to understand, so according to my book the way we generate this parity check matrix is that we pick some matrix A and based on this matrix we generate the parity check matrix H as follows H = (A | I). They state tha...

@DanielFischer haha
@MikeMiller Sorry, I was away.
Er, wait a second, I think I just computed things with $X(\vec{x}) = 1/\|\vec{x}\|^2 (-y, x)$, not $X(\vec{x}) = 1/\|\vec{x}\| (-y, x)$. The latter is actually not irrotational.
I am confused. Why does vectors increasing in magnitude as it comes closer to origin make the field irrotational, but fixed length makes it non-irrotational, both being twisty?
The geometric picture is not clear.
20:16
what are you doing @BalarkaSen?
this looks like vector calc
@L33ter Multivariable calculus, probably. Who cares? :D
As long as the exercises are interesting...
@Balarka: It's the first one. And Eh, I'm going off drawings, not much rigor here.
The physicists have a better understanding of the geometry of irrotational fields. I just use them.
You still have not told me if it's conservative
it will be conservative if have the integral along a closed path being zero
20:23
@MikeMiller Yeah, it's not conservative.
I don't think in this case it will be conservative
If I go around the unit circle, it's $2\pi$.
you can actually just see it from the formula
interesting stuff
20:24
So I guess this thing represents the first de Rham cohomology of $\Bbb R^2 - 0$ or something?
Now... Can you prove that if an irrotational vector field integrates to 0 along the unit circle, it's conservative?
what is de Rham coholomogy
@MikeMiller If a vector field integrates to $0$ along a closed loop it's conservative. I can prove it.
Along a closed loop?
i.e., if $X : U \to \Bbb R^2$ is a vector field, $\int_\gamma X = 0$ for any $\gamma$ a closed curve ($\gamma(0) = \gamma(1)$), then $X$ is conservative.
20:26
Is anyone here participating in the facebook hacker cup?
Ok, so now you mean over every closed curve. I just said the circle.
Oh, I see what you mean.
Erp. I'll have to think.
I presume the vector field is on some open subset containing the unit circle?
We're still in the punctured plane.
Ah, ok.
It's not obvious to me how to do it. I don't have Green, because domain is not simply connected.
Don't forget I assumed the vector field was already irrotational.
20:37
I'll ponder a bit more.
@DanielFischer Hi, about your construction of $f$, how did you get that $f$ is zero on the diagonal ? I got the fact this $f$ symmetric.
Take a basis $B = \{b_1,b_2,\dotsc\}$ and define $f(b_1,b_1,b_2) = 1,\; f(b_1,b_2,b_2) = -1$ (and correspondingly for the permutations to preserve symmetry), and $f(u,v,w) = 0$ for all combinations of basis vectors that involve any other than $b_1$ or $b_2$, and of course $f(b_i,b_i,b_i) = 0$ for $i\in \{1,2\}$. Then extend $f$ to a trilinear map. Check that $f$ is symmetric and $f(x,x,x) = 0$ for all $x$, but $f\not\equiv 0$.
Does someone of you have an idea about my question:
0
Q: The parameter curves are asymptotic curves

Mary StarI am looking at the following exercise: Let $p$ be a hyperbolic point of a surface $S$. Show that there is a patch of $S$ containing $p$ whose parameter curves are asymptotic curves. Show that the second fundamental form of such a patch is of the form $2Mdudv$. $$$$ I have done the foll...

?
21:05
@JeSuis Oops, it doesn't, sorry :( With $x = \alpha b_1 + \beta b_2 + y$, we are left with $3\alpha\beta(\alpha-\beta)$, which usually is not $0$.
It works over $\mathbb{F}_2$, but not over general fields.
Hey can anyone help me prove that e^(1/x) is not uniformly continuous in (0,inf)?
@Balarka: My phone will die soon. Feel free to ping with questions or answers.
Ok. I don't have ideas on how to solve this one.
So probably it'll take some time to get some ideas.
@Balarka: Green's theorem doesn't just tell you that integrals of irrotational fields are zero in the plane. It tells you that the integrals of irrotational fields only depends on the homotopy class of the loop.
Oh, I guess.
Then the rest follows pretty easily. The only loops in R^2 - 0 which do not bound disk are upto homotopy the ones going circles around the origin. Clearly if the integral is 0 for the loop going once, it's 0 for all of them.
21:21
:)
:( Unhappy about not realizing that earlier.
@JeSuis But from that mistake we learn something. In dimension $\leqslant 1$, we already know $f = 0$, so consider dimension $\geqslant 2$. Suppose the characteristic is $\neq 3$. Taking two linearly independent vectors $b_1,b_2$, we must have $f(x,x,x) = 0$ for all $x = \alpha b_1 + \beta b_2$. Using $\alpha = \beta = 1$ we find $f(b_1,b_1,b_2) = - f(b_1,b_2,b_2)$, and with the above we then get $3\alpha\beta(\alpha - \beta)f(b_1,b_1,b_2) = 0$ for all $\alpha,\beta$.
If there are two different nonzero $\alpha,\beta$, we can choose the coefficients so that $3\alpha\beta(\alpha-\beta) \neq 0$, which forces $f(b_1,b_1,b_2) = 0$. Dimension $2$ is thus done. For dimension $\geqslant 3$, this shows that $f(e_i,e_j,e_k) \neq 0$ is only possible when all three basis vectors are different. Then looking an $\alpha e_i + \beta e_j + \gamma e_k$ gives us $6\alpha\beta\gamma f(e_i,e_j,e_k) = 0$ for all $\alpha,\beta,\gamma$.
If the characteristic of the field is also different from $2$, we have $6 \neq 0$, and hence we must have $f(e_i,e_j,e_k) = 0$. So whenever the characteristic of the field is neither $2$ nor $3$, $f$ must be $0$. As seen above, in characteristic $2$ there can be a nonzero such $f$, and also in characteristic $3$.
Interesting how $\pi_1$ comes up from this.
But I shouldn't be excited by subsets of $\Bbb R^2$, because of winding numbers. If there is a generalization to subsets of $\Bbb R^n$, then I guess it'd be rather interesting.
@aaadddaaa How does it behave when $x$ tends to $0$?
@BalarkaSen: Well, the issue is that the notion of "curl" is harder to write down.
Anyway, you just proved that $H^1_{dR}(\Bbb R^2 \setminus \{0\}) \cong \Bbb R$, or more precisely, \cong $\text{Hom}(\Bbb Z,\Bbb R)$.
21:29
@MikeMiller I can believe that. I don't even know what curl means in $\Bbb R^2$.
In general it is reasonably easy to prove that $H^1_{dR}(M) \cong \text{Hom}(\pi_1(M),\Bbb R)$. The proof is not that far off from what you wrote!
Indeed the only hard part is to find a form realizing any given homomorphism.
Oh, I guess that makes sense. Covectors are precisely the 1-forms.
You'll learn all of this soon enough. Here's some geometry you might not learn from Ted's book.
(Which, BTW, get back to work :D )
Let's rewrite everything as $fdx + gdy$. The irrotational equation (now called being 'closed') is $f_y = g_x$. Students often ask me why we don't talk about $f_x$, too.
Well, there's a pretty natural equation coming out of geometry: $f_x = -g_y$. Putting these two eqns together, does this remind you of anything?
Cauchy Riemann equations, I think.
I say that a form is coclosed if it satisfies that equations. And yes.
It's just slightly off. I've swapped some signs. Indeed $f-ig$ is holomorphic iff $fdx+gdy$ is closed and coclosed - which are the so-called "harmonic forms".
21:34
@DanielFischer it goes to infinity
Now, fact (do not try to prove this): In every cohomology class, there is a harmonic representative. This means that I can add an exact form ($df$ for some $f$) to get a harmonic form.
Ah, ok.
I wonder what that means in the singular/simplicial context. If there is even an analogous version.
Wtf does that even mean
@aaadddaaa And can a uniformly continuous function do that?
What is "that"
21:35
@MikeMiller "What's the correct analogue for that fact for singular cohomology?"
@DanielFischer guess not,but doesn't really know how to show it as a proof
@aaadddaaa Guessed right, it can't. As for the proof, look at what the definition of uniform continuity is. What is it?
@BalarkaSen: Of what fact?
for every ε>0 exist δ>0 so that for any |x-y|<δ |f(x)-f(y)|<ε
@MikeMiller Of the harmonic form fact you mentioned.
21:39
I don't see why you would think there would be one. I haven't said anything algebraic.
It is a natural question to ask: If $f-ig$ is holomorphic, is there a harmonic function $w$ such that $w_x = f$, $w_y = g$? (You can verify that if this is true, $w$ is harmonic, meaning $w_{xx} + w_{yy} = 0$. Using the above fact about cohomology classes, we know that if we're simply connected, every closed form is exact; in particular, $fdx+gdy$ is. This answers the above in the affirmative.
But if we're not simply connected, picking some harmonic representative of a non-exact but closed cohomology class, we have a form $fdx+gdy$ such that $f-ig$ is holomorphic, but the form is not closed. So there is not always such a $w$.
@aaadddaaa Okay. Now fix an $\varepsilon$, say $\varepsilon = 1$. So there is a $\delta > 0$ such that $\lvert x-y\rvert < \delta \implies \lvert f(x) - f(y)\rvert = 1$. Can you see how that $\delta$ shows that $f$ must remain bounded as $x \to 0$?
I guess there isn't any analogue. The motivation is that whenever I hear something in de Rham cohomology which looks vaguely similar, I try listing it down. E.g., analogue for integration of forms is the pairing $H^k(M) \times H_k(M) \to R$ obtained by letting a cochain eat a simplex. Stokes theorem is that this pairing satisfy $\langle \sigma, \partial \varphi\rangle = \langle \partial \sigma, \varphi\rangle$.
Well, I still haven't said anything special. I could, but I haven't.
@MikeMiller Interesting. Please continue.
Given a closed smooth Riemannian manifold $M$, I can still define harmonic forms. (I need the Riemannian structure.) These are forms that are both closed and coclosed. In this context it is not hard to see that harmonic forms are exact iff they're zero.
In other words, calling the space of harmonic forms (I have not modded out by anything!) $\mathcal H^k(M)$, there is an injection $\mathcal H^k(M) \to H^k_{dR}(M)$ given by passing to cohomology classes.
21:46
What does exact mean again?
It is $d\omega$ for some form $\omega$.
It is the "conservative" of before, just for forms in arbitrary rank,
Ah, ok.
@MikeMiller Very cool.
Now the previous (hard! this is the hard part of everything I'm doing here!) statement, that every cohomology class has a harmonic representative, says that map is an isomorphism.
Oh, true.
This is an algebraic fact, now. I'm saying there's a special set of classes that you pick out that represent the cohomology.
AKA, you can find the homology at the chain level, without passing to quotients.
This has some advantages. When you learn the setup, it immediately implies Poincare duality. It slightly less immediately implies that the cohomology groups are finite-dimensional. It generalizes wildly to situations where you don't just get these facts from algebraic topology.
21:50
I am not sure why you're calling this an algebraic fact. You mean it's not strictly restricted to the setting of forms over Riemannian manifolds?
No... I mean it's a fact about the algebra of differential forms
That I can canonically pick out a special subspace that represents cohomology, instead of having to take kernels and quotient by image etc
Ah, ok.
@MikeMiller This is fun.
That is special. I know of no way to do this for the singular chain complex (other than for $H_n(M)$).
Aw. Too bad.
That's what I was hoping for.
No, not too bad. It tells you that Riemannian geometry can help you with something more topologically flavored.
If there was nothing new or helpful about forms there would be no value to them.
The other thing to note is that $\mathcal H^k(M)$ depends on the Riemannian structure. Obviously they'll be isomorphic, since it's isomorphic to de Rham cohomology which is an invariant of the underlying smooth manifold. But the actual subspace of $\Omega^k(M)$ of harmonic forms will change.
21:53
I guess. This is interesting though. It seems to mean that differential forms are a lot more than just a geometric analogue for singular cochains over smooth manifolds.
Yes, differential forms are geometry
@MikeMiller Right. I agree.
That you can extract topological data from them is exciting. But they are not a bit of topological data.
Actually, I think if you consider $\Omega^*(M)$ as a commutative differential graded algebra, its homotopy type (defined similarly to the homotopy type of a chain complex) determines the rational homotopy type of the underlying compact manifold
That is not really a fact about forms.
But I think if you want to do that with an arbitrary space you can't just use the singular cochain complex, I think you need to do your best to mimic forms.
This is still topology; there is a lot of geometry hidden in differential forms, especially given that most all of most any kind of geometry can be phrased in terms of forms.

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