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17:00
@0celo7 You might find this Terry Tao blog post interesting: terrytao.wordpress.com/2007/06/25/…
> Thanks for the very nice discussion. I’ve been a fan of ultrafilters since learning about them in high school, although, not being in analysis, I haven’t particularly ever needed to use them.
High school???
lol
yeah, that's a bit crazy
@Adeek I'll go on a typo hunt after emailing my prof
There's probably a few
Hmm, I think I have figured out the thing I wanted to.
17:03
Howdy @Semiclassic, @Balarka, @0celo.
Hi @TedShifrin
oh, @ted, i sent you a ping re: my riemann surface
@TedShifrin Hi
so not as well-behaved as I'd thought
17:05
Yes, @Semiclassic, that $(x,y)\rightsquigarrow (x^2,y^2)$ factorization of the map should say that we have nodes at $(0,0)$ and $(\infty,\infty)$, I bet.
sounds right.
Hey @TedShifrin!!
But to adjust the genus formula you need to know the precise nature of the singularity. I'm pretty sure these are just nodes.
Heya @Danu, stranger.
it's also pretty easy to see that if you've got anything of the form $(x^2+y^2)^2=p(x,y)$ with $p(x,y)$ of degree 3 at most
Suppose I have a cobordism $B$ between two manifolds $M$ and $N$. Then $TM$ and $TM$ is stably $TB$ restricted to $M$ and $N$ respectively. That implies $TM$ and $TN$ have the same S-W classes (by using stability of the invariants, and then preservation of pullback), right?
17:06
I have a bunnnnch of questions, if you're up for it...
Sounds right, @Balarka.
I may or may not be able to help, @Danu, but I'm game for a few minutes.
Okay, I'll stay with something a bit smaller then
So consider the following:
then taking the projectivization with coordinates $[x:y:z]$ always gives singularities at $[1:\pm i:0]$
$H^2(X,\Bbb C)=(H^2(X,\Bbb Z)\otimes_{\Bbb Z}\Bbb R)\otimes_{\Bbb R}\Bbb C$.
@Semiclassic: That can't be right. It depends on $p(x,y)$.
17:09
that was a bit too quick, yes.
@Danu: Why not just tensor with $\Bbb C$ in one swell foop?
@TedShifrin Actually maybe that doesn't quite make sense. What does it even mean to say S-W classes of two vector bundles over different bases are the same?
i think it's true as long as $p(x,y)$ is a degree 2 polynomial in $x,y$
@TedShifrin Wait for it ;P
o.o
17:09
Anyways, replace the $2$'s by $1$'s, sorry.
But I am sure one can fix it a bit so it does make sense.
since then the projectivization will be $(x^2+y^2)^2=z^4 p(x/z,y/z)=z^2 P(x,y)$ with $P(x,y)$ homogenous of order 2
Thats okay for me. But now Huybrechts says "this show that $H^1(X,\Bbb Z)\to H^{0,1}(X)$ is injective with discrete image that generates $H^{0,1}(X)$."
@Balarka: What makes sense is S-W numbers (cup to get top classes and evaluate on fundamental class).
Why $H^{0,1}(X)$ (by the way, I have this decomposition because I'm working with compact Kahler manifolds)
17:10
That's wrong, @Danu.
Damnit
Sorry
Typo'd
Of course it has to be $\Bbb Z$
(it goes through $H^1(X,\Bbb C)$ though)
Yes, now I am starting to see what the title of the next chapter is about. (title is precisely "S-W numbers", and that's all I have read of the next chapter).
Ohhhh ... now it has a better shot. It's because $H^1(X,\Bbb Z)$ injects into $H^1(X,\mathscr O)$.
@Ted I think he wanted to figure this story out himself.
Ah
I see
17:12
I told him to calculate for surfaces. I don't know if he did.
oh
hi @TedShifrin
Hi Karim
@MikeMiller Tangent bundle of oriented surfaces are stably trivial, nope?
I asked you to do all surfaces.
Oh, hm.
17:13
So why does $H^1(X,\Bbb Z)$ generate $H^1(X,\mathcal O)$?
Think about rank and dimension, @Danu.
Remember what you know for compact Kähler (that needn't hold in general).
what I should do now is look at some of the other examples of Riemann surfaces (within the context of the given physics problem) and see if that's consistent
and see if they've got the same sort of structure
Degree 2 seems awfully restrictive, @Semiclassic.
it does, but it matches the example I had.
hence why I need to look up the other examples I've seen
Okey dokey. I'm still puzzled by my $x^2,y^2$ observation (which I realize needn't hold in general), but maybe I need to sit down and think more.
17:15
@TedShifrin Eh... $H^1(X,\mathcal O)=H^{0,1}(X)$ which is half dimension of $H^1(X,\Bbb C)$, as is $H^1(X,\Bbb Z)\otimes_{\Bbb Z}\Bbb R$ as a real vector space, since $H^1(X,\Bbb C)=\text{that}\otimes_{\Bbb R} \Bbb C$?
Good morning guys.
Right, @Danu.
I guess that's enough, because you then have an injection into same-dimensional space
Of maximal rank, @Danu.
What of maximal rank?
17:16
i mean, I think part of what's going on there is that if you write $(u,v)=(x^2,y^2)$ then $y(x)\,dx=\frac12 \sqrt{\frac{v}{u}}du$
You could include $\Bbb Z$ into $\Bbb C$ and the lattice wouldn't generate.
@Semiclassic: I was thinking merely about singularities, not about the differentials.
@Danu The lattice :)
@TedShifrin Ah, you mean a maximal rank injection?
Think about $\Bbb Z\hookrightarrow \Bbb C$ versus $\Bbb Z\oplus \Bbb Z\hookrightarrow\Bbb C$.
17:18
Yeah, I see what you mean. The image has not got full rank in the first case
I'm just struggling with how to word it
I worded it :P
Is "the image is of maximal rank" alright, or not? I'm not sure what noun to put before "of maximal rank" :P
lattice
= discrete subgroup
Question about a proof for the expectation operator: how do I prove |E(X)| ≤ E(|X|)?
@wowdavers: What inequality do you know about integrals involving absolute values? (If you're doing discrete random variables, then the hint is triangle inequality.)
17:22
I know -|X| ≤ X ≤ |X|, and consequently
E(-|X|) ≤ E(X) ≤ E(|X|)
You're almost there.
How do you show $|x|\le 3$?
Having a brain fart on the final step
|X| ≤ 3?
No, I'm just talking simple math. What does a mean to say a number has absolute value at most $3$?
Ah, it's between -3 and 3?
Righto.
17:27
OK @Ted I guess I'm okay with my understanding of this now. For my next question, you can choose between a "soft" (motivation) question or more technical stuff about the Albanese map.
I don't get to see the questions before I choose?
hah
So -E(X) ≤ |E(X)| ≤ E(X) ?
Right, @wowdavers.
@TedShifrin The latter is rather a chain of questions.
I'll ask the soft question first---probably more fun.
So I have this "Hard Lefschetz Theorem" in my book---but I don't really see (i) what it means (ii) (as a consequence) why I want it
17:28
@wowdavers: So I assume you realized $E(-X) = -E(X)$.
It gives me an isomorphism $L^{n-k}:H^k(X,\Bbb R)\to H^{2n-k}(X,\Bbb R)$
That's not right, @Danu, is it?
It is
In mathematics, group cohomology is a set of mathematical tools used to study groups using cohomology theory, a technique from algebraic topology. Analogous to group representations, group cohomology looks at the group actions of a group G in an associated G-module M to elucidate the properties of the group. By treating the G-module as a kind of topological space with elements of G n {\displaystyle G^{n}} representing n-simplices, topological properties of the space may be computed, such as the set...
O crap, incomprensible cohomology stuff. Better wait until much later before crunching through this
And it's weird, because I want to say I already have this from Poincare duality anyways :P
17:29
Oh, right.
How do I come to the conclusion that $|E(X)| \leq E(|X|)$?
@wowdavers: Because of what you said about $|x|\le 3$.
I mean from PD with universal coefficients (no torsion) I just get $H^k(X,F)\cong H^{2n-k}(X,F)$ for a field $F$ and a [nice] manifold of real dim $2n$
@Danu I think the map is important here, not just the fact that it's an isomorphism.
Well, two things, @Danu. (1) is what Balarka just said. That you get the isomorphism by repeatedly intersecting with hyperplanes.
17:31
@BalarkaSen But I haven't seen it being used at all :\
@Balarka Compute!
@TedShifrin I have no idea what that means---no geometric intuition at all for the Lefschetz operator.
Right, I have $ -E(X) \leq |E(X)| \leq E(X) $, but I don't have an absolute value sign inside any of the terms.
(2) You get the Lefschetz decomposition of cohomology into things coming from primitive cohomology.
@TedShifrin Okay, this has been useful in some things already.
17:31
You will see things later that tell you hypersurfaces (or more generally complete intersections) share certain levels of cohomology with that of their ambient spaces. This is very powerful and important.
@wowdavers: Stop and reread our earlier discussion.
Okay, so it's supposed to be kinda useless so far?
You have to start studying actual projective manifolds, @Danu. But for a submanifold of $\Bbb P^n$, Poincaré duality tells you that wedging with the Kähler form is (dual to) intersecting with a hyperplane in $\Bbb P^n$. VERY powerful.
Other question, perhaps a bit stupid-sounding: Why is the Lefschetz decomposition orthogonal? I was able to prove it "by hand" with some trickery in the case I actually encountered but it should be somehow easy to see. Huybrechts says it comes from a formula for $[L^m,\Lambda]$ but I don't see that
@MikeMiller Only way I can see how to do it is to look at the oriented double cover. Pullback of $w(S)$ is $1$ by the map on cohomology induced by the covering map... still pondering.
Oh. Something like $\text{im}{T^*} = (\ker T)^\perp$?
17:34
@Balarka That's worthless. It's a double cover. It's going to kill mod 2 cohomology.
No killing today.
Ah, true. Crap.
What do you know about $w_1$? What do you know about $w_2$?
Interesting. Someone just asked about Poincaré-Miranda (which I'd never heard of) and whether you can deduce Borsuk-Ulam from it. I suspect not. But look at that, @Balarka (and @MikeM if you care).
So $-E(|X|) \leq |E(X)| \leq E(X)$
17:37
You're missing absolute value on the right.
Trying to get some thinking done this morning.
Answering all these unrelated questions in here is exhausting me. It's time for a nap.
(Plus I'm taking Benadryl to mitigate some of the side-effects of the antibiotics. So it makes me sleepy.)
Sorry, bear with me
I have these two statements which I'm combining:

$-E(|X|) \leq E(X) \leq E(|X|)$
$-E(X) \leq |E(X)| \leq E(X)$
Is that correct so far?
No, @wowdavers. You have just the first line.
<3 @Ted you're a life-saver
17:39
Wiki seems to say it's equivalent to Brouwer fixed point theorem. I don't know the relation between B-T and Brouwer (I think it worked the opposite way, Brouwer is implied by B-U)
But, as you already said, by definition that says $|E(X)|\le E(|X|)$. Done.
Apparently Miranda proved the equivalence, @Balarka.
What's B-T? You mean B-U?
Alright, then where do I go from there?
Right, typo.
You go home, @wowdavers. That's what you wanted.
@TedShifrin Well, don't answer several unrelated questions at once :)
That's also a possible solution.
17:40
I truly don't think Brouwer can prove B-U, @Balarka.
Me neither.
$E(X) \leq E(|X|)$ ?
Sorry if this is frustrating :( Not quite seeing it
No, @wowdavers: $|E(X)|\le E(|X|)$.
Why? Where do the two terms come from? The left term comes from $-E(|X|) \leq E(X)$, yes?
Remember from our discussion of absolute value that we said this is equivalent to $$-E(|X|)\le E(X)\le E(|X|).$$
17:43
Where does the abs. value sign inside the right term come in from?
You said you got what I just typed by integrating $-|X|\le X\le |X|$.
Right
Then if you remember what absolute value means, we're done.
@Danu: Did you understand why wedging with Kähler is P.D. to intersecting with hyperplane?
I'm shocked Huybrechts hasn't told you this.
Great, thanks a lot!
Yippee @wowdavers. :)
17:46
Sorry for that frustration - I've got it now
@TedShifrin No
@TedShifrin No geometry over hurrr
F*** that, @Danu.
Work in $\Bbb P^n$. What do you know about the Kähler form?
I agree...
Anyways, I see that $\omega$ will be PD to a hypersurface
But do you know what generates cohomology $H^2(\Bbb P^n,\Bbb Z)$?
@TedShifrin Locally given by positive definite hermitian matrix blahblah
Osculates to order two
blahblah
@TedShifrin Yes, I know that
17:48
I'm doing Fubini-Study on $\Bbb P^n$.
Well... Not geometrically :P
You need to integrate the Kähler form over a linear $\Bbb P^1$ sitting in $\Bbb P^n$. What do you get? Everyone needs to do this at least four times.
I mean, I know $H^*(\Bbb P^n,\Bbb Z)$ is the (truncated) polynomial ring
@TedShifrin So the explicit expression for the Fubini-Study one?
@MikeMiller OK, how about I look at the map $f : S \to \Bbb P^2$ which squashes all but one $\Bbb P^2$ component? $w(S) = f^* w(\Bbb P^2) = f^*(1+\alpha+\alpha^2)$. I believe that is $1 + a + b$ where $a$ is the element of $H^1(K)$ which is the generator of the Z/2 factor and $b$ is generator of $H^2(K)$.
17:50
Okay, for $\Bbb P^1$ I know it gives $1$
$S$ is the Klein bottle. Sorry about that, just working out an example.
I'm going to say it does this always :P
Aha. Yes, by homology.
So that's the same number you get by intersecting with a hyperplane.
But it shouldn't be different for other surfaces anyway.
Right, because the (co)homology of $\Bbb P^n$ agrees with the lower ones in the lower degrees
@TedShifrin Intersecting what?
The linear $\Bbb P^1$?
17:51
We're talking just $\Bbb P^n$.
Yes, the linear $\Bbb P^1$.
With a transversal hyperplane
(also I have 0 visualization of geometry in $\Bbb P^n$)
So, inductively speaking, you can next deduce what wedging with $\omega^k$ does.
Should I be thinking about spheres, like for the real case? or not?
17:52
finally found an example in the literature which isn't (at first glance, anyways) equivalent to the Riemann surface I keep going on about
No, alg. geometers draw the cartesian plane, with a line completing a triangle, that line representing the line at infinity.
...wait, nope, still has same singularities.
oh well.
I think of $\Bbb P^n$ as $\Bbb C^n$, but the rest of $\Bbb P^{n-1}$ someplace I can't see
I cannot parse that sentence
And I can change perspective to see that hyperplane at infinity by changing charts
17:53
I draw it in there ... so the picture is a triangle with all its edges extending ...
(the case that's been studied in the literature corresponds to period-two resonances; what we were hoping to consider were period-3 instead)
@Danu: I'm pretty sure you'll find pictures in those notes I sent you.
@TedShifrin A triangle??
Oh, that picture---I've seen something like that before
Hang on. I'll draw it in Illustrator and paste it here.
Happy?

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