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17:00
The interesting thing is that while there are additive inverses, thus normally one will expect collapse will occur. However because 0 is left absorbing, it mop up those problematic zero terms thus allowing the results to be consistent
@Secret did someone use mspaint to make this...
Nope I ues powerpoint
@Adeek It may be helpful to also share the theorem/proposition this is a corollary of.
please use LaTeX :(
@Adeek They're proving that there's no proper normal subgroup of $A_5$. Is there anything particular you're having trouble with?
17:01
And, well, don't they just prove that a proper normal subgroup does not exist in that proof?
That's literally the definition of simple group, no?
yeah I don't understand how this proves it @BalarkaSen
They give all the options for $|N|-1$ where $N$ is a proper normal subgroup
how do I solve $\int \frac{x}{x}$?
or some function over a function
@Adeek He's getting obstruction from the class equation. Please be particular about what you're having trouble with.
@BalarkaSen so we are proving that there are no normal subgroups of $A_5$ then we got the divisors of 60. But what is the other things ? what are 1,2,3,4,5,9,11,14,19,29 ?
17:04
how does one read sums that have not a clear end?
Hello could someone help me with 1/(x sin(x))-1/x^2 when x goes to 0 without using l'hospital's rule
-> "This message is too long." Fine I will shut up, bleh
I agree that a normal subgroup is union of conjugacy classes.
@Adeek The possible orders of the normal subgroup, except the identity.
ok I see but then why this doesn't happen ?
how do we know that ?
17:06
What are the size of the conjugacy classes of A5?
ohh I see
I see the class formula for $A_5 = 1 + 15 + 20 + 12 + 12$
we can't get any of the normal subgroups from the conjugacy classes.
@heather x/x=1 has antiderivative x+C. there is no general rule for integrating f(x)/g(x).
@Null what do you mean?
oh ok I understand that is pretty cool
17:08
oh, okay @arctictern
@Adeek Yes. You can't sum 1, 15, 20, 12, 12 to anything that divides 60 except 1 and 60 itself.
That's the whole point
yes]
Hi @Ted
Hi @Balarka, Karim, @heather, Tern ...
hi @TedShifrin
17:12
@TedShifrin, hello
@Ted hi
Salut, @Astyx
Tu parles Français couramment ? @Ted
Oui, @Astyx ... au moins, je parlais couramment il y a longtemps :P
Cool ! :)
17:14
@arctictern how would you read $\sum ab+cd+(xy)^2$ ?
@Null: What does that even mean?
Is $\sum ab+cd+(xy)^2$ something you actually saw somewhere?
Notation should either be unambiguous, or its meaning should be clear from context.
Sum over what?
@TedShifrin currently working on your exercises
LOL @meow ... And hating me, I'm sure :P
17:16
a tiny bit, maybe ;)
Section 2 is very long with lots of interesting exercises (including some introductory algebraic geometry stuff)
I'm probably overthinking some of these, but AFAIK the proofs are right.
@TedShifrin sum over what is actually uninteresting. i meant where does the sum end. at ab or at $(xy)^2$. @arctictern ok thanks
@TedShifrin, which would you say comes first: multivariable or vector calculus?
well, it's ok, @meow — you join generations of students who've hated me :)
17:16
@heather multivariable calculus
@meow-mix, okay, thanks
@heather: to me it's the same thing ... sometimes colleges teach a vector calculus class for engineers.
@Null your question still makes no sense.
ask something that makes sense instead
$\sum_{i=1}^{n}x_iy_i+x_{n+1}^2y_{n+1}^2$
in the above case its clear
since n+1 doesnt belong to the sum
17:17
Which means that my question is totally a propos.
i just wondered what if it is not clear, that's all ;)
@TedShifrin $\sum_{i=1}^{n}a_i+b_i=(\sum_{i=1}^{n}a_i)+b_i$ ?
That doesn't make sense, so no
An other question is the following:
Let $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ be a real sequence and let $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ a sequence in the set of limit points of $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$, $L(a_n)$.
There is also a $a_0\in \mathbb{R}$ with $a_n\rightarrow a_0$ for $n\rightarrow \infty$.

I want to show that then $a_0\in L(a_n)$.

But isn't this obvious, since $a_0$ is the limit of $a_n$ ?
If you are indexing over both $a$ and $b$, both are part of the sum
$i$ the index of summation, so obviously $b_i$ is included in the sum
If you wrote $\sum\limits_{i=1}^n a_i+3$, then I would agree it's ambiguous.
And I would insist on parentheses if I meant the $3$ to be inside the sum.
17:21
@MaryStar Not necessarily
ah ok, so in such a case a small note would be helpful?
(or paranthesis)
@Mary: Don't you mean for $(b_i)$ to be a sequence in the set of limit points? You can't reuse the same letter.
@Null: 95% of people would say $\sum a_i + 3$ is unambiguously $(\sum a_i)+3$.
If you intend $\sum (a_i+3)$, then don't write any notes; use parentheses, as mathematics intends you to.
@MaryStar If you have not studied topology yet, I guess you would need to do it with $\epsilon$
@Mary: I really do not understand the question because you have used $(a_n)$ with two different meanings.
@Ted She wants to show the set of limit points of a sequence is closed I think
17:25
Well, most likely. :) But it's important to write stuff that makes sense, first of all :)
Very true :)
That's one of the hardest things for people learning mathematics. I speak from 40+ years of experience on this one.
@TedShifrin "I have a topology and a Morse function on it. What is the second homotopy group of the limit set?"
LOL
Whom are you quoting?
None particularly. Perhaps me from 3 years ago.
17:27
So I can say it's ununderstandable garbage?
@MaryStar A first step would be to show that a is a limit point iff $\forall N \in \Bbb N, \forall \epsilon \gt 0, \exists n\ge N, |a_n - a| \lt\epsilon$
Hi @Alessandro !
That's false, @Astyx.
Hi! @Ted
@TedShifrin Yeah, feel free to :P
Yes, but I didn't give the definition of the limit of the sequence, did I ?
17:30
hi chat
Oh, I apologize. I hate quantifier symbols and didn't read them correctly.
@Semiclassical, hello
@Ted No problem, I perfectly understand you :p
@TedShifrin There is a seminar next week about hodge theory
it seems interesting
It'll probably be pretty sophisticated, Karim.
hi @Semiclassic
17:32
Main thing I know about Hodge stuff (beyond the hodge star) is the notion of a Hodge decomposition
@Astyx: Isn't that unnecessarily complicated, though?
But I wouldn't say I know that particularly well
I went to one which proved the Hodge theorem. Didn't understand much except the theorem statement.
yeah I will attend but probably not understand anything but just go get an idea of high level math
Hard to do the Hodge Theorem without lots of analysis, @Balarka.
17:33
@Ted If you haven't studied topology I don't see how else you'd proceed
@BalarkaSen yeah that is me in most of grad seminar talks
@TedShifrin Yeah... Sobolev spaces and elliptic operators everywhere....
Can't you leave out the $N$? For every $\epsilon>0$, there is some $n$ with $|a_n-a|<\epsilon$?
Cool stuff, though, @Balarka.
That's not sufficient to construct a subsequence converging to $a$
Seems like it. Hopefully I'll get to know some one day. Not today though.
17:34
It seems not to be, but it is :)
You don't have equivalence anymore
But a limit point is not defined in terms of convergent subsequences, is it?
I think it is ? We don't call them limit points in french so I'm not sure
Ted is right, I think. Limit points are things around which stuff accumulates.
So having at least one $a_i$ in an arbitrarily small nbhd suffices.
a is a limit point iff there exists an extraction $\phi : \Bbb N \to \Bbb N$ such that $a_{\phi(n)} \to a$
17:36
But we can, in the case of a sequence, construct a subsequence converging thereto.
(Working in a metric space here.)
That's not the definition I learned/taught, @Astyx. But we can prove it's equivalent in a metric space.
what does $a<<b$ mean?
Agreed.
a is much smaller than b
There must, in fact, be infinitely many points in the $\epsilon$ neighborhood, and so we can choose one with as large an index as we need.
@Astyx thanks
17:38
Yep. That fails in nonmetric worlds though.
@Ted since you know french : fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valeur_d'adh%C3%A9rence :)
So yeah you'd be right
@Astyx @TedShifrin There were a typo... The statement should be as follows:
Let $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ be a real sequence and let $(b_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$ a sequence in the set of limit points of $(a_n)_{n=1}^{\infty}$, $L(a_n)$.

There is also a $b_0\in \mathbb{R}$ with $b_n\rightarrow b_0$ for $n\rightarrow \infty$.

I want to show that then $b_0\in L(a_n)$.
Thanks, @MaryStar :)
This is now a good thing to prove :)
@Ted so what I said would be necessary if we are in a metric space
@Astyx What you said would be equivalent to what Ted said if we are in a metric space. Not "necessary".
17:43
@BalarkaSen Yes, I meant that the quantified line I gave would be necessary for $a$ to be a limit point in a metric space
You just need to know that the sequence is not effectively constant, as, at least for me, when you define a limit point $a$ you must have points $x$ from the set, $x\ne a$, in arbitrarily neighborhoods of $a$.
No, @Astyx. Modulo what I just said.
But your definition of point d'adhérence allows the sequence to be sitting at the limit point.
@Astyx an infimum is either the existing minimum or...? how do you find the infimum if no minimum exists?
Oh wait ... those two reformulations are not equivalent.
Wiki is wrong.
1) allows the subsequence to be constantly at the limit point. 2) will allow one to rule that out.
@Ted Okay I see
just a quick question about split extensions.
17:46
@Null It is the biggest minorant
@Astyx do all those terms only make sense in ordered sets?
@Ted so your definition of limit point would be what we call "un point d'accumulation" fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
Karim: I don't like using the same notation for that subgroup of $G$. I would introduce $H'\cong H$ with $H'\subset G$.
ok so I see that we can think of N as a subgroup of G by exact sequence. Then we say something is a split extension if we can think of H as a subgroup of G such that they intersect trivially ?
17:47
@Astyx: d'accord. But I'm still saying that 1) and 2) are not equivalent.
@Null I think so
Yes, @Null.
@Adeek it means there's a morphism $\psi: H \to G$ such that $p \circ \psi = id_H$
Could you maybe give me a hint how we could show it? @TedShifrin
just a sec I am trying to activate latex something wrong happened with my broweser
17:48
@Ted I fail to see why. (you do mean 1) and 2) of the first paragraph, right ?)
Here they are working with real sequences
I don't like your definition, @Adeek. But yes.
@Astyx: It's quite likely I'm being stooopid again. But in 1) you could take all $u_n=y$, whereas in 2) we're supposed to have infinitely many elements near $y$.
Yeah I agree notation is a bit weird
@Ted we have $|y-y|\lt \epsilon$ ? Or did I misunderstand you
@Mary: What is the definition of limit point you're working with? Start there.
@Astyx: Well, isn't $0<\epsilon$ for any $\epsilon>0$? :D
17:51
Exactly
@SteamyRoot yeah nice way to express it.
So in 2) the set would indeed de infinite
So in 1) a constant sequence $(u_n)$ would work. It violates 2), however.
That's the standard way to say it, @Adeek
@Ted Why does it violate 2) ?
17:51
DogAteMy!!
Hi! What's happening?
I see @BalarkaSen
Oh, it's a set of $n$ that's infinite, not a set of $u_n$. AGH. OK. We're ok.
Ok right, you scared me :p
The identification in your definition, @Adeek, would be the image of $\psi$.
17:52
What's happening is that Ted is being stooopid, DogAteMy.
yeah
hi @AkivaWeinberger
Okay so the issue is that "limit point" is not the english word for "valeur d'adhérence", as wikipedia suggests it
It should link "limit point" with "point d'accumulation"
In English we have both limit point and accumulation point.
So we're talking about limit points and split SESses?
But definitions are not universally consistent across all textbooks.
17:54
(What's the plural of SES)
DogAteMy, @MaryStar is trying to prove that the set of limit points of a real sequence is a closed set.
SESs
SES ?
short exact sequence
Ah thanks
And so what is an "accumulation point" in english ?
same as your point d'adhérence
I personally have never taught that term.
17:58
Argh
Very inconvenint terminology
d'accord
Anyway thanks for the info @TedShifrin @BalarkaSen
18:14
Something you might find humerous: satirev.org/harvard/…
(Also, my neighborhood is in national news! For the worst reasons.)
@TedShifrin I hope it doesn't bother you, but I was wondering if you knew something about the universal coverings of "surfaces of genus infinity with $n$ ends", for example with $n=2$ its an an open cylinder with a countable amount of "Torus holes".
they should be some sort of tiling of the poincare disk, but I can't find any literature on the internet or something
I imagine that there should be super pretty pictures, stuff that looks like this for example: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apeirogon#Apeirogons_in_hyperbolic_plane
We were discussing about these a few days ago.
yeah I know
(weeks)
I had searched and thought a bit about it since then, but not gotten anything new out of it
18:34
@TedShifrin We have that $b_n\in H(a_n)$ is a limit point of $(a_n)$ if every neighbourhood of $b_n$ contains at least one point of $(a_n)$ different from $b_n$ itself, right?
Someone help me on this please
0
Q: Orlicz-Funtion and $\Delta_2$ condition

VrouvrouI have that $\Phi$ is a $N-$function (or Orlicz function) if If i have that $$\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\int\Phi(|u_n|)dx =\int\Phi(|u|)dx$$ and $\Phi$ satisfy the $\Delta_2$ condition i.e., $$\Phi(2t)\leq C \Phi(t),~~\forall t\geq0$$ How to prove that $$\int \Phi(|u_n-u|)dx\rightarrow0$$ Than...

18:56
Could someone help me solve ln(1+1/x)=1/x
Is a set of points, a set of numbers?
Has anyone seen the terminology "fixed point of a filter" before? Google doesn't bring up anything and the author never defined it, my guess it's that it is an element of $\bigcap\limits_{F\in\mathcal{F}}F$ since the filter is fixed if this intersection is nonempty
Hi !
@user379685 Reduce::nsmet: This system cannot be solved with the methods available to Reduce. >>
1/x > ln(1+1/x) for all real x
(to see that, let u=1/x. then that's just u > ln(1+u) which follows from ln(1+u) being concave down and u being the tangent line of ln(1+u) at u=0)
19:08
@s.harp You should know that @MikeMiller was thinking about these also. I don't know if he's thought about it since then, though.
@Semiclassical Alternatively, that follows from $e^x\ge x+1$ for all $x$, my favorite inequality. (Sub in $x\mapsto1/x$, as you did.)
yeah, i was trying to remember the name of that
@MikeMiller I'm pretty certain I'd seen the talk quite a few times so I sort of ignored it.
Wait, @AkivaWeinberger was this the conversation I was also a part of?
Oh. Whoops. I forgot. Sorry
But yeah
I think so
ok, searching the chat for genus infinity does not return many resutls :=) (actually only the message I had just written and a joke that is funny)
(and now that one probably)
19:12
@s.harp We actually kept on talking for a while after you left, I think
@NaCl did you advance with your problem?
(Searching "apeirogon" should bring the conversation back up)
@Null not at all
There was one guy who answered me and his answer was essentially useless
So I was reading about the Jones polynomial in knot theory, and the introduction on how it was discovered is quite interesting (page 46 of this lovely set of notes)
(*knotes)
@NaCl mmh, tough luck. Do you have only this as an axcercise?
19:16
basically, yes
I solved all others
What was the problem? @NaCl
@Alessandro It's not a math problem
@NaCl i would implement it the way you would do without restrictions. or is it the task to do it without "datatype"/"exception"?
@Null We did not had datatype/exception in our lecture, so we are not allowed to use it
@NaCl I see..
19:19
I wish I knew knot theory. But there's so many things I wish I knew.
Essentially, the Jones polynomial is this miraculous and amazing object that was discovered by accident by someone who was working in a completely different area of math.
@BalarkaSen The set of notes I linked to above seem to be good
I think it has a physics background, IIRC?
(if not entirely typo-free)
@BalarkaSen ywhy exactly knot theory?
Yeah, I mean, I can go ahead and read something if I wanted to. But life and time are both cruel enough.
19:21
@Null 'Cause I mentioned it above
There's only time for differential geometry in life
2
@NaCl well, not to sound dumb, but did you compile your code? Does it what you want it does?
@NaCl do you even know what you want?
@Alessandro Not doing much of that either of late
@Null ...what are you trying to tell me?
It's like python, you write the code an then run the interpreter
@Null Chocolate
19:22
Yes, I always save the file I edited
@Balarka because you're doing other maths or because you're too busy to do any kind of maths?
@NaCl what is it you're trying to do ?
the latter. studying for exams is tiring enough that when i actually get some free time i spend time either being lazy, or looking at less mentally straining things
@Astyx do you know any functional programming language?
Yeah
19:26
I am not sure if this makes sense: $f~n~x~y :=f\;(n-1)\;(f\;n\;x\;(y-1))\;((f\;n\;x\;(y-1)) + y)$
@NaCl Oops I have to go and eat, I'll look at your problem afterwards ;)
@PVAL Fair enough. I hadn't.
Fun fact: ~ functions as a space in LaTeX
@Astyx my problem solved itself eventually, (the cauchy stuff)
it's ok
19:28
@AkivaWeinberger you learn something new everyday :)
@AkivaWeinberger It is still an open question whether the Jones polynomial detects the unknot.
@Null Cool
@MikeMiller I know (it's mentioned a few pages later)
But there are other things that we do know detect the unknot
which I think is pretty amazing
19:29
usually those are absurdly expensive and time-consuming; there are much better algorithms than 'calculate these invariants'
I'm not sure how an algorithm is different from an invariant in this case
In general I don't understand how people comes up with these combinatorial invariants, not that I have studied them in any level of depth
My question is: is induction overkill for the Cauchy-Schwarz-Inequality? I have read proofs without induction, and they seem more meaningful to me
@BalarkaSen The Jones polynomial, apparently, was discovered in connection to a completely unrelated field. So the answer to your question, I guess, is that people get really lucky
@AkivaWeinberger an algorithm doesn't spit out a number, or a group, or whatever
it just tells you the answer
19:31
Also the tricolorability may or may not have to do with the fundamental group? I haven't gotten to that bit yet
@MikeMiller If it spits out something in $\{\sf Yes,No\}$, it's still an invariant, no?
meh
technically correct but everybody working in the field will roll their eyes at you
@AkivaWeinberger huh, fair enough
It's a function whose domain is the set of diagrams and which is invariant under knot isotopy
I'd say an algorithm gives you one answer to one question. If you don't yet know the question things might get messy.
The question is, "Is this the unknot?".
19:36
in any case, computing the jones polynomial or khovanov homology or heegaard floer homology are almost always unnecessarily expensive operations if you want to check if it's the unknot
@Astyx I have edited my question... http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/2022192/limit-of-sequence
Is my idea correct so far?
OK
And we know non-expensive ways to do it?
@AkivaWeinberger maybe you can check if it's tricolorable in a non-expensive way.
tricolorability doesn't tell you if it's the unknot...
oh, the question is if it's the unknot, not if it's not the unknot. ok.
19:39
there are algorithms using what's called normal surface theory which are exponential time in principle but "usually" low degree polynomial time
@BalarkaSen You can - there's a linear algebra way
@MikeMiller Interesante
27
Q: What part is left unsolved in the Unknotting problem? (after results of Bar-Natan, Khovanov, Kronheimer and Mrowka)

Omri Kronheimer and Mrowka showed that the Khovanov homology detects the unknot. Bar-Natan showed a program to compute the Khovanov homology fast: there was no rigorous complexity analysis of the algorithm, but it is estimated by Bar-Natan that the algorithm runs in time proportional to the square ro...

I don't know if one can parameterize the knot and compute the curvature efficiently in a computational sense.
Then one can invoke the Fary-Milnor theorem.
What's that?
If total curvature of a knot is less than or equal to 4pi it's an unknot.
19:41
@AkivaWeinberger what is a good example for "non polynomial time"? something like: "it either stops eventually or not"?
again, that's not good enough
you can certainly make the unknot very curvy
Do you know the joke about knot theory?
I guess you do
me neither
it's knot theory! a ha ha
@BalarkaSen No, you don't understand me. It wouldn't solve the problem.
There are unknots with curvature greater than 4pi.
Ah, yes.
I'm dumb.
19:44
@Null Analysing generalized chess (on an $n\times n$ board) is exponential time, because games can get exponentially larger as the board's size increases
All the algorithms for unknot recognition are nontrivially complicated. So I wouldn't suggest coming up with one right now.
The best known algorithms for the Traveling Salesman Problem (and every NP-hard problem) are nonpolynomial @Null
@AkivaWeinberger but that fact alone doesn't prove that there isn't a polynomial one right?
I think the chess one is provably exponential
though I don't know the proof
I see
19:47
It takes exponential time to write out all the numbers from $1$ to $n!$.
…this is true
and polynomial time?
It was recently proven that determining whether a number is prime is polynomial time in the number of digits
@Null multiplying numbers
19:49
@DanielFischer I've seen in your answers that you know Lusin's theorem (measure theory). Is Lusin's theorem true for functions that may have infinite values ? Is it also true for functions with unbounded domain ?
@Null That can't take polynomial time (in $n$), because there are more than polynomially many numbers from $1$ to $n!$.
This was proven in a paper with the borderline ungrammatical title "PRIMES is in P"
I mean, it's grammatical, but it doesn't look like it
@AkivaWeinberger Wasn't this done by three students or something
Was it? I don't know
and polynomial time algorithms are expected to get a quicker solution than nonpolynomial algs?
19:52
Must have raised a few eyebrows
Would be amazing if true though
"For our thesis, we prove one of the hardest major unsolved problems in math"
It's true. A couple undergrads and a professor.
Also, recently was in 2002
@Null Generally, especially as $n$ gets large. Because, for any polynomial, once $n$ gets large enough, $e^n>{\rm polynomial}(n)$
Exponential time algorithms quickly take longer than the age of the universe to compute, is my understanding
Unless the exponential base is really small and we don't care about huge $n$
Let $\mathcal K$ be the space of smooth embeddings of $S^1$ into $S^3$ that are isotopic to the unknot. Then it's a theorem that there is a smooth deformation retraction of $\mathcal K$ onto the space of great circles in $S^3$ (aka, $SO(4)$). In principle, following this deformation retraction would give one a way of showing that something is the unknot, if it is (and if the "deformation retraction process" makes sense for all knots, just that it'll end up singular for the rest of them).
19:55
@AkivaWeinberger so for some m<n, it might be true that exp-algorithms do it faster or at least in the same time?
Unfortunately, nobody knows how to explicitly do this yet.
@Null Yeah, sure.
Definitely.
anyone here have texmaker on linux and is willing to provide some help?
@MikeMiller That's a neat fact.
Why are some people so crazy genius
19:56
@Krijn law of big numbers?
Reading up on Herbrand, who made contributions to mathematical logic and class field theory, and died at 23
i mean, give me a big enough population and there will to 100% be someone who is smart.
Yeah but it's unfair
@Null That's not quite how the law of large numbers works...
@Krijn i like Galois.
19:58
@Null Yeah, another one like that!
@MikeMiller well, it is, "unrigorous", i agree :P
Hey ! How can I prove that the set of polynomials of grade less than n is a subspace of R[x] ??
with gusto
@Krijn Misread that, thought you wrote "Why are some crazy people so genius"
19:59
@AkivaWeinberger Ted Kaczynski comes to mind

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