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05:00
@TheGreatDuck So you want to construct a system of axioms suchthat you can nuke this?
> "if and only if a function is constant does it have a derivative of 0 for all real numbers"
that is, you want nonconstant functions whoose derivative everywhere is zero?
but a function has to be defined at all of the elements in its domain
thats what i meant
@Null so you meant point 1 instead of point 2
yep, sorry
yes, that is the definition of a function, then.
@Secret um yeah... there are versions that still have a consistent system of calculus. It just changes the notion of antiderivative and derivative.
and a full set of understandable axioms would allow one to search for other alterable things that may produce intriguing results
I think of it like non-euclidean geometry
except instead of us thinking of it as geometry on a sphere
I think "could this other system do problems easier that we can convert back to the original problem"
for instance
that statement is fundamental in proving the following
"Any potential antiderivative must be continuous everywhere"
i could easily cook up examples where that is not true
honestly it would probably be better for me to define the axioms myself
but I know I'd probably end up doing something shoddy or contradicting
05:13
Well, initial analysis suggest if you nuke the axiom you mentioned above, (that is, using $f'=0$ for all $f \in \mathbb{C}(\mathbb{R})$), you pretty much nuked everything as when you go through the other axioms, and then remembering that 0 is a multiplicative absorber, then e.g. the chain rule and the addition law of derivatives will become zero for all $f$
@dhmo how do you think we should present the graphs I made
so the derivative function becomes "multiplication by zero" effectively speaking
@GFauxPas no idea
I mean, I could just dump all four graphs there like I did on your discussion page, but I need to convey to the viewer what it is we're looking at. I tried adding a title over the graph but it doesn't look good when I do that
@Secret chain rule only works for continuous functions. Also. I'm not saying it's 0 for all functions. Another possible negation would be the following:
"if and only if a function is piecewise-constant does it have a derivative of 0 for all real numbers"
the original axiom is now false
there exists some non-constant function whose derivative is 0
05:18
@GFauxPas then add it under the graph?
and it doesn't imply all functions have derivative of 0
because piecewise constant functions have no particular inverse by which to regain the identity function
there are other examples
the squaring function
periodic functions
etc.
So in your system, are ordinary constant functions $f=c$ are considered a subset of piecewise functions?
well yeah
constant function are piecewise-constant
by definition of piecewise constant
ok so basically in ordinary deriviatives $f'$ will be 0 except for the jumps, while in your systems, even the jumps will be zero?
DHMO might as well put on on the proofwiki page rather than on the image
so the graphs of $\operatorname{Arg}(W)$ and of $\operatorname{Arg}(\operatorname{Log})$ look very similar
05:35
is there a term for discontinuous everywhere?
So I decided to graph $|\operatorname{Arg}(W) - \operatorname{Arg}(\operatorname{Log})|$ to compare how similar they were
and weird stuff happens
@Secret that's an example of one particular negation but yes.
the integral is a bit more interesting
@Secret not all systems would have to use that axiom. Another axiom could be "if and only if a function is periodic does it have a derivative of 0 for all real numbers"
Nuking the integral as a kinda of "inverse" of the derivatives (except for a constant) means nuking the fundemental theorem of calculus. That will mean your integral will be something that is not lebniz integral nor a riemannian integral
(possibly not any type of integral with a known measure, (I am not very good a measures however)). I am not sure what happens when you do that, but that will surely be an interesting case given how most of out integrals rely on its relation with the derivative in order to be evaluated
well technically the antiderivative would still have a nice relation
we just wouldn't vary some constant c
it would be some function c(x)
i know in the piecewise-constant case that the actual integral pretty much always differs by some piecewise-constant function except in cases of divergence.
not 100% sure but I also have a strong feeling it's true for diff eqs. as well
i mean their solutions that is
not that that implies any means of actually finding the solution to a normal differential equation in regular calculus
that is arguably a much more difficult prospect
05:43
I thought of maybe calling these things non-Neutonian Calculus
Nuking (f+g)'=f'+g' will mean the lebniz product rule will be necessary if you want to recover some of the usual notions of derivative, unless you are happy to have that go to
but that's a bit contrived seeing as how many many men created calculus.
$||\operatorname{Arg}(\operatorname{Log}(z))| - |\operatorname{Arg}(W(z))||$
I guess they're not similar after all
@Secret not interested in nuking that rule. Only interested in nuking the one I mentioned. However, if the others prove fruitful in certain ways then by all means I would examine them.
oh it's late
I need to sleep
good night
05:47
another potential axiom that could be useful is:
if for all real numbers c' = 0 then (c*f)' = cf
less strong then the product rule
but the product rule could create a contradiction
(for instance, if the derivative of x^2 is 0 by the constant axiom)
then (xx) ' = 2xx'
however
this implies either x is 0 everywhere (false)
or x' is 0 everywhere
x is 0 everywhere i like :D
which is not supported since x cannot be expressed as f(x^2)
@Null To put it in context, me and secret are discussing the prospect of alternate calculus axioms.
yep
just found it funny ;)
@TheGreatDuck Well, consider c=1, then $c'=0$. Therefore by the cf axiom , (1f)'=1f=f, meaning all derivatives of f is itself
05:51
oops
I meant = cf'
if for all real numbers c' = 0 then (c*f)' = cf'
doesn't seem to imply that any falsehood or contradiction with the postulate I proposed
and doesn't seem explicitly provable.
that can be dervied using $1'=0$ and $(f+g)'=f'+g'$
Set g=0, f=cf. Then (cf+0)'=cf'+0'=cf'+0=cf'
granted, there's also the strong possibility and suspicion I have that alternate derivatives like this will act different depending on the expression of a function rather than the values of a function.
which may or may not be bad.
The periodic $f(x+a)'=0$ case I am still checking. IT seems interesting
yeah it does
i only recently learned of it
finding it's relation back to regular calculus is an intriguing prospect.
although that will mean fourier transforms and foruier series will nto be applicable to thse fucntions else their derivatives to be identically zero
that's not really a problem, because there are functions canot be handled by fourier series anyway
05:55
shrugs I don't know how far these things can go.
and I think their usefulness (while potentially analytical in some way) I believe will only extend to being usable in solving differential equations more efficiently.
Naively speaking, $f(x+a)'=0$ might be useful in checking whether a function contains an oscillatory component, but details I still need to check
for instance the equation $y'' + y = d$ has the general solution $y = c1sin(x) + c2cos(x) + d$
replace d with a version of the heavyside function as in the aformentioned alternate system and you've pretty much solved that differential equation
just have to ensure that the two independent solutions have piecewise constant cn such that they are continuous
@Secret interesting. I just noticed it was a set of functions that fulfilled one of my requirements for having the same solutions to differential equations as usual differential equations.... without rendering the equation meaningless I mean.
cause we make assumptions based on c_n always being the same function type
and then add them subtract them etc while still assuming they are still a ____ function
periodic happens to be one of four known sets that fulfill that
The periodic rule also covers the constant case, since constants are also a periodic function (a wave of infinite wavelength)
well not neccessarily
the other sets I know of fulfilling that rule I specified are:
constant (obviously)
periodic function
piecewise constant functions
and all functions (cause I would hope there are not two functions that when composed are no longer a function)
@Secret well while examining them is intriguing and all. My prospect is to try and develop a set of postulates including that one that truly govern real number calculus. I suspect that the answer might be really trivial, but I don't want to choose a cop out.
for instance
I could get away with two postulates if I make the second one:
"if there exists a real number x such that the derivative of f at x is not zero, then the derivative of f is (insert standard limit definition here)"
that feels like a silly cop out though
granted, it would put more emphasis on my statement as in "we only manipulate this one".
then again that would mean x*floor(x) would have a normal derivative rather than an altered derivative of floor(x)
so then again after thinking it through... it's not that trivial.
@Secret you meant infinitesimal
@TheGreatDuck so you're creating your own rules now?
06:09
@DHMO we're discussing negations of calculus axioms. specifically of
"if and only if a function is constant does it have a derivative of 0 for all real numbers"
this isn't an axiom at all.
it can be.
but if you negate this theorem, your system would be inconsistent
unless you negate every single axiom that leads to that theorem
no
only if you use the limit definition of the derivative
so you're negating other axioms that lead to this theorem
06:11
in this situation, the axioms define the derivative and lead to the limit formula.
so what's your new definition of the derivative?
I think the explicit form does not matter, because it can be defined by the axioms
@DHMO That's what we're trying to figure out. I'm trying to figure out a clear set of independent axiomatic statements including that axiom that fully define real number differentiation and antidifferentiation
the integral is it's own thing so it can be left to the side as riemann sums or whatever.
@Secret are you interested to discuss the transcendence of e?
@TheGreatDuck what is differentiation?
and why do you think that the current system is inadequate?
@DHMO Let me tried a bit more on redoing thegreatduck's derivation based on the MO link (should not take too long) and I will attend you shortly (earlier this morning I have been teaching chemistry in the h bar)
06:15
@DHMO I don't think the current system is inadequate. I am interested in looking at systems using negations of that axiom and so in order to do that one should first have a clear set of rules so that if you do negate it everything is still a clear system of calculus.
though I definitely wouldn't claim it to be an equivalent calculus. :p
@TheGreatDuck that is not an axiom.
@DHMO it can be with no problems
because
the derivative need not be defined explicitly via the limit formula
one might argue that is derived via the axioms
it doesn't make it an axiom
i never said it was commonly accepted as such
but if I choose to use it as an axiom what is to stop me?
the entire mathematical community.
06:17
it is a true statement.
and it's only proof comes from the limit definition
which means reversing it and claiming the latter proves the former might be odd but certainly not invalid logic.
alright, good luck inventing your own calculus
@DHMO you're being a jerk, do you know that?
also
there are axioms of calculus
see here
13
Q: Independence of Leibniz rule and locality from other properties of the derivative?

Ben CrowellThe following is meant to be an axiomatization of differential calculus of a single variable. To avoid complications, let's say that $f$, $g$, $f'$, and $g'$ are smooth functions from $\mathbb{R}$ to $\mathbb{R}$ ("smooth" being defined by the usual Cauchy-Weierstrass definition of the derivative...

@TheGreatDuck I apologize.
trying to turn it into an equivalent set including the statement I was interested in is not at all invalid thinking.
I might be working purely in real number calculus
but that's just my particular knowledge level
so if you negate that axiom
what do you get?
06:21
one particular version that is a negation would be
"if and only if a function is piecewise-constant does it have a derivative of 0 for all real numbers"
basically, there exists some non-constant function whose derivative is 0
even at the discontinuous point?
yes
all real numbers
what is the derivative of |x| at x=0?
normally, undefined.
under your calculus?
06:23
give me a second to think about it. I have to rewrite it better for the other version.
I fail to see how the 6 axioms in your link above can lead to x' = 1
note: they are for abstract differentiation
might not be purely numerical
2*[x>=0]*x - x = |x| and has a derivative of 2x - 1 which means at 0 it has a value of -1
I see your point
it could also be 1 if I write it a different way.
granted, that simply means the derivative in this context isn't an operator
it's a function upon the set of expressions
which is what I said to secret earlier as a problem
You might be interested in Cantor function:
In mathematics, the Cantor function is an example of a function that is continuous, but not absolutely continuous. It is also referred to as the Cantor ternary function, the Lebesgue function, Lebesgue's singular function, the Cantor-Vitali function, the Devil's staircase, the Cantor staircase function, and the Cantor-Lebesgue function. Georg Cantor (1884) introduced the Cantor function and mentioned that Scheeffer pointed out that it was a counterexample to an extension of the fundamental theorem of calculus claimed by Harnack. The Cantor function was discussed and popularized by Scheeffer (1884...
under your system, the derivative would be 0 everywhere in (0..1) while the value goes from 0 to 1
yup
but the antiderivative is x*c(x)
what is c?
06:28
and I can say that there is some piecewise constant function d(x) such that x*c(x) + d(x) is the integral of the cantor function
c is the cantor function
Using this as a template:
Z. $\exists f : f'\ne 0$

U. $1'=0$

A. $(f+g)'=f'+g'$

C. $(g \circ f)'=(g'\circ f)f'$

L. The value of $f'(x)$ is determined by knowing $f$ in any neighborhood of $x$.

Now replace Z by P:
P: $\exists f : f(x+a)=f(x), f'= 0$
Then:
U = the same U
A = the same A
C = if $f$ periodic, then $(f^n)'=0$
Lebniz: if $f$ periodic, then $(fg)' = 0$ for all $g$
L = same L
I'm not sure if L is explicitly true anymore.
Well as long restriction can be treated as composition, L will remain true
I don't understand L.
as a function being periodic is not determinable by looking at the neighborhood of x
06:31
although I am not very sure how the periodic case will screw it up given all periodic functions and their products and powers have zero derivatives now
@DHMO basically, the derivative is always based on the values around a point
So what you proposed is actually a subset of the usual differential algebra that we are familar of
not the entire function
@Secret in a weird twisted way, yes.
It could be useful if your diff eqt have periodic solutions, I guess
except it's not operational derivation
it's actually symbolic differentiation
06:32
for example take: y"+y=d
If y periodic, then y"=0, thus you end up with a boundary condition y(x+a)=d
as @DHMO pointed out, the values may change depending on how you write a function
@Secret intriguing.
So, I guess, your subset of differential algebra will be useful in testing whether periodic solutions solve the differential equation, however more is need to be check to be sure
well...
In particular, the integral will now have an arbitrary periodic function
it's more like
if d is periodic than the solution will be this thing: c1*sin(x) + c2*sin(x) + d
and then it's a matter of finding whatever c's somehow give the correct solution
granted
i have no clue how to do that
there's probably a specific subset of functions governing that
but it's not periodic
best I can do is find a continuous solution
but it wouldn't be right
shrugs. it's an interesting concept. Not as trivial as the piecewise constant one.
that one is easy to convert back
just choose piecewise constant c's so that y is continuous
boom
yer done
I'm going to go to bed
06:36
every periodic function has derivative zero?
in this system yes
and, as derived from the axioms, every powers and products of them
@Secret wanna reconvene later?
interesting
sure
06:37
@Secret ideally any mutlivariate composition
because believe it or not
for periodic f and g
so thomae function has derivative 0?
h(f,g) is periodic
for all h
@TheGreatDuck cos(x) is periodic. cos(x*sqrt(2)) is periodic.
@DHMO the cantor function is 0 in the piecewise constant system.
their sum is not.
@TheGreatDuck i'm talking about thomae not cantor
06:39
$h(f,g)'=h'(f,g)(f'+g')=0$, hence h is periodic
@Secret cos(x) is periodic. cos(x*sqrt(2)) is periodic. their sum is not.
@Secret periodic implies zero derivative. its converse is not assumed?
and here
-4
Q: A composition of a periodic function that is somehow not periodic.

TheGreatDuckI have this conjecture: $$\forall f: R \to R(\exists g:R \to R (x \cdot f(x) = \int f(x) dx + g(f(x))))$$ Basically, my problem is that I am very very sure this is true. I have no way to prove it, but I strongly believe it to be true. However, $f(x) = (x \mod 1)$ seems like a counter-example. T...

unless i misunderstood
the answers I recieved must be wrong by your counter-example.
@DHMO In his system, things have zero derivative only if they are periodic (including constant functions)
06:41
@DHMO it is if and only if
then your system is inconsistent, as my counter-example suggests.
must be rationally periodic then
idk
@DHMO Due to $(f'+g')=f'+g'$, your example will be considered periodic to his derivative, which is...kinda... idk
something about that in the answer i recieved in that link
@Secret we're not distorting the definition of periodic
:p
In that case, you need to find a way to take account of DHMO's counterexample
06:42
1 min ago, by TheGreatDuck
must be rationally periodic then
see the answers i linked
they probably explain the issue
it's what I based by h(f,g) statement on
either that or they are wrong answers
i gotta go
There is still no algebra people yet. Let me just do some final check on a table and I will head to transcendetal number room. Also if some of those who visited my room have questions, please ask there, it is getting too inactive to maintain the room
07:00
@Secret Sorry I'm not an algebra person.
Yup. I know
is $\mathbb{R}\setminus\mathbb{Q}$ with "holes" like $\mathbb{N}$?
discrete is the word i think
Are single sets equivalent sets?
@Null what does discrete mean?
no it isn't discrete
07:45
[Division by zero] Everyone said not to divide by zero is because they **** up all rules. Turns out, they are perhaps the most rule abidding (for associative division by zero algebras) of all:
$0^2$ determines the fate of the zero terms by associativity, zero inverse determines the fate of all products of it
and then all zero terms (including the zero inverse) dictate the fate of 3n entries in the addition structure by one sided distributivity
It is PRECISELY because they are so rule abiding is why they are such a headache
(because having $3n$ out of $n^2$ entries knocked out, the table is going to have a sizable portion to become a one sided null semigroup)
How to prove this for infinite structures is a work in progress
Basically, there is very little wiggle room for associative division by zero algebras (the number of constrained entries in the addition sturcture is roughly halved by having only one sided multilpicative identities) until it gets large enough
to the point that for $n=3$ it reduces to $\mathbb{Z}/3$
Anyway, wrong timing, i should head to the transcendental room now...
as someone who isn't that good at algebra, is a zero algebra just an algebra that contains 0 * r = 0 and 0 + r = r?
I think you mean zero term algebra. I don't recall there is anything named zero algebra. However there is something called a zero object
"for associative division by zero algebras"?
O, that...
07:57
@Secret what do you mean?
do you really want to know
Wait, I replied to the wrong message, stupid phone
@Perturbative what do you mean?
@BalarkaSen Maybe I don't haha.
Nope @Balarka, I was trying to answer to @Perturbative!
it basically means any associative algebra that allows a multiplicative inverse of zero
This is possible by knocking out $0*n=0$ and anything that lead to it
07:59
This might sound like a troll, but it's a serious question:
what do you mean by "knocking out $0 \cdot n = 0$"?
I wonder how many mathematicians I am likely to meet who are capable of recognizing the degree of precision and variability contained in the English language—not as something which should be clipped carefully to disallow any ambiguity, but as something which has greater expressive power for variability of ideas than any other mathematics yet invented?
@Dair Perhaps it will be better to discuss that in the room now that the chat start getting busy
08:25
hey @Daminark
Let $k = \displaystyle \sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac 1 {2^{n^2}}$.
What do we know about $k$?
we know it's a real number
and we know it's less than 1
and it's positive
@DHMO
that's very useful thanks
can we prove/disprove that it is transcendental?
08:51
lol
5
Sullivan invented it on the spot. — András Szűcs Oct 15 '14 at 11:44
always cool to see these
09:11
akiva, maybe you can help me on this semigroup question?
0
Q: Necessary and sufficient condition to show the surjectivity of an action if the existence of right inverse is not known

SecretGiven a semigroup $S$ with possibly infinite elements , it is known that there is an element $a$ such that its left semigroup action on all other elements $x \in S$ either fixes it or map to a distinct element i.e. $ax=x$ or $ax=b$ where $b \in S$ and $b \neq x$. It is also known that a left inve...

09:30
@BalarkaSen That's a nice desciption.
hmm... asymptotes, that's easy for uncountable structures with some kind of topology, but I wonder how can we generalise that to countable systems... hmmm...
so for surjectivity, we need something more than having the image of each point being not the same as the point
whatever that means, I 'll sort that out when I finsih my transcendental revision
@MikeMiller It's not obvious to me why a Lie group is always supposed to contain a circle subgroup though.
Well, I suppose compact ones, because that's obviously false otherwise
You're not trying to null-bord the noncompact ones.
@Balarka is there an hat for offering a bounty?
@Alessandro IIRC on the last day of winterbash
09:47
Nov 7 at 3:42, by Brody
@Kaumudi Range cannot be determined analytically, for now you need the graph of the function, which will tell all
suprisingly relevant
seems it holds for semigroup actions as well
Wonder if groups will fare better...
10:02
@AlessandroCodenotti can you determine if sum 2^(-n^2) is transcendental?
i would be quite surprised if it is algebraic
never mind
21
A: Is this number already known to be transcendental? Is there a survey about up-to-date trascendence results?

Andrey RekaloI have checked with Introduction to Algebraic Independence Theory, where it is mentioned in the preface (p. V) that D. Bertrand and independently D. Duverney, Ke. Nishioka, Ku. Nishioka, I. Shiokawa (DNNS) deduced results on algebraic independence of the values of theta-functions at algebrai...

 
1 hour later…
11:11
Why are prime numbers so confusing
Off topic: Is $n$ choose $k$ defined for $k$ not an integer?
@TheSubstitute just use gamma function instead of n! in definition
@AliCaglayan Thanks that's what I thought. For some reason I was getting different answers in mathematica when I rewrote the binomial coefficient this way.
@TheSubstitute Remember that $x!=\Gamma(x+1)$, not $\Gamma(x)$.
@AkivaWeinberger Oops! Thank you for that.
11:22
Also, if $n$ isn't an integer but $k$ is (the reverse from what you have), you don't need Gamma to define $\binom nk$.
It'd be $n(n-1)(n-2)\dotsb(n-k+1)/k!$.
@AkivaWeinberger it seems k is not the integer in this case
hello @Alessandro
I've got a small question, I am assuming $7^{1/3}\in Q(5^{1/3})$. Showing that leads to $Q(7^{1/3})=Q(5^{1/3})$, I showed as required (with the basis $(1,7^{1/3},7^{2/3})$ that there are $a,b,c\in Q$ so that $a+b7^{1/3}+c7^{2/3}=5^{1/3}$. Now they want me to show, using the transformation $Ta=5^{1/3}*a$ that $a=bc=0$.
I don't get it - I derived using two different basis for the transformation that $(t-5^{1/3})^3=t^3-5$ (the contradiction yells here). I can follow suit placing $t=1$ and replacing $5^{1/3}$ with the previous equation and show that a=b=c=0. Which makes me thing I am missing something/am wrong
Since the question clearly asks to derive something else..
Anyone can see where I am skipping a step?
11:38
@Studentmath If you can show a=b=c=0 then can't you show a=bc=0?
oh wait
If $Ta=5^{1/3}a$
then $Ta+T(b7^{1/3}+c7^{2/3})=T(5^{1/3})$
Actually if you apply T twice
on the left hand side you get some mess
but on the right you get an element of Q
I wonder what does a polynomial look like graphially before expanding it...?
so by equating components you have what you need I belive
in particular, geomety wise, this theorem always seemed like magic to me:
In linear algebra, the Cayley–Hamilton theorem (named after the mathematicians Arthur Cayley and William Rowan Hamilton) states that every square matrix over a commutative ring (such as the real or complex field) satisfies its own characteristic equation. If A is a given n×n matrix and In is the n×n identity matrix, then the characteristic polynomial of A is defined as p ( λ ) = det ( λ I n − A ) , ...
11:54
@AliCaglayan Yes, of course I also have a=bc=0, but it makes me think I am missing something along the way. And thanks! I will try to look at that out. Generally I am supposed to conclude that by looking at the polynomial of T under two different basis (which is what yield $(t-5^{1/3})^3=t^3-5$)
the functions R->R with rational periods form field under pointwise addition and multiplication
I'm not aure about the general case but I think that if you consider matrices over a field you can think about the matrix ring as an extension of the scalar matrices field and use the fact that the minimal polynomial divides the characteristic one @secret
I'm not sure about the proof in the general case but I think that if you consider matrices over a field you can think about the matrix ring as an extension of the scalar matrices field and use the fact that the minimal polynomial divides the characteristic one @secret
12:09
Well yes that's how we proved that back in linear algebra class. What I am more interested in is that since linear operators represent transformations in a vector space, and then a matrix polynomial is some map from the vector space to itself (thus some kind of nonlinear transformation), what is the geometric meaning for a matrix that solves the polynomial (and hence vanishes by cayley hamiltonia theorem)?
that is what does it mean geometrically in terms of transformations in vector spaces when a matrix solves the polynomail and hence vanishes. Or rather, what does a root of a matrix polynomail mean geoemtrically?
12:24
@DHMO are you sure about the multiplicative inverses?
12:39
@TedShifrin, I think of you whenever I see this: gifbin.com/bin/122014/….
@AlessandroCodenotti quite.
except the functions that contain zero, right
they form ring then
Maybe do the one-point conpactificstion of $\Bbb R$ instead
aka the one-dimensional projective plane
$\Bbb R\cup\{\infty\}$
12:54
Is the Fibonacci sequence deterministic or non-deterministic?

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