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00:00
@SteamyRoot O sorry, I skipped some writing there. Yes, it should be $A_1 \supset B_1 \supset \dots$ where $\dots$ is the nth case shown above
@TedShifrin I thought proving f is injective and then deuduce A and B has the same cardinality is what is needed in the proof? (Meanwhile I do got an onion diagram drawn, I am currently fetching it because it is on paper...)
No, you are given $f$ is injective and you're going to define $h$ and show $h$ is the desired bijection.
Hello
Let $\pi:\mathrm TX\to X$ be a tangent bundle with a chosen connection. Let $\gamma$ be a path in $X$. Say a section of $\gamma ^\ast \pi$ is constant w.r.t the connection if it's a parallel transport along $\gamma$. Is $\gamma $ being geodesic equivalent to $\dot \gamma$ being constant in this sense?
Isn't that the definition of a geodesic?
I saw the definition of covariant derivative being zero, but I don't know how to show they're equivalent
00:11
(You aren't talking about specifically a Levi-Civita connection for a Riemannian manifold, where geodesics have a different definition.)
@Secret: The picture isn't right.
The ring between $A_1$ and $B_1$ maps precisely to the ring between $A_2$ and $B_2$.
Parallel transport of the section means that covariant derivative is 0, @Arrow.
That makes sense, I just don't know how to show it
Those statements are equivalent, right? It's not just an implication
Yes.
I don't know where you're starting if it isn't basically definition.
Rehi @Semiclassic
I think it's probably very easy, just not easy enough for me. I'll write out what I'm struggling with.
You starting with a covariant derivative or a notion of parallel transport? You deduce each from the other.
00:15
Hi.
Re g'night @MikeM
Actually, I am only given the recursion relation of $f$ on the sets $A_n$, $A_1$, $B_1$ and $B_n$ and that $f$ is injective. How to show that $f(A_n-B_n)=A_{n+1}-B_{n+1}$ since $f$ is not necessary linear wrt its arguments, thus I cannot do it via $f(A_n-B_n)=f(A_n)-f(B_n)$?
OK, that's a good place to start. Just do $n=1$ for starters. $f(A_1)=A_2$ and $f(B_1)=B_2$ by definition.
Why does something in the difference map to something in the difference? What hypothesis on $f$ must you use?
Let $\pi:\mathrm TX\to X$ be a tangent bundle with a connection. Let $\gamma$ be a curve in $X$. The covariant derivative of a section $h$ of $\gamma ^\ast \pi$ is $$\nabla_\gamma h(t_0)=\lim_{t\to t_0}\frac{\underset{\gamma:t_0 \to t}{\mathrm{tra}}^{-1}(h(t))-h(t_0)}{t}.$$

I want to show $\nabla_\gamma \dot\gamma \equiv 0$ is equivalent to $\dot\gamma $ being a path lift of $\gamma$ chosen by the connection.
tra is parallel transport along $\gamma$?
00:18
Yes, sorry
@Arrow Pick an immersed path in the manifold. By pulling back the bundle, section, and connection to the path, you reduce your entire question to understanding why those two notions - covariant derivative is zero iff it's a parallel transport - to working on the bundle over the path itself. Then this is an initial value problem.
So if $h$ is parallel to start with, the numerator is dead 0.
Clearly if $h$ is parallel transport along the path, the covariant derivative is zero. But since the solution to an ODE on the path is uniquely determined by its value and derivative at 0...
hi @BalarkaSen
yells at Balarka for not being asleep
00:19
hi @Ted, @SemiC
my internet's being dumb
@MikeMiller I think I understand the second explanation. For the first, why does the path need to be an immersion?
@TedShifrin thank you
@Arrow For a good notion of parallel transport. You could make it a piecewise smooth piecewise immersion if you wanted.
If it's not piecewise an immersion you no longer have a well-defined parallel transport.
Sorry, could you explain why?
@BalarkaSen One of the things you raised when I was rambling about my stuff is on my mind atm. Namely, whether one can always find an algebraic perturbation which resolves some double points but not others.
@Semiclassic: I thought I gave an argument for that (but you have to allow higher degree than perhaps you want).
00:23
(I'm not thinking hard about it, right now, since I"m in post-dinner mode)
I'm in pre-cocktail mode.
@MikeMiller I fiddled around for a while and I think 3, 4, 234432, 12344321 generates a Z^4 inside B_5.
All I remember arguing is that I had examples where I could do that.
I think in general you could play the same palindrome game to get Z^n in B_n+1
Jesus. I need to get more smarterer.
00:24
err, 3 and 4 doesn't commute
@Fargle: You stopped working on my books, so you must be smarterer already :)
@TedShifrin Cessation should not be conflated with completion. >_>
well, whoops.
(Would that it were.)
I just meant that ignoring me should make you smarterer. :)
00:25
@Semiclassical yeah?
Ahhhhh.
@TedShifrin you said geodesics are defined differently for the Levi-Civita connection. Why? The definition using parallel transport seems very intuitive and works for all cases
No conclusion yet. Maybe once I'm past the post-dinner yawns.
Geodesics are defined (for many people) as paths of (locally) least length.
@Arrow What does $\nabla_{\gamma'} \gamma'$ mean when $\gamma'$ can be zero?
00:27
@MikeMiller I think I got it. Thanks again
Sure.
Are you working towards something or just learning what seems fun?
Just trying to understand the basic ideas in differential geometry
Learning is fun?
Hah. I think most differential geometers wouldn't call the categorical approach I think you're taking the basic ideas
Remove all geometry from geometry — why not? :P
00:31
geometry - geometry = categories?
I just take the categorical approach because it helps me stay organized
sounds legit.
algebra - algebra is also categories
categories - categories is a 2-category
Crap. If I see "universal property" one more time...
00:32
LOL
@Arrow unlike the rest of the room, I won't pick on you
I was answering questions, damn it.
Categories are neat. They just fly over my head right now.
Haha I don't mind this kind of picking actually. I think I can make a solid case for categories even though I know very little math.
Fargle: we've had this chat before. Your head is too high for that. But I won't dwell on it.
00:33
Question. Suppose we have a bundle (just a continuous map) with a Hurewicz connection/parallel transport defined on it. We can define geodesics as the lifts of paths downstairs specified by the connection. Is this a useless notion? It seems that specifying geodesics is simply specifying parallel transport
@TedShifrin We have? Whoops.
@Arrow I think everyone should learn math the way they find most comfortable or helpful. In particular, if people find categorical language helpful, great! If they don't, also great! I find it helpful exactly as far as I need to use it, but the general language not so much.
I have never heard of a Hurewicz connection. What's dat?
@TedShifrin Parallel transport.
00:34
Woo, poster is finished
Geodesics are downstairs, though, Arrow.
Ahh, right. All clear now.
Was that sarcastic or genuine?
Hmm... given any set $C \supset D$, $g: C \to D$ only preserves unions and inclusions (as $g(C) \cap g(D)$ can be $=\emptyset$ even when $C \cap D \neq \emptyset$) but their preimages preserves unions, intersections (hence differences), and inclusions. So in order to avoid the case $g(C) \cap g(D)=\emptyset$ it means $g$ is injective.

So going back to the current problem, since $f$ is injective, intersections and hence differences $A-B=A \cap B^c$ is preserved, hence $f$ preserve set differences...
Remember that a geodesic is one such that the horizontal lift is parallel. But it still lives downstairs.
00:36
Genuine! I wouldn't be sarcastic towards people who help me
I didn't read your first paragraph, @Secret, but the second is right.
Just checking, @Arrow :)
@Secret $C \cap D \neq \emptyset$ but $g(C) \cap g(D) = \emptyset$ ?
@MikeMiller regarding categories, I also feel that they're useful for "elementary" things too. For instance the inductive proof of homotopy invariance of singular homology basically uses naturality to reduce to simple spaces only. And from there the acyclic model theorem hints itself, which is also pretty useful
@Arrow I think of both the examples you give as homological algebra/diagram chasing, not category theory. The thing from category theory I find most useful in day to day life is Yoneda lemma
Do feel algebraic topology flows freely with little abstract nonsense?
00:38
Steamyroot: I'll fetch a diagram to illustrate that when I get back to my main computer
Uhhh...
Let $x \in C \cap D$. Then $g(x) \in g(C)$ and $g(x) \in g(D)$.
@Secret: No you won't :)
If $g$ is a function but not a map, sure.
But I think Munkres always means map when he says function, so I doubt that's the case.
@Arrow I don't get a lot out of that. You could do that, sure, or think about things with model categories or whatever. But defining the chain homotopy is all about triangulating a product simplex, which maybe that's what you're saying?
00:40
@BalarkaSen I see. I think Yoneda is pretty deep even though its proof is simple.
But I don't think about that categorically.
@Steamy: What do you think "function" means?
(Alternatively you could do cubical homology and the homotopy invariance is suuuuper trivial.)
I never remember what Yoneda lemma is. I saw it only in an algebraic geometry class 40+ years ago.
Triangulating the product simplex is what Hatcher does in his book, but e.g Rotman and tom Dieck take an inductive approach
00:41
@MikeMiller OTOH it should be harder to prove excision/Mayer-Vietoris in cubical
Haven't look at cubical stuff yet
lots to subdivide
Or rather, harder to keep track of the combinatorics
I don't remember what any of these books say. Just how I know how to prove things.
@TedShifrin A function $f : X \to Y$ is a relation $f \subseteq X \times Y$ such that every $x \in X$ appears in at most one tuple $(x,y) \in f$.
Maybe I'll get to that point someday.. haha
00:42
No, that's not a function.
Mayer-Vietoris is not significantly worse, really. The main technical disadvantage is you have to mod out by degenerate cubes.
If the domain is $X$, there must be exactly one ordered pair $(x,y)$ for every $x$.
We call that a map o.O
Well, in the US they're identical.
00:43
That's just not true.
They're identical everywhere. At best what was given is a partially defined function.
Not in Europe (or at least Belgium)
function is not necessarily defined everywhere, map is.
Only in algebraic geometry do you have not-everywhere-defined maps.
Well, we kind of use it so we can be lazy with properly defining our domains... hehe
I think that's horrible, actually.
@MikeMiller, @BalarkaSen, just out of curiosity, do things like topoi interest you for their own sake?
00:45
it's perfectly fine to say $f: \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}: x \mapsto \frac{1}{x}$
@Steamy: Not fine to me.
e.g the phrase "a topos is a mathematical universe" etc
@TedShifrin If F is a functor from an arbitrary (small) category to Sets, then natural transformations hom(A,-) --> F are in 1-1 correspondence with F(A), given by sending each nat. transfromation T to the image of the identity hom A -->A in F(A).
You've told me before, @Balarka. I never remember it.
Well, it's mostly just another different naming convention I suppose :P
00:47
I suspect there are a few things I've told you that you never remember, though, so I don't feel too bad :P
yep, you shouldn't
@Steamy: Map ordinarily is used in the US to connote a morphism in whatever category one's in. Function needn't have that specificity.
@Arrow I don't even know what they are, and the standard references don't really tell me why I should care
Hmmm... I think we use "map" in that context too. Been a few years since I last touched any category theory, though.
Gotcha
00:49
Either way, we pretty much always stick to maps because functions are just awful if you try to do well-defined things.
if I ever get a reason to be interested, then sure! why not
Ah, something I was wondering about - what's the relationship between Gaussian curvature and the definition of curvature of a connection?
@Arrow in Riemannian geometry?
@SteamyRoot Yep
@Arrow: What's your definition of curvature of a connection?
00:53
The Riemannian curvature is $R(X,Y)Z = ([\nabla_X,\nabla_Y] - \nabla_{[X,Y]})Z$
This thing ${\displaystyle F^{\nabla }(X,Y)(s)=\nabla _{X}\nabla _{Y}s-\nabla _{Y}\nabla _{X}s-\nabla _{[X,Y]}s}$
OK, so we have to unwind a bunch to answer your question.
@SteamyRoot I like your presentation much better
Then you can define the sectional curvature $K(X,Y) = \langle R(X,Y)Y,X\rangle$ for orthogonal unit vectors $X,Y$
And if the dimension of $T_pM$ is $2$, the sectional curvature coincides with the Gaussian curvature
sectional curvature should be something like $\langle R(X, Y)Y, X\rangle$ in an orthogonal frame
00:55
Gaussian curvature is a scalar function that's built out of the Riemannian curvature for either a hypersurface of a Riemannian manifold or an even-dimensional manifold in general.
orthonormal, @Balarka
Ah, right
@Arrow another presentation is $R(X,Y) = \nabla^2_{X,Y} - \nabla^2_{Y,X}$.
In general, Gaussian curvature is built out of the curvature 2-form matrix, @Arrow. Do you want me to go on?
I don't get the Riemann curvature tensor
I would actually like some intuition for the curvature tensor
00:56
I know the "parallel transport along an infinitsimal square" interpretation but I still don't get it
The definition of Gaussian curvature is intuitive I think
Well, so you have to have intuition for curvature of surfaces.
Measures stretching. In Gaussian case relies on embedding into Euclidean spaces and sees how much normals "spread out"
is that reasonable?
Sectional curvature of a 2-plane (doing Riemannian connection still) at $p$ is the Gaussian curvature of the surface you get by following geodesics emanating at $p$ with tangent vectors in that 2-plane.
Well, hey, every Riemannian manifold can be isometrically embedded in some Euclidean space.
00:57
For a hypersurface in $\Bbb R^{n+1}$, the Gaussian curvature is in fact the jacobian determinant of the Gauss map.
@Steamy: For the intuitive one I just gave, you need a hypersurface. High codimension means you'll have to do some average process.
Hmm, right.
Meh, that's the sad thing about Nash' embedding theorem. The codimension gets ridiculously high quickly...
@TedShifrin Yeah, but why should anyone come to think of the Riemann tensor - symbolically - at all? And why should that agree with the Gaussian curvature of the 2-plane after exponentiating it onto the manifold? That sounds like a technical result I have no reason to believe
Very.
It's a good moving frames exercise, @Balarka. I put that on my final exam in the grad course :P
@TedShifrin where might I find an explanation of this good exercise?
01:01
Here's another good exercise for you, @Balarka. If $M$ is a surface in $\Bbb R^n$, prove that the Gaussian curvature $K=\sum K_\mu$, where $e_\mu$ form an orthonormal basis for the normal space and $K_\mu$ is the projection of $M$ into the $\Bbb R^3$ spanned by $T_pM$ and $e_\mu$. :)
Interesting; bookmarked
Good question, @Arrow. I don't know all the modern differential geometry texts. I worked it out for myself years ago. And I no longer have my huge library to check.
Sadly, there's not enough geometry in so many of the books ...
I think my first exercise was proved by Riemann, actually, using normal coordinates.
wow
Ah, I have a somewhat annoying question about the covariant derivative in terms of parallel transport again
$$\nabla_\gamma \gamma ^\prime(t_0)=\lim_{t\to t_0}\frac{\underset{\gamma:t_0 \to t}{\mathrm{tra}}^{-1}(\gamma ^\prime(t))-\gamma ^\prime(t_0)}{t}.$$
@Arrow I don't care about them at all. But I don't object to people who do like them.
At some point I should stop being a sucker at differential geometry
01:06
In the above definition we're identifying the fibers with their tangent spaces, right?
@Arrow: As Mike already pointed out in part, you should be writing that as $\big(\nabla_{\gamma'(t_0)} \gamma'\big)(t_0)$.
@MikeMiller gotcha.
My friend Kevin likes them, I think. He took a course on them or something.
Yes, no doubt, @Arrow.
@TedShifrin I don't understand. The covariant derivative by definition is with respect to a curve... even if its value at a point depends only on the derivative
01:08
More generally, covariant derivative is a directional derivative in a direction.
The right functoriality to understand is how it behaves with respect to the direction (linearity, for example).
Isn't that less general?
A tangent vector is by definition obtainable from a germ of a curve
But I want a linear map, just as I do in calculus.
Linear in the section of $\gamma ^\ast \pi $?
01:10
No, linear in all the directions tangent to $M$.
Ah, so you're saying this doesn't make sense with curves?
I'm saying you have a lot to prove from where you are to get what I'm saying.
You're talking about directional derivatives one direction at a time, without having a notion of derivative as a linear map.
Interestingly, there was a question like that about directional derivatives on vector spaces, asking to prove linearity in the direction if one knows a bit more. I'd never seen that before.
Then I don't follow. Without any linearity or anything, a covariant derivative comes from a parallel transport (suppose also without any linearity conditions). It's defined along curves. If we want to look at the covariant derivative in a certain direction then we can look at the derivative of the curve at the point in question.

If we want linearity then we must work with covariant differentiation with respect to a tangent vector.

Is this correct or am I missing the point?
Well, your definition gives one tangent vector at a time. How in the world do you see linearity as a function of them all at once?
That's a hugely important part of the structure of covariant derivatives.
Ok, I don't understand. First of all I don't understand what you mean by "gives one tangent vector at a time"
01:15
You pick a curve $\gamma$ with tangent vector $v$ and do what you're doing to compute $\nabla_v s$.
Yes
It is trivial to see that $\nabla_{cv}s = c\nabla_v s$.
But how the hell do I prove that $\nabla_{u+v} s = \nabla_u s+\nabla_v s$?
I thought this comes from assumptions on the connection
You're defining your connection only in terms of parallel transport on curves.
So there's a real theorem needing to be proved.
What underlies it?
01:18
LOL ... the "better" way of looking at connections, I suppose. I'm saying the formula I just wrote up there (linearity) is a theorem you need to prove somehow.
What's the "better" way / how would you go about this?
Off the top of my head, I don't know how to get there from where you are.
Ok. I think I'll be able to find this in a book somewhere.
The better way is to define a covariant derivative as depending on a vector field on $M$ and a section of $E$.
But I actually have dinner company coming soon, so I need to skedaddle and cook.
I thought that's worse because those are global objects, so less general
Okie
01:20
You can localize them as much as you want. :)
But that's how people actually compute things, not your way.
Ok. I'll try to fill in some gaps. Thank you very much!
Talk to you soon :)
01:48
So, if a family has two children, what is the probability that both children are girls? Wouldn't be $\binom{2}{2}*0.5*0.5$?
*Assuming both genders are independent and are equally likely.
@Lelo Correct. Another way to see it: in order of birth, you could have either BB, BG, GB, or GG with equal chance, so P(GG) = 0.25.
I see. Thanks :)
02:03
@SteamyRoot Sorry, I must have accidentally swapped $=$ with $\neq$ in my previous message. I now get the same conclusion you have wrote there
Hmm now I'm trying to find the probability that both children are girls if you know that there is at least one daughter. I thought it would be $0.5$ but it was incorrect. So confused.
sorry mistake, inclusions are always preserved, thus this particular type of intersection will always be preserved regardless of whether g is injective
02:23
Nevermind I got it. It was $1/3$ because the order of the set DID matter.
3
Q: A question on a limit arising in Fourier series

Rajesh DachirajuLet $$a_k = \frac{1}{k\pi}\sum_{j=0}^m\alpha_j\sin(kT_j)$$ $\alpha_j,T_j \in \mathbb{R}, 0<T_j<\pi,m \in \mathbb{N}$. I'd like to know the limit if it exists, $$\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{\log(n)}\sum_{k=1}^n\left|a_k\right|$$

0
Q: When do the needles of clock meet (Where did I go wrong)?

Chandler BingI tried finding it out mathematically by taking their velocities in degrees per second, and finding out the L.C.M of them which should give me the time period in which all the needles intersect. Speed of seconds needle : 6°/sec Speed of minutes needle : 0.1°/sec Speed of hours needle : 0.00833...

There is something wrong, but I don't know what help mee !
02:44
What is the difference between ⊆ and ∈ ? Apart from the name.
{1,2} is a subset of {1,2,3}, and 1 is an element of {1,2,3}
the words "subset" and "element" are different
(if you don't have latex in chat going for you then see "LaTeX in chat" in room description)
I'm switching browser right now to see it
guess there wasn't really a reason for latex for this question
Hmm ok; if so ⊆ means element what does the underscored bellow it signify? I have seen some without it
⊆ does not mean element, and the partial "equals" sign underneath serves the same function it does in the "less than or equal to" symbol: it means the the two things could be equal
{1,2,3}⊆{1,2,3} for instance
02:50
I'm confused about the difference again. ∈ allows for the following case you see {1,2,3}∈{1,2,3}. It also allows for {1}∈{1,2,3}
so how does ⊆ differ?
Hello?
I don't quite understand in the Munkres solution why the map $l$ will be a surjection (thus concluding it is a bijection). It is true that in the previous line we concluded that $|f(A)|=|C|$ and it is given that $f$ is injective and $f(A) \subset C$ but I see no reason why $f$ will also be surjective
For example. consider $A=\mathbb{N}$ and $f(A)=2\mathbb{N}$. It is easy to see that $f$ is indeed injective as required, but $2\mathbb{N} \subset \mathbb{N}$ despite $|2\mathbb{N}|=|\mathbb{N}|$, thus $f$ is not surjective?
@user400188 {1,2,3}∈{1,2,3} is wrong
x∈A means x is one of the things in A, while A⊆B means every element of A is also in B
Why? I was under the impression that ∈ allowed for the case in which the two things were equal to another. It just meant the same set or smaller.
@user400188 no. you're making stuff up.
A⊆B allows for A=B
what do you mean by one of the things? Do you mean only 1 element is allowed?

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