« first day (2472 days earlier)      last day (2844 days later) » 

22:00
Too many Erics in this chat, no idea who is who, lol.
there's an Eric, and there's an Eric Stucky
two many, not too many
You like puns don't you? Actually I don't, though I like language.
I like the good ones
I think that word puns are like math exercises to me.
@Jason a lot of them were comparison Theorems yeah
22:02
Every James Bond movie has lots of puns.
@Eric There is even a book called Comparison THeorems in Riemannian Geomtry by Cheeger and Ebin, lol.
i remember watching lots of bond movies (because family members with not that great taste) but i didn't like them. not enough to remember any of them at the very least
I am aware of it. Been told it's good
@BalarkaSen Not that great taste? LOL
@MikeMiller Heh, it seems like Solyaris (72) was marketed into US as "answer to Stanley Kubrick's 2001" (69?)
amuses me to no end
@BalarkaSen Have you watched Blue Velvet?
22:05
Not yet. But actually I might right now. It's not that late.
@AkivaWeinberger I wonder who still reads Euclid today. Is it even worth reading? I don't know.
@BalarkaSen I recommend Blue Car and Blue Desert as well.
i don't watch movies based on whether or not the title contains blue, unfortunately
@Jason I read Euclid when I was in high school. I would say it's worth it if you're a history nerd, but not super worth it for learning math.
@JasonBourne I read a bit at the start. Maybe I should pick it up; I'm horrible at geometry.
(Re: Eric's comment) (Or maybe not…)
@BalarkaSen Looks like everything I say sounds so stupid. =)
22:07
Yeah I think there are better places to learn that stuff
@JasonBourne Is English your native language? (Out of curiosity)
(I'm guessing yes?)
Besides Lee's Axiomatic Geometry and Hilbert's Foundations of Geometry, there is also Martin's Foundations of Geometry and the non-Euclidean plane. Martin wrote a lot of interesting geometry books.
@AkivaWeinberger Yes, I think it is.
Where're you from, America?
Nope, I live in Asia, in a not very good place.
@JasonBourne Nah, just that I'm choosy with what movies I watch
or what books I read, or ...
22:11
@BalarkaSen Certinaly not as choosy as me since I take years to think about books. =)
However, I live in one of the richest countries on earth, but money is not everything. In fact, money is the least important of all important things.
Singapore?
My location is a pseudo secret for pseudo secret reasons. =) I just tell people I live in Antarctica, as a joke and a cover.
It's either Singapore or Hong Kong.
I no longer consider where I live home. It's just a place I happened to be born in, and I hope to leave as soon as I can.
I like to say I live in one of the most nothing countries on earth, where we have the most amount of nothing, and the most nothingest peoples, and the most densely populated nothings per square kilometers. But I kinda like it.
That's also an irrelevant rant to a large extent though
22:19
Well, the best thing about India is it is the country where the Buddha lived and taught, though not where he was born.
There are only two people I really listen to. One is my mum, and the other is Buddha.
I don't know anything about Buddha's philosophy except the little there is on the Jataka epics.
The Jataka takes don't talk much about the teachings at all.
I guess I have been hurt by so many people around me I no longer trust anyone.
I guess that's my rant.
Hello everyone, I am trying to understand something about Taylor series:

f(x, y, z) has the following taylor series: $\frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{x}} x+ \frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{y}} y + \frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{z}} z$

But according to this source (http://docs.opencv.org/trunk/d7/d8b/tutorial_py_lucas_kanade.html) the taylor series should have the following form:

$\frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{x}} x+ \frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{y}} y + \frac{\partial{f}}{\partial{z}} = 0$

where $x = \frac{dx}{dt} $ and $ y = \frac{dy}{dt}$
Could someone explain me why x and why equal derivatives with respect to time and aren't just constants?
22:26
Hah:
123
A: Does notation ever become "easier"?

LeoAs others have pointed out, it gets much better if that's your first semester. But in my experience, there is not much relief between, say, years 2 and 4 of your studies. Sure, you get more mature, but the material gets more difficult too. To address your question whether "more advanced mathema...

(Re: the Arnold quote)
so true man
Anyone any idea?
textbook should include awkward lines explaining what passages of symbols mean
even though it's awkward
@trilolil No idea
@AkivaWeinberger thanks for your reply
anyone else?
22:30
@BalarkaSen Sometimes I feel like I want to say it the way I'd say it out loud. But often, I can't quite say it out loud (where, in a face-to-face conversation, I'd start looking for something to write with)
Huh. My hands usually fly around in every direction when I talk math face-to-face, that also helps
can you give an example?
@AkivaWeinberger I already understood it. So stupid
it s not a derivative but simply a division...
@BalarkaSen An example where I would be able to say something out loud, differently than my first instinct with writing? None comes to mind, actually…
For an example that I wouldn't be able to say out loud: an analysis proof with lots of integrals I guess
Oh, that's strange.
I dunno, maybe we should do some math and if an example comes up I'll point it out :P
If I read a textbook like Rudin out loud, I often paraphrase stuff.
22:34
@AkivaWeinberger What's the basic idea behind excision theorem?
Can you say this out loud (if you remember) without writing anything whatsoever?
Oh, god…
I don't quite remember, no
I am asking 'cuz I can. This is actually very interesting; I wonder if you're fundamentally an algebraic person more than a geometric.
@AkivaWeinberger Ah, ok. Forget that then.
@BalarkaSen Geometric, probably
> I am asking 'cuz I can.
Can remind me how it goes, then?
That should mean your first instinct is to wave a lot of hands and try to describe the shape and size of the things than write the symbols!
Maybe I don't have enough face-to-face conversations about math.
They all tend to be on here.
22:39
@AkivaWeinberger OK. Do you want me to do it without symbols or with? :) The latter would probably take less time over chat :P
With, sure
Say $X$ is your space with an open cover $O$. $C_*(X)$ the singular chain complex and $C_*^O(X)$ the "excision" chain complex, consisting of singular simplices the images of which fit inside some open set in $O$. Remember that excision is equivalent to saying the inclusion map $C_*^O(X) \to C_*(X)$ is a chain homotopy equivalence (or in particular, is an isomorphism in homology)
It's a 2 line argument to see why this implies the standard formulation of excision
In any case, the idea is simple. Construct a map $C_*(X) \to C_*^O(X)$ (candidate for the "chain homotopy inverse").
This is given by taking a simplex, subdividing it like mad till you exceed the Lebesgue number of the cover $O$ for each subdivided piece, and you get a chain in $C_*^O(X)$. Extend linearly.
That's all.
(Went for a minute; I'm back)
@BalarkaSen Ohh. Right. Duh.
Ignore that
Well, $H_*(X, A) = H_*(X/A)$ for a good pair $(X, A)$.
That's a consequence anyhow, not the formulation
Excision was $H(X-Z,A-Z)=H(X,A)$.
22:49
Yup, Z subset A subset X, closure of Z contained in interior of A
I don't remember the 2 line argument :P Probably you look at the open cover {int(A), X - cl(Z)}
Yeah that's exactly it
OK. Yeah, I could've totally said that out loud if I actually remembered what the excision theorem was :P
(I remembered the theorem but forgot it was called the excision theorem)
…and if I remembered the two line argument.
Ahh.
Well you have surprisingly good geometric intuition even if you can't say stuff out loud so it doesn't matter much
Ah, thank you :)
weren't we supposed to learn differential forms at some point together? i'm terribad at it
22:55
Oh. Right. Yeah, I haven't looked at Ted's book in a while (don't tell him!)
@Daminark Speak of the devil. I mean, demon.
But I haven't actually gotten up to forms yet
Ayyy
@Akiva Are you through inverse function theorem stuff?
@BalarkaSen Dammit, I was just about to say that edit
22:56
:P
Ah, we're talking about forms, I see
Fun stuff
@BalarkaSen Yeah, I'm on section 6.3 "Manifolds Revisited"
Not demonic forms
only differential forms
I was thinking of Platonic forms
@Akiva aha
psst. I didn't really do 7 carefully
23:00
Multi integration?
there are some cool exercises in there however; I didn't read the proof of change of variables although I understand the idea
@Daminark Yep
Lol I'm doing most of those theorems in a Lebesgue integration context and I'll probably just call it a day
Because the Lebesgue stuff seems nicer to deal with than Riemann
Huh, I've never worked with Lebesgue (though I know what it is)
I don't know anything about measures to be honest. Beyond what they are.
I was told in the last week of my informal reading course on Fourier theory about Borel, Lebesgue, how to integrate with them, etc etc but I forgot it all
23:05
So basically, the idea is that you define a simple function as being a linear combination of indicator functions
(of measurable sets)
So $f(x) = \sum_{i=1}^n c_i\chi_{A_i}(x)$
You define the integral of that to be $\int f = \sum_{i=1}^n c_i\mu(A_i)$
Then if $f$ is non-negative, you define $\int f = sup(\int g)$ where $g$ is a simple function and $g \le f$
Noob question
Any easy way to get the eigenvectors of this
\begin{bmatrix} 3x_1^2-r^2 & 3x_1x_2 & 3x_1x_3 \\ 3x_1x_2 & 3x_2-r^2 & 3x_2x_3 \\ 3x_1x_3 & 3x_2x_3 & 3x_3^2-r^2\end{bmatrix}
If you're not necessarily non-negative, you split up $f$ into its positive and negative parts, $f^+$ and $f^-$, and then $\int f = \int f^+ - \int f^-$
have you tried asking mathematica
Well, by hand
$f$ is integrable if at least one of those values is finite
23:11
damn I was fiddling with my pen and it flew 5 feet across the bed
well first rescale all the $x_i$ by $\sqrt3$ to get rid of those annyoing factors
don't feel like fetching it
Lel @Balarka
next see that you are subtracting $M_{ij}=x_i x_j$ by something proportional to identity
so you only need to find the eigenvectors of $M_{ij}$
$a_i=\lambda x_i\sum_jx_j a_j$ is the equation for the coefficients of the EV $a$
@s.harp Not sure I follow
23:17
hi everyone
Hey @Adeek!
Does anyone know how if I make some table
$\det(A+B) \neq \det(A)+\det(B)$
and I want to connect two things from a table that is draw a line from A to B
in a table
is it possible ?
What's the definition of table?
23:24
Are you talking about LaTeX?
@Daminark (/r/nocontext)
Lol right?
@s.harp I understand that $M_{ij}= x_ix_j-\delta_{ij}r^2 = x_ix_j-r^2 \mathbf{I}_3$ but I'm not sure how the eigenspace of $\mathcal{M}_{ij} = x_ix_j$ is the same as the eigenspace of $M_{ij}$. Or is that not what you are claiming?
They're related, but they're not the same.
It's very late here so I might just as well be blind
Right
@Lozansky You want to see where $\det(M-\lambda I)=0$, right?
23:27
Yeah
So that's the determinant of $x_ix_j-(r^2+\lambda){\bf I}_3$
Now divide through by $r^2+\lambda$ and substitute $x_i=x'_i\sqrt{r^2+\lambda}$.
You end up with $(r^2+\lambda)^{1/3}\det(x'_ix'_j-{\bf I}_3)$, I think.
So focus on the eigenvalues/vectors of $x'_ix'_j$.
I'm not sure how you find that, but it's certainly much simpler than what you started with, right?
Oh, wait, hold on.
Now I'm confused. $\lambda$ is outside the determinant? I probably messed that up…
…unless $\lambda=-r^2$ is the answer…
Its not
Wait
Yeah, the $x'$ depend on $\lambda$ in a nontrivial way, so it's gonna be more complicated.
23:32
My original matrix is $M_{ij} = r^{-5}(3x_ix_j-r^2\delta_{ij})$
That what I wanna find the eigenvalues/vectors to
So ignore all that. (And $\lambda=-r^2$ makes no sense because in that case the definition of $x'$ involves a division by $0$)
6 mins ago, by Akiva Weinberger
So that's the determinant of $x_ix_j-(r^2+\lambda){\bf I}_3$
^That part should still work
Yeah that's clear
So they're $r^2$ less than the eigenvalues of $x_ix_j$
Uhmm
23:36
Linear algebra was a long time ago. That might actually make sense
But I mean $\det(A+B) \neq \det(A)+\det(B)$ generally
Isn't that what you are doing?
"zen buddhism and the art of motorcycle maintenance"
man this must be fun to read
23:54
^ this is a very good book ^

« first day (2472 days earlier)      last day (2844 days later) »