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03:00
Oh, it actually was lectures that never got published in French. I wonder how good Goldberg's English translation is.
oh cool
Ah, Chern wrote the forward for that ...
See y'all later.
the array of topics definitely strikes my fancy, but every once in a while something is said and I have to think about it for days and do loads of computation
see ya @Ted
See you @Ted!
cya @Ted
03:03
Also @EricSilva backtracking quite a lot, do you think Marianna will cover harmonic functions next year?
idk ask her
you still have class with her
@Eric Out of context it sounds like you're telling Daminark to ask a girl out lol.
that is very much not what's going on
03:06
Oh God
I'm sure she probably isn't really thinking about it right now though @Daminark
Also backtracking again, are there people in your cohort who you think would be very receptive to diff geo stuff? Are you the only one taking manifolds?
There are 5 of us doing manifolds
One is not doing the bootcamp though
But yeah I mean, I think a lot of people will enjoy it enough
Wow that's a lot more than in my cohort
Only me and Brian did
For what it's worth, not everyone will be ecstatic
But on average people will see it as at least reasonably interesting
We also have 3 people taking complex, I think
We had a bunch
Me and 5 or 6 others I think
03:20
I think Webster teaching and the knowledge that it'd happen in bootcamp got many people to not do it yet
The people who did complex now are wishing they did manifolds now and complex next year
Last quarter would've been good because Calegari but most people who doubled did so with topology
there is a class dedicated to manifolds?
it's a basic differential topology class
oh diff topo. i remember that class. I had the same teacher for diff topo as complex analysis. all in the same semester too.
I took them in the same quarter as well
It was a fun term
Lol, I imagine. Neves difftop was dank
03:32
I would've preferred your version of the course, but I'm glad I took it my first year, that quarter would've driven me crazy without it
Lol, I imagine
At some point I will need to go over the stuff, the stuff was a bit scattered and my understanding was vague
And lol you had the professor who did sheaves, right?
Lmao
I mean I guess you gotta learn them eventually
meh. i mean it's an ok perspective
03:52
Warner mentions them even vOv
What should I know before trying to learn what a sheaf is?
inb4 "everything"
Everything except what a sheaf is
Lol jk
I don't know what a sheaf is
@Fargle I say everything to answer the question "Why do I care?"
I mean I could suggest topology, and groups/rings but you'd only understand the definition and not why you'd want to know the definition
which is really more relevant imo
That's a fair point.
start by knowing what a smooth manifold is
(easiest examples of sheaves)
03:56
"A smooth manifold is a locally ringed space such that..."
Lol jk
I think I know what a smooth manifold is.
Sheaves are apparently certain types of categories so I imagine that by the time you care about them you at least know algebraic topology
nah man
sheaves may be a category but that's only how nlab would define them.
so yeah no
I vaguely remember seeing that definition on wikipedia
A smooth manifold is a set which is locally homeomorphic to (a fixed) $\Bbb R^n$ for which each transition map in the atlas is smooth.
04:00
Yeah, preferably second countable and $T_2$ if I remember right
Because you want uniqueness of limits and partitions of unity
Wait
"We want it not only to be Hausdorff, but aLSo $T_2$!
@Fargle Ok. Fix a smooth manifold $M$. To each open subset $U$ of $M$ assign $C^\infty(U)$, the ring of smooth $\Bbb R$-valued functions on $U$ (why does this make sense?). This assignment is called a presheaf.
Or at least is an example of a presheaf.
@BalarkaSen The ring with composition as multiplication?
No, that doesn't make any sense.
Indeed.
It's pointwise multiplication and addition.
In any case, why does "smooth function on $U$" make sense?
because composition of smooth functions is smooth again and so is the addition of smooth functions?
That's not the point
This definition of a manifold is a topological space
04:07
Oh, no, I'm literally asking how to define a smooth function on (an open subset of)a smooth manifold. This is a technical point of course.
ohh.
So you don't a priori know you have the structure of a smoothness, so the idea is to define it properly
Right, I'm trying to consider that.
Actually I should probably find a book that defines manifolds as such and go through it carefully
GP does everything embedded in $\mathbb{R}^n$
Yeah. It's not really that of a big deal but you should pick it up at one point.
04:11
a smooth function has derivatives of all orders defined everywhere?
Then learn the proof that every abstract smooth manifold embeds in R^n from Hirsch, so you know nothing is lost when you do GP's definition
I feel like it's going to be something to do with restricting an atlas.
Might try Hirsch
@Fargle Yep, good idea.
@Daminark It's a reference book to me, to be honest. I can't read through it.
But each chart is mapping to a different "copy" of $\Bbb R^n$, and the transition map only tells you how those copies interact where the charts overlap...
04:14
Yes, it's a technical detail you need to pay attention to. But try it on a rainy day when you have nothing better to do, maybe :)
hi
@BalarkaSen That happens to be today (er, tonight)
lol oops
04:17
is it really raining tho?
SBM
SBM
hmm hello people
It has been
hmm hello @SBM
SBM
SBM
Hope you're having a good day
Hey @Alessandro and @SBM
And @Balarka lol, well, what you do you think is better for working through more?
04:27
I don't know a great reference unfortunately
I haven't noticed this because I was going with the flow, but apparently GP has a reputation for being wishy-washy with certain technical details that are important to see precisely
I learnt differential topology in fragments
I see
Makes sense, the vibe I got is that most "manifolds" books start with all the basic stuff about smooth structures, various types of maps, bundles, Sard, all that
But then most of them seem to go down less of the transversality/intersection theory/degree and more toward things like forms and cohomology
So references are tricky to find, I only know of GP, Milnor, and Hirsch
@BalarkaSen re: the formal thing from earlier
I think the issue for me is what it means to have a 'good' intuitive answer.
In some fields, that can be done pretty often. In others, not at all.
@Daminark Lee is also good
04:51
Ah, alright, will check it out
The exercises are disappointing, but it's thorough with some of the stuff (vector fields and flows, Lie theory, stuff) you won't find on GP
Lee for Lie!
Dummit and Foote for?
04:55
Dammit my foot
Credits to Balarka
But yeah I mean, that's exciting for sure. I've wanted to learn a bit about cake theory for some time
@Daminark Definitely the reactions when the book slips out of your hand and falls right onto your toes.
So dummit and foote is for sustaining foot injuries :P
0
Q: Let $f$ be a polynomial with at least $k$ different roots, prove that $f'$ hast at least $k-1$ different roots

Gioacchino ScuticchioI don't know how to write the proof to this problem: Let $f$ be a polynomial with at least $k$ different roots, prove that $f'$ has at least $k-1$ different roots. It's featured among a few exercises made to apply Rolle's theorem, but this one is about a general result and asks for higher d...

I thought of proving it by contradiction!
Can we use that integration of a $k−1$ degree polynomial is a $k$th degree polynomial !
in the proof
05:56
@TheGreatDuck good morning, this is an response about one of your comments: my comment is about the edited post of the new user (with a question and member for 3 days). Thanks.
06:29
0
Q: Why are we solving the limits in this way?

AbhishekstudentThe question is- Find $ \lim_{x\to 5} f(x) $ if it exists $f(x)=\frac{x^2-9x+20}{x-[x]}$ where [.] is G.I.F. Now, my teacher solved it like this- $ \lim_{x\to 5^+} \frac{(x-5)(x-4)}{(x-5)}$ Now, (x-5) gets canceled and gives us $x-4$ $=$ $5-4=1$ Similarly, for $5^-$, we get the answer as 0...

SBM
SBM
easy
 
2 hours later…
08:22
and that's my reaction to the entirety of the album
good album
um. lol.
I kinda like it.
Hey @MikeMiller
08:45
what axioms among the group axioms are needed to prove "if [xa=ya for all a] then [x=y]"?
Hi @Danu
@LeakyNun Existence of an inverse.
You don't need $xa = ya$ for all $a$ anyway. A single $a$ suffices - just multiply $xa$ and $ya$ on the right by $a^{-1}$.
Hi @arctictern
or, without existence of inverses, it would suffice to take a=id (so applies to any binary operation with a right identity)
hi
So if I puncture $\Bbb C\mathrm{P}^1$ $n$ times, $n\geq 3$, and I look for automorphisms of the resulting Riemann surfaces, that's the same as looking for Mobius transformation with $n$ prescribed points
"Generically" it should not be possible to find any Mobius transformation that does that
(for $n> 3$)
08:55
yeah, modular group acts sharply 3-transitively
It would correspond to some kind of embedding of a subgroup of $S_n$ into the Mobius group
but it is possible "accidentally". Can I make this more precise somehow?
I am interested in $n=4$ first because I feel like you can maybe bootstrap those results (especially if they're mostly "negative")
So how many of the 24 possible permutations of the four points are actually possible as Mobius transformations?
How does it depend on the points I chose?
For instance, I know that if I take 3 of the four, permute them amongst themselves, then the fouth is a fixed point and that's possible by fine-tuning it to be one of at most 2 points
Is it easy to improve on this?
I feel like all of this is already known
wifi bad. all 24 are possible (whenever any are possible at all)
@arctictern So to get from 1 to all 24, what do you do?
Suppose the modular group stabilizes the set of points {a,b,c,d}. Then given any permutation, there is a unique g that matches that permutation when restricted to {a,b,c}, which must also send d to the same place as well.
err
I shouldn't be saying "modular group." not sure I'm making any sense.
Mobius group?
I mean PGL(2,C)
BUt what you're saying makes sense
so take {a,b,c} and take the g that sends them to prescribed points {x,y,z}
09:02
PGL(2,C) will never stabilize a 4-element subset
Then also d maps to w
@arctictern What do you mean by stabilize? I don't mean stabilize every individual element
It definitely can stabilize in the sense of permuting {a,b,c,d}
G stabilizes S if gS=S for all g in G
right
I mean not the entire group
I mean just a single element
I just mean there exists a g such that gS=S
(so an automorphism of the Riemann surface)
I wanna understand how many automorphisms there are as you vary n
For n=3 it's clearly exactly 6, but for n=4 what is it?
More, or less?
The symmetric group is larger but the system is now over-determined so typically one should have no solutions at all. What weirds me out is that it seems to depend on the choice of the points
what part of the world do you live in?
it's 4am here lol
try it with {0,1,inf,z} wlog
Yeah, I tried that
09:06
see if/how it depends on z
I'm in Germany
you get solutions for some special case of z
For instance, I don't know, take $0\mapsto 1,1\mapsto \infty,\infty\mapsto 0,z\mapsto z$
This will be possible iff z is a fixed point of the unique transformation determined by the three other points, which is 1 or 2 points (too lazy to check)
1/(1-w) I think
yeah that's right
Right, so the fixed points of that
solutions of w^2-w+1=0
09:10
okay, let's distinguish the variable from the parameter z
right haha
so $z=\frac{1}{2}\pm i\frac{\sqrt 3}{2}$
are the only ones that will work, none of the others do
So say we take one of those two and do a different permutation of the 4 elements. Does it still work?
First order check: Does every permutation of $\{0,1,\infty\}$ fix the same points?
No, it doesn't I think
Because $\{0,1,\infty\}\mapsto \{1,0,\infty\}$ is given by $f(w)=1-w$
Guyz
can u help me with complex analysis
i need to proof check my sollution
@MikeMiller Any comments on the automorphism group of $n$-times punctured $\Bbb C\mathrm{P}^1$ ($n>3$)? It depends on where you puncture... Take $n=4$ if you like :P
So you don't get all 24 @arctictern... Maybe even just 1?
I conjecture either 1 (for the special choices of $z$) or 0 automorphisms
09:17
@Danu did you check permutations where $z$ is not a fixed point?
@arctictern No
But I can try
Suppose $g$ is an automorphism of $\Bbb CP^1-X$, where $X$ is a finite set of punctures. So I guess it lifts to a auto of $\Bbb CP^1$ with $gX=X$. This means $X$ is a finite union of finite cycles of $g$. It might be useful to look at what finite cycles of mobius tranformations are possible.
$x$ is in a finite cycle of $g$ of length dividing $k$ iff $x$ is a fixed point of $g^k$ (not sure if helpful)
So $(0,1\infty,z)\mapsto (z,\infty,1,0)$ is given by $\frac{aw-az}{aw-a}=\frac{w-z}{w-1}$
@arctictern Exactly, that was my second line of thought when I started yesterday
What's it called when $g^k=id$ for some power?
torsion
I was thinking of the subset of $S_n$ that has that property
09:21
but an individual $x$ fixed by $g^k$ is not the same as $g^k=\rm id$
No, of course not
@SteamyRoot thanks
But if you can permute let's say 3 of them in a torsion way
You would get it
oh, you mean solutions to $\{\sigma\in S_n:\sigma^k=\rm id\}$
yeah
So maybe say we know PGL(2,C) has no torsion of order k then we can rule out stuff like that
09:22
I don't see how. Having torsion as a map on CP^1 doesn't follow from restricting to finite order permutation of X.
Also that other permutation I gave above also doesn't preserve the fixed points
Does any permutation ever preserve fixed points?
${\rm PSU}(2)\subset {\rm PSL}(2,\Bbb C)$ should be able to act on $\mathbb{CP}^1\simeq S^2\subset\Bbb R^3$ by any possible 3D rotation. Suppose we take a set of points in $S^2$ with lots of symmetry (like a regular tetrahedron for the $n=4$ case)...
Actually it's probably important to note that that permutation $(0,1,\infty,z)\mapsto (z,\infty,1,0)$ does work.
So it's at least 2 non-trivial automorphisms
and it doesn't even depend on z (!) that this second one works
if i take the limit $\lim_{z \to\ z_0} (z-z_0)^mf(z)$ and it is zero is it a pole or essential singularity?
Urgh, I'm doing something st00pid
09:32
does any1 know?
@ManolisLyviakis If it is zero for every $m$ then it is essential
lets take $\lim_{z\to\ 0} \frac{z^m}{e^z-e^{-z}}$
So @arctictern for any $z\neq 1$ the map $f(w)=\frac{w-z}{w-1}$ definitely works, and sends $(0,1,\infty,z)\mapsto (z,\infty,1,0)$. I double-double checked :P
since it is 0/0 if i use D'hospital rule it is 0 for every m i think so that mean 0 is essential for the function $f(z)=\frac{1}{e^z-e^{-z}}$ @Danu or i cant use d'hospital
btw @danu
i think ive seen u here before
@Danu If I did my math right, for $\{\infty,\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}},\frac{\omega}{\sqrt{2}},\frac{\omega^2}{\sqrt{2}}\}‌​$ we should get $A_4$.
09:37
Yeah, you have. But sorry I'm not going to work on your problem now @Manolis
@arctictern $\omega$ anything, or unit norm?
$\omega$ is cube root of $1$
ah
that's the regular tetrahedron in the Riemann sphere under stereographic projection
the whole SU(2)->SO(3) thing
09:38
Ah
@arctictern So, why is it $A_4$ and not $S_4$ or something else? Any insight?
orientation-reversing isometries of the sphere would require conjugation and be anti-holomorphic
And the odd permutations reverse orientation?
(the rotational symmetries of a regular tetrahedron are even permutations of the vertices; odd permutations come from reflections, which on the sphere are orientation-reversing, which back in the Riemann world are anti-holomorphic and would be mobius transformations of $\bar{z}$ instead of $z$)
right
Aight
cool
so for special values you get a lot
can one ever get all of $S_4$?
Can we prove that if one works, and you just switch around two elements, then it doesn't work?
First check: Does $\{0,1,\infty,z\}\mapsto \{1,0,\infty,z\}$ ever work?
$\displaystyle \lim_{z \rightarrow z_o} f(z) = \infty$ does that mean it must be a pole for sure?
09:45
No, it doesn't for any $z\neq 0,1,\infty$ because $f(w)=1-w$ is the Mobius transformation
$\{\pm1,0,\infty\}$ should net you the dihedral group $D_4$ (at least)
How does that relate to $S_4$?
So those are the "largest cycle" ones, plus the ones given by reflections right?
multiplication by $-1$ is sufficient to transpose $\pm1$
otherwise yeah 90 degree rotation matrices cycle them
And $1/z$ transposes $0,\infty$ while fixing $\pm 1$
presumably because 1/z is conjugate to -z by a rotation matrix
but yeah
09:55
There should be a general result :P
@arctictern thank you so much for all this :D
I'm thinking what of this I can put on my exercise sheets for the course on Riemann surfaces...
Suppose g is in PGL(2,C) transposes two points and fixes some others (collect these things in a set X). Wlog (by conjugating g) we can ensure g transposes 0 & inf and fixes 1, so in other words g(z)=1/z. the only other fixed point is -1, which means for |X|>4 no automorphism can restrict to a transposition.
@Danu fun stuff
@arctictern That sound good!
It's funny because for |X|=4 I have this double transposition {a,b,c,d} -> {d,c,b,a} which actually works (that's the one I found earlier)---it doesn't fix anything but transposes
So if you add a 5th (and fix that one) this can't work is what you say
So it doesn't factor through S_5
you can get other odd permutations though. for instance 1/z on {0, inf, r, 1/r, -r, -1/r}. where r is not +/-1.
@arctictern Ah, but this is actually trivial because if that were the case then you have 3 fixed points $(|X\setminus\{0,\infty\}|\geq 3$) but not id, which is not possible trivially
That is, if you'r ejust transposing 2 elements and otherwise do nothing
consider the Iwasawa decomposition ${\rm SL}(2,\Bbb C)=KAN$, where $K=$ special unitary matrices, $A=$ positive real diagonal matrices, and $N=$ unitriangular matrices. everything in ${\rm SL}(2,\Bbb C)$ is conjugate to an element in one of these three subgroups. this should allow you to determine the conjugacy classes of ${\rm SL}(2,\Bbb C)$, and then determine the cycle types of a representative of each class
10:10
oompf
(btw we're working with PGL, not PSL, right?)
Wait... am I wrong?
doesn't mattress over C
right
because you just scale
inclusion PSL(n,C)->PGL(n,C) is an iso (not over R tho)
and it doesn't change the automorphism---the constant drops out
yeah
I think the iwasawa idea gives a complete solution
the finite cycles of things in A and N are obvious
which leaves torsion elements of K=SU(2)
which basically means you only get nonobvious permutations when you use polyhedral symmetry from special sets of points on the Riemann sphere stereographically projected into 3D space
err, actually have to see if nontorsion elements of SU(2) could have finite cycles first I guess
10:20
This is a little over my head
But thanks a lot
I don't really know much about SL(2,C)
KCd has a nice note which on SL(2,R)=KAN which generalizes pretty easily.
the wikipedia page on iwasawa decomposition is way too advanced
10:33
I read that KAN stuff at some point
10:53
hi
can $\dot{x^2} = Ax + B\dot{x} + C$ can be written as two different set of or coupled or uncoupled differential equations ?

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