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04:16
@BalarkaSen Seifert, not Siefert.
Dietmar and Deitmar are both mathematicians, though.
04:44
0
Q: Why cosine and sine functions are used while representing a signal or a wave?

gayathri gayiActually, in the mathematics sine and cosine functions are defined based on right angled triangle.But how the representation of a wave or signal will say based on these trigonometric functions ( we can't draw any right angled triangles in the mediums(air) ))then how can we say that?

05:20
@Secret They satisfy the right differential equations
At least for simple harmonic motion, you need the second derivative to be proportional to the negative of position
I wonder if it is possible to produce a sine wave from a linear combination of bessels
since the bessels do form an orthonormal basis
So theoretically, the inner products $\langle J_{\nu}(x), sin(x)\rangle$ will give the coefficients in the series combination
In mathematics, Fourier–Bessel series is a particular kind of generalized Fourier series (an infinite series expansion on a finite interval) based on Bessel functions. Fourier–Bessel series are used in the solution to partial differential equations, particularly in cylindrical coordinate systems. == Definition == The Fourier–Bessel series of a function f(x) with a domain of [0,b] f : [ 0 , b ] → R {\displaystyle f:[0,b]\rightarrow \mathbb {R} } is the notation of ...
that's sounds like overkill
Anyway, for an ODE with a linear differential operator, if $a_i$ are solutions, then so is any convergent series combinations of $a_i$
If the differential operator is nonlinear (because it contains nonlinear terms like $(-)^2, yD(-),$ etc.), then it might be possible for a solution to be some series combination of functions, but the individual functions are not solutions
Actually I am wrong, while for linear differential operators, "if $a_i(x)$ is a solution $\implies$ $\sum_{i}a_i$ are solutions", the converse is not necessary true.
One counterexample being sines and cosines don't solve the bessel equation. It will take a bessel function (which can be constructed from sin cos by fourier series) to solve te bessel equation, despite both it and the wave equation are linear
05:41
Hi, I have a math question
LOL
(87.2057<(-(((((sin(sin(((|((({a}+210.161)--271.942)<(({b}*{b})<=-293.63))|<(49.87^exp({a}[41]))[33])-256.239)[36][35]))=tan((-85.8608*((-104.479^sin((atan({a})/{b}[87]))[69][30][93])-((ln(|(((-{b})*{b}[46])|(ln(|{b}|)>172.746))|)[83]!=tan(((-99.2256-(({a}<=-382.473)/({a}<=-240.893)))>=(94.5361*(-(-395.226/{a}))))))=-372.904)))))=(367.384/((((217.513>(pow((-313.092&cos({a}))[15],124.239)>=(375.489|exp(((-79.3096^{b})/-17.7684))))[81])>(((sin({b})>|{a}|)<-54.43)[26][50][65]-266.508))|-304.039)!=224.515)))%2.36137)[25]&((-((asin(ln(|pow(((-342.912<=({b}[24]--185.244))+50.6944),(|{b}[65][30]|+
that seemed to be a bunch of inequalities
user147690
06:28
@EyesOnBud The answer is approximately $13.37\pi$ (actually compute this)
07:39
What operator is [] in the above expression?
Anonymous
08:07
0
Q: How to prove L'Hospital's rule using epsilon-delta method?

BlueFor epsilon-delta proofs, basically we need to find a $\delta$ such that $|F(x)-L|<\epsilon$ whenever, $0<|x-a|<\delta$ (for a small positive number $\epsilon$). To prove L'Hospital's rule (for when numerator and denominator function both tend to $0$ as $x\rightarrow a^{+}$) let us assume $F(x)...

Anonymous
Can someone help me with this ? ^
09:51
10
A: Classification of $SU(2)$ principal fibre bundles over four-dimensional manifolds

Tim PerutzIsomorphism classes of principal $SU(2)$-bundles $P\to X$ over a closed 4-manifold $X$ are classified by $H^4(X;\mathbb{Z})$. One assigns to $P$ the second Chern class (a.k.a. Euler class) of the associated $\mathbb{C}^2$-bundle. (In the oriented case, the number $c_2(P)[X]$ is also called the in...

How come we can trivialize $X$ in the complement of a ball, over an arbitrary connected 4-manifold?
Ah, because it has to be trivial over an open manifold. Never mind! :D
 
1 hour later…
11:05
@Danu Hm, that's a cute fact. I don't know how to get from [X, BSU(2)] to [X, K(Z, 4)] immediately.
Ah maybe K(Z, 4) is obtained from attaching higher cells to BSU(2) or something so that there is an inclusion BSU(2) --> K(Z, 4).
I have no idea how to calculate the cardinality of the neighborhood of $\omega_2$ under the order topology
11:21
@Danu Do you have a simple example of an even dimensional real manifold which isn't a complex manifold? @Balarka said I should ask you
@AlessandroCodenotti $S^4$ lel
Fun fact, $S^4$ is not even almost complex.
how does one prove that
huh nice
The almost complex? Wu classes IIRC
characteristic classes stuff
becuase complex implies restrictions on e.g. divisibility
especially Hirzebruch-Riemann-Roch is powerful in this direction
11:24
I see
Do you have to invoke big things to come up with examples like that?
I told Alessandro about F_n not being a fundamental group of any compact complex surface thing
so eg (S^1 x S^3) # (S^1 x S^3) is an example
I think it's probably not a difficult thing to prove that $S^4$ is not complex
Yeah, you just use Pontryagin numbers
Calculate $p_1[S^4]$. Now calculate it assuming $S^4$ is complex.
But proving it is not almost complex is more difficult.
What restrictions does being complex have on Pontryagin numbers? (I am not very familiar with those characteristic classes)
The Pontryagin classes of a complex bundle have a simple expression in terms of Chern classes
Recall that $p_j(V)=(-1)^jc_{2j}(V\otimes_{\mathbb R} \Bbb C)$
Now if $V$ is complex then $V\otimes_{\Bbb R}\Bbb C=V\oplus\bar V$
11:27
Right. Ah.
The Pontryagin classes are then $p_j(V)=c_j^2(V)-2c_{j-1}(V)c_{j+1}(V)+\dots$
(easy exercise)
By using the direct sum formula for Chern classes, I expect. Gotcha.
So if $S^4$ were complex then $p_1[S^4]=\pm 2 c_2[S^4]=\pm 4$ (I forget the sign)
But $S^4$ bounds, hence $p_1[S^4]=0$
Nice! Thanks a lot.
@Danu well that's surely easier than I expected! I suppose showing it's not a complex manifold is not easy at all?
11:30
See the above.
You need characteristic classes
Characteristic classes are basically the best thing ever :)
I have no idea what does are, but thanks for the example!
The best
A beautiful combination of geometry and topology
with extremely powerful applications
@BalarkaSen Yeah apparently
idk
Also, someone on Physics claimed that principal $G$-bundles over four-manifolds are classified by second Chern class for any compact, simple Lie group $G$
This just has to be horribly wrong. Any easy counterexamples @BalarkaSen?
I don't really know enough about Chern classes to help you with that.
some fb stuff
11:47
I don't even know how to make sense out of "second Chern class" for principal bundles unless they're frame bundles of a vector bundle :P
I guess that for the compact simple Lie groups you can associate a vector bundle to them via the defining representations
But the result is not oging to be a complex vector bundle in general so it makes no sense to talk of $c_2$.
I think the user is confused with the Euler class, and that does make sense as long as it's oriented
I'm fairly certain I can find bundles with the same Euler class which are no isomorphic, over a 4-manifold
@Danu I have a question on MSE to that effect.
@BalarkaSen really? :P
You're basically asking for nonisomorphic vector bundles with isomorphic compactly supported cohomology ring of the total spaces.
You can even find nonisomorphic vector bundles with diffeomorphic total spaces.
Not sure about the 4-manifold base thing.
@BalarkaSen Why am I asking that?
Well, uh, you're not but if you have such an example then Euler classes of those are the same.
Euler class = cup square of the PD of the zero section
12:00
JK you're 100% right
PD of the ZERO LOCUS of a generic sectino
but that's of course just the intersection of the zero section with itself
yeah exactly
Mike has given two answers here to that effect
its PD is then the cup square
I proved that in a seminar
That was one tedious proof
if you dig through them you're going to find examples
\documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article}
\begin{document}
	\newcommand{\fib}[1]{
		\newcount \a
		\newcount \b
		\newcount \c
		\newcount \i
		\a = 0
		\b = 1
		\c = 1
		\i = 0
		\loop
		\advance \i by 1
		\a = \the\b
		\b = \the\c
		\advance \c by \the\a
		\ifnum \i < #1 \repeat
		\the\a
	}

	\fib{11}
	\fib{12}
	\fib{13}
	\fib{14}
\end{document}
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@BalarkaSen how about this
Take the two non-isomorphic oriented rank three bundles over $S^2$
Now if I take the direct sum bundle over $S^2\times S^2$
12:12
yeah that works
That has zero Euler class
and... is not trivial (????)?
In general I should look to produce examples by adding trivial bundles
hmm?
Sorry, ignore that.
Aren't there zero Euler class but nontrivial rank k bundles on S^4?
Let's try to find out :D :P
Maybe it's easier to work with something with $H^2\neq 0$ so that we can use first Chern class
I mean what if you we just take a non-trivial line bundle $c_1\neq 0$ and then sum with $\Bbb C$
That has zero Euler class for sure but isn't trivial by the usual formula for Chern classes
That works on anything with nonzero $H^2$, right?
Is a mod allowed to dismiss the flag of his message?
And the transition functions take values inside $SU(2)$, no?
No, this is weird haha
@skullpatrol I think so
12:23
Hey. Why not Milnor's S^3-bundle on S^4?
The exotic sphere example
Total space of that is homeomorphic to S^7, so it's automatically zero Euler class
I guess you want vector bundles though. Is this sphere bundle linear?
Oh yeah I think it is linear
I suppose that means you get a rank 4 vector bundle on S^4 with nonzero Euler class but which is not trivial (because the unit sphere bundle is Milnor's bundle)?
I am pretty sure fiddling with this will give you an example. I gotta go right now though, have to prepare for the one last exam
OK, "enjoy" ;-)
12:40
I know that if $\lambda$ is an eigenvalue of $A$, then $\lambda^k$ is an eigenvalue of $A^k$, but I am wondering whether the converse holds. That is, if $\lambda$ is an eigenvalue of $A^k$, then must $\lambda^{1/k}$ be an eigenvalue of $A$?
@user193319 No; take for instance $-\operatorname{id}$. It has eigenvalue $-1$ but its square has eigenvalue $1$.
@Danu well you can choose the value of $\lambda^{1/k}$ to make the converse hold...
@Danu I am not sure what you are getting at. $-I$ is not a power of $I$, if that's what you are aiming at.
@user193319 $(-I)^2 = I$
No. I said that it isn't a power of $I$; i.e, $-I \neq I^k$ for any $k \in \Bbb{N}$.
12:50
@user193319 $A = -I$
I think I have a proof of the theorem, but there is one step that bothers mean. Here is it: $\lambda \in \sigma(A)$ if and only if there exists $v \in V \setminus \{0\}$ such that $A(v) = \lambda v$ if and only if $A^{k-1}(A(v)) = \lambda A^{k-1}(v)$ or $A^k(v) = \lambda \lambda^{k-1} v = \lambda^k v$ if and only if $\lambda^{k} \in \sigma(A^k)$.
The only problem I see with the proof is, what if there is some $k$ such that $A^k(v) = 0$? This would imply $v =0$, which is a contradiction. I can't rule this out, nor can I find a example in which $A^k(v) = 0$ for some $k$.
Oh! I see. Thank you @MartinSleziak
@user193319 I am not sure whether you claim that this is equivalence: $(\exists v\ne0) Av=\lambda v$ $\iff$ $(\exists v\ne0) A^{k-1}Av=\lambda A^{k-1}v$
There must be some problem with the above proof, as the linked counterexamples show.
13:15
@user193319 This is, in my opinion, one of the problems in the attempted proof above. If you read it from right to left, then you know $\lambda^k\in \sigma(A^k)$, which gives you $A^kv=\lambda^kv$. But what do you use to replace the RHS by $\lambda A^{k-1}v$?
BTW I have reposted this in linear algebra chat room - maybe somebody interested will notice it there.
@BalarkaSen I just saw that the proof that $S^4$ is not even almost complex is really easy.
If it were almost complex, we would have $p_1(S^4)=c_1^2(S^4)-2c_2(S^4)=3\sigma(S^4)=0$. Since $H^2=0$, we find that $c_2=0$. But $c_2$ is the Euler class.
This is really exactly the same as what I said before, because you only need an almost complex structure to turn $TS^4$ into a complex vector bundle. Also, this is of course only easy modulo proving that the Pontryagin numbers or the signature are zero for oriented boundaries. But I remember showing you how to do it for the signature ;D Though now we're stuck using the signature theorem so you need to do some work in any case...
It has been 2 months and I still made that typo of "ordinary" to "ordinal"
@user193319 $I=(-I)^2$ but $\sqrt 1=1$ is what I was saying.
Of course, $(-1)^2=1$ as well so it's not such a great counterexample.
@MartinSleziak it's funny; the top answer on that post is the IMMEDIATE thought I had when I saw the question. Alas, I realised the $-\operatorname{id}$ example was even easier (to check explicitly), though not as "good".
13:40
in The h Bar, 49 secs ago, by Secret
Meanwhile, I forgot what is the complex number generalisation to a metric
O, it is literally what is said on the tin
Hi!
quick1
$\int_{-\infty}^{x} e^{\frac{a}{x}} dx$
how do I solve this integration?
One does not solve an integration. One evaluates or computes an integral.
yeah my bad!,good will hunting
:)
$\displaystyle \int_{-\infty}^{x} e^{a/x} \ \mathrm dx$
Not really sure if you can find its closed form
yes , my latex looks different than yours!
also your profile pic changed! :)
actually this comes from a probability question
13:54
@BAYMAX show us the whole question
Let $X$ be a random variable having PDF $f(x) = \frac{1}{\lambda} e^{-\frac{\lambda}{x}} , x>0 , \lambda > 0$
find the $p$th Quantile?
What would an author mean if they say a value has an asymptotic upper bound of, say, $2^{n(1+o(1))}$?
for which I had done $\int_{-\infty}^{x} f(t) dt = p$
now I have to find $x$
@LegionMammal978 like $2^{1.324342n}$
13:58
$\int_{-\infty}^{x} \frac{1}{\lambda} e^{-\frac{\lambda}{t}} dt = p$
@LeakyNun I get that, but would this bound allow me to find a exact, "hard" upper bound for a given $n$?
@LegionMammal978 no idea
$\int_{-\infty}^{x} e^{-\frac{\lambda}{t}}dt = p\lambda$
This is why I hate asymptotics so much :/
@LegionMammal978 more context?
14:01
@LeakyNun Was trying to get some upper bounds on the kissing number $k_n$ for $n=25..31$ (the standard tables only go up to $n=24$), and a loose upper bound is $k_n\leq2^{0.401n(1+o(1))}$
The problem is, I have no clue what bounds there are on the $o(1)$ term
@LegionMammal978 strange notation
@LeakyNun Why so?
I think, based on my guess, that $o(1)$ is between $0$ and $1$
@LegionMammal978 because you wouldn't use $o$ if you already have that term
Well, the paper the bound comes from is in Russian :P
The integral is nonelementary
To get the wolfram alpha result, change of variable $\frac{a}{x}=u$ and then integrate by parts the $-\frac{a}{u}\frac{e^u}{u}$ formed
sorry what I said is wrong: The wolfram alpha result is a direct integration by parts of $1*e^{\frac{a}{x}}$
Hmm...
14:20
ya just use reciprocal substitution and then laurent series
@Secret You alright?
I guess so.
recently discovered that chat tags can be made this long
well at least it does not strech the screen like those super long \$\$ messages
@secret I just wanted you to know I don't mind your long messages and self conversations in this room. I quite enjoy them actually. =D
14:49
@WillHunting icon
@LeakyNun Sorry, I don't understand what you mean by icon.
@WillHunting [your] icon [changed]
@LeakyNun Oh yes, it is the latest pic I just took. It was taken to show my suffering.
@LeakyNun You can see all my pics on my instagram. =D
[Integral project] I am starting to wonder whether it is possible to capture all special functions into some kind of algebraic structure. Take the above integral as an example, it can be integrated simply because when $f(x)=\frac{a}{x}$, we call $\int xf'(x)e^{f(x)}dx$ the special function $a\text{Ei}\left(\frac{a}{x}\right)$
This means, of the $\mathfrak{c}$ many integrable functions, it just happens that finite many of them are interesting enough to earn a special name for them
This means in general, integrating an nonelementary integral is basically the same as asking the question of whether you can split it up into known integrals
Since infinite series are lesbegue integrals under the countable measure, it might explain why Waiting can often found the close form of some series. What is actually happening is we are just expressing one series in terms of integrals and other known series
So unless there really is some universal rationale on how people define special functions, the question of close forms is really the following:
@Secret Well, that's because Waiting is the world's leading authority on series and integrals. =D
15:04
Definition: Given a Lesbegue integral with some measure $\mu$, a closed form is an element $f \in (\mu,\Bbb{F})$ such that it is a finite combination under addition, multiplication, exponentiation and composition of named elements $g \in (\mu,\Bbb{F})$
That is, suppose $h$ is the integrand. Then, the integral has a closed form if:
$$\exists f,g \in (\mu,\Bbb{F}), \int h d\mu = f = \prod_{n_1,...n_5 < \infty}(+^{n_1},-^{n_2},\times ^{n_3},\frac{-}{-}^{n_4},\circ^{n_5}) g_{n_1n_2n_3n_4n_5}$$
where the messy bracket is an ordered sequence of operations to be applied
E.g. $\sin (x^2) = \sin \circ (-)^2 \circ x$ ($\circ$ is right associative)
Therefore, an integral has an elementary antiderivative if $g$ are elementary functions
I am not sure, given the size of the space of all integrable functions, whether there can exists a function $k$ such that it can only be produced by an infinite composition (including operators like addition, multiplication, exponentiation etc.) of all known functions in the literature
If I wanted to continuously deform e^x into ln(x), I would need a model for fractional iterations of e^x
I see nothing strange about this, so Can anyone tell me why people keep making up outlandish statements like "There is no entire (holomorphic everywhere) function f(z) with f(f(z))=z?" It's clearly easy to do something like ask mathematica to deform the exponential function into the half-exponential function which is shown extending over the entire domain.
and then from there to deform it into ln(x)
15:19
The above thing regarding the function $k$ can make a good MSE question, but probably way too broad to ask
no questions more broad than this have already been asked on stack exchange
specifically regarding that topic
it was a stack exchange member who essentially said the existence of such a function would be a contradiction
and it was accepted as an answer
but according to topology...there's nothing wrong with it
we don't even have a taylor series for f(x), why would someone make the assumtion that the iteration wouldn't yield the proper range for e^x?
sorry, no, questions...*
@DaneJoe I would like to read the link to that, because that will basically imply every series and integral, as long they converge, will have a closed form if we actually named every single function in the space of all integrable functions
oh wait never mind it wasn't accepted as the answer
but it had the most upvotes
also what's wrong with every integral having a closed form?
you know the functions already exist, but we simply haven't discovered them, right?
the numbers aren't random, they have to equation something
equal*
Well, one thing that I wonder about is whether there exists integrals that can only be computed numerically and has no closed form even in the most general sense
the only time it wouldn't work in the general sense
is if for every partial
we needed to discover a new function
in other words that we will never know the generalization
but I don't know where that is the case
I guess it's possible
but with our current simple axioms of functional analysis
I see nothing wrong with the proposition that every convergent integral has some closed form in the form.
in the form of any combination of computational operators
There is already an answer for all the unanswered questions, it's just a matter of discovering them.
15:37
@DaneJoe Do you have the link to the question?
Hi, $$f\in C^3(\mathbb R) \text{ with }f' \times f'''<0\\
\text{Is it true that : }\forall a,b\in \mathbb R^2, |f(a)-f(b)| \leq |f'(\frac{a+b}{2})|\times |a-b| $$
I thought I posted the link
id I didn't my bad ill post it now
26
Q: Does the exponential function have a square root?

2010 Joint Meetings(asked by Nathaniel Hellerstein on the Q&A board at JMM) Is there a "half-exponential" function $h(x)$ such that $h(h(x))=e^x$? Is it unique? Is it analytic? Related question: Is there an invertible smooth function $E$ such that $E(x+1)=e^{E(x)}$? Is it unique? If so, then we can take $h(x)=E(E...

> so we are led to the absurd conclusion that $e^z$ takes the value zero infinitely often.
well
that's not generally strange
because sin(x) does so
it just means it has a
hold on
I remember this term vaguely
let me find it
damnit
sorry
but they removed the term from wolfram's page for some reason
but anyway
15:48
it's a point where a function changes from being monotonic to oscillating
it occurs in the cosine integral
but there is no reason to suspect that the half-exponential function does this that I can see
at least from a topological perspective
@DaneJoe It's not generally strange, but it's also not true of the exponential, which never takes the value zero, since $|e^z|=|e^x e^{iy}|=|e^x|>0$
@MikeMiller Right that's what I'm saying
the half-exponential function could take on 0 once
but only once
Shiva is english your first language?
@shiva *
I'm not being condescending I'm actually asking
Hmm, infinite number of roots does not sound very bad. It depends on whether it is countably many or uncountably many. Also since $e^x$ is already nonlinear wrt $x$, I don't see what's the problem that the half exponential will also be a nonlinear function hence it can very well map $0$ back to something nonzero when it is applied the second time?
how could the zero of an exponential function be uncountable
zeros*
and yes the half exponential function has the property that ln(f(e^x))=f(x)
so it should be able to be mapped back
but for some reason it's excruciatingly difficult to explicitly define any form of the exponential function
I think I know where the infinite zeros comes from though
usually fraction iterations is defined about fixed points
e^x has no real fixed points
I am thinking about Let $a$ be in the kernel of the half exponential $f$. Then $f(a)=0$ and then $\exists b \in \Bbb{C}, f(f(a))=e^a=b\neq 0$
15:54
yeah I don't think the half-exponential function would ever fail to be injective
I can see how it seems like a contradiction from a functional view
since the half-exponential function would span all real numbers
whereas e^x cannot
but topologically there is nothing wrong with the half-exponential function
but it should also be considered
that given how little we know about the function
we shouldn't be so quick to assume its iteration wouldn't yield e^x over at least some domain
It would seem a more generalized definition of a function is needed to reconcile these two conclusions
something that includes iterations of functions
If both $f$ and $e^x$ are linear functions, then yes we will have a problem since for linear function, we cannot escape from the kernel since for $l$ linear $l(0)=0$

But since both of these functions are nonlinear, then we can escape from the kernel as $f(0)$ can be multivalued. In that case, I think it is even ok for the half exponential to span all real numbers. Perhaps it can be defined in some continuous manner such that positive numbers maps to positive numbers, and negative numbers maps to some other negative numbers such that after two applications of $f$ it must map to positive num
The half-exponential function should span all real numbers
but not because it returns to 0 infinitely often
f(0) shouldn't be multivalued
the half-exponential function, in terms of homotopy, should be injective
which is to say that if you continuously deformed e^x into the half exponential function you would arrive at a function that has no strange properties, that is simply monotonically increasing
but grows a little more slowly than the exponential function
though eventually faster than any polynomial
You mean the half exponential itself is an injective function or the deformation map from it to $e^x$ is an injective map?
the deformation map, at least so far
we can't currently prove the half-exp function itself is injective
@DaneJoe Not a first language
16:08
at least not as far as I am aware
Okay, well then this brings up a good point
Shiva doesn't speak english, but they got downvoted for being unclear
that isn't right
this isn't the right room for that but it is the situation I expected
I would recommend using like google translator first if you can
typing it in your own native language as best you can, and then pasting the result
@shiva you shouldn't feel bad about it though, it's stack exchange's fault that they aren't accounting for the cultural diversity of its members
Why do people always say that Complex Analysis is beautiful?
because it lets you solve a lot of problems you shouldn't solve before
and there's a lot of unexpoected and yet simple results
unexpected*
like e^(-pi*i)=-1
er actually just pi*i
and also couldn't*
plus when you look at complex maps
Is it diffcult?
it takes a lot of training to get to it
then linear algebra
then differential equations
you need to finish all of calculus
then applied or functional analysis
is functional analysis itself difficult? it depends on the problem
I currently finished Real Analysis
16:17
sounds like complex analysis is a good way to go
complex analysis is heavily based on things like multivariable deriviatives
but also spans the other topics
Does Complex Analysis share a lot of similar concepts with real?
The only difference being that in Complex u do things in the complex plane rather than the real line
it has some similarities, it doesn't deal as much with discrete operators
but rather gets more into complex mapping and defining functions of a complex variable
so its based more on integrals
In my opinion it's harder because it's a bigger leap to go from only thinking about real variables to complex variables
but it should be equally as tedious as real analysis
polar coordinates will come up more too
@yswong Complex differentiable functions are much nicer than real differentiable functions.
For example, in complex analysis, if something has a derivative, then it is infinitely differentiable (its second derivative, third derivative, etc., all exist).
This is wildly not true in real analysis.
@AkivaWeinberger would you agree that deriving them is harder? It's harder to work with descrete functions but deriving them is easier, whereas deriving complex functions is harder but using them is easier
To me i think the fun starts from the integral portion onwards
16:22
a lot of times all you're really trying to prove is that a function applies to complex variables in a similar way that it applies to real variables
From cauchy integral formula onwards
that e^x is defined not only for real x, but for any x+iy
What's the set of derivatives of complex functions ? Is that something we know ?
The main conceptual difference is that, a function is differentiable if it's locally linear. And "linear" means something different for real functions then complex functions.
Well it means something more general
16:24
@Astyx It's the same as the set of differentiable functions, at least on a simply connected domain, IIRC.
just that it's mapped linear
The phrase I heard to explain linear maps in the complex setting is "amplitwist"
complex analysis is like a combination of real analysis, linear algebra and calc 3
Basically, $f(z)=az$ stretches ("amplifies") the complex plane if $a$ is real, and rotates ("twists") it if it's imaginary
complex numbers tend to act like ordinary numbers in some instances, like vectors in other instances, and like angles in others, so you should be comfortable with all those forms of math
16:25
and if $a$ has both a real and imaginary part, it does both
Note that $f(z)=\bar z$ and $f(z)={\rm Re}(z)$ are not linear or amplitwists
so something that locally looks like the conjugation function is not complex differentiable
(Amplitwists preserve angles and the orientations of those angles)
So any differentiable function is the derivative of another function ? How do you prove that ?
(Unless the derivative is 0, because that means that it locally looks like a constant function.)
@Astyx No, every differentiable function is the derivative of another function, in complex analysis.
Remember that once-differentiable things are infinitely differentiable.
Yeah, a mistake on my part that took an eternity to correct cause I'm on my phone
You show that integrals don't depend on the path of integration
and then you integrate it
Cool
16:30
That's why I said simply connected domain, though. $\frac1z$, as defined on $\Bbb C\setminus\{0\}$, isn't the derivative of anything. (You can't define $\ln z$ for the entirety of $\Bbb C\setminus\{0\}$.)
(You get the weird multifunction thing where the value can drift in multiples of $2\pi i$ as you go around the origin)
Right
17:07
Hey everyone!
@AkivaWeinberger can't I just integrate it?
How do you integrate it? The integral is not path independent since the domain is not simply connected
@LeakyNun Locally, yes. Globally, no.
not all paths are homotopic
@AlessandroCodenotti I see
17:13
If it was a derivative of something integrating it along any loop would give you zero.
But clearly, that does not hold.
Whats the difference between Cauchy integral formula and residue integration?
How do u know when to use which?
Residue theorem is a generalization of Cauchy integral formula.
The residue theorem is a generalization of Cauchy
SNIPED
17:20
SNIPED AGAIN
nobody answers for 5 minutes and then I get sniped as I type!
how is that possible
Yup but which instance is it better to use Cauchy integral formula and which instance is it better to use residue theorem?
Humour me for a second, a vector field is conservative iff it is the gradient of some vector field right?
In most exercise you'll want to use the residue theorem I think
@Perturbative Yeah. Well, gradient of some function, you mean.
17:26
@Balarka Yeah woops, meant scalar potential
Well in a test our lecturer set a question, where we were given a vector field $F = \nabla ln(xy)$, which is obviously conservative, we weren't asked to prove it was conservative, but we all got marked down for not showing that is was conservative
The question wanted us to draw some field lines and other boring stuff, but not to prove conservativeness
17:48
Does anyone know of a manuscript that discusses "Weierstrass substitution"(also called tangent half angle substitution) in terms of the Risch algorithm?
There is one paper that discusses the Weierstrass substitution in symbolic integration but "not" specifically in terms of Risch algorithm, this one apmaths.uwo.ca/~djeffrey/Offprints/toms1994.ps
I posted the question now on site itself math.stackexchange.com/questions/2400454/…
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