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17:00
Hi @BalarkaSen @TedShifrin
@MatheiBoulomenos Here's a question I have no idea how one would answer. Suppose we take that method of generating additional solutions from a given solution as an equivalence relation, i.e. two solutions are equivalent if you can obtain one from the other.
Hi @Mathei,@Balarka
How many distinct equivalence classes will there be?
Hi @Ted
@Semiclassical that's a good question. I guess someone knowledgable about elliptic curves could answer that, but unfortunately I am not knowledgable about that
17:01
Nor I
@BalarkaSen I thought a discrete set is one with the discrete topology. But for a cover, don't we only know that the preimage of an evenly covered open neighborhood $U$ of that point is a disjoint union of $V_i$ where the $V_i$ is homeomorphic to $U$. So why is this disjoint union a discrete set?
I think that is where my confusion is coming from
@user2154420 That means every point $y_i$ of $p^{-1}(x)$ has a neighborhood in the cover (namely, the slice $V_i$) separating itself from the other points
So under the subspace topology, $p^{-1}(x)$ becomes discrete
Because $V_i \cap \{y_i\} = \{y_i\}$, implying each point of $p^{-1}(x)$ is open in the subspace topology.
Oh right :)
@MatheiBoulomenos hmm, the comments to that question link this page: mathpages.com/home/kmath164.htm
So that is what I wrote initially, but I convinced myself that was wrong because apparently we need a path-connected assumption...
17:06
and I'm not sure what conclusion to draw
but that's confusing because we only want that it is finite, not the same finite number everywhere
Which I assume is why one would also require path-connectedness
@Semiclassical well, we have another curve here, so I'm not sure if the same argument applies
@user2154420 Well, you need $X$ to be connected, that is true. Because otherwise the cover might be disconnected and have a compact component somewhere and a noncompact component elsewhere
Like cover of the circle by a disjoint union of a circle and $\Bbb R$
well, the key sentence is this: "As Poincare conjectured and Mordell proved, all the rational points on a curve such as x^3 + y^3 = 6 can be generated by tangent and chord constructions applied to a finite set of points."
That's pretty cute
Well, the theorem seems to only say that the group has finite rank
not that the rank is $1$
and even if the rank is $1$, we would have to make sure that our initial solution is actually a generator
Oh wait! Is another way of saying this that if $X$ is finitely covered at each point, each of these might be different from each other if $X$ is not connected
definitely
I really want to learn about elliptic curves eventually
17:11
and the question about rank appears to be a pretty deep one
@MatheiBoulomenos thanks. Isn't it an overkill?
Well, you don't need the theory of elliptic curves to verify that this method generates additional solutions
sure it's overkill
or, rather, it's definitely pushing the question beyond what you need
@user2154420 No, if $X$ is connected, the cardinality $\#p^{-1}(x)$ for a cover $p : Y \to X$ is always the same, irregardless of $x$.
Think the tangent chord operation is group multiplacation.
17:15
Yeah, I think that's right as well
chord operation is addition, tangent is doubling
I mean, it's from an undergrad olympiad
and what Mordell proved is that elliptic curves are f.g. as groups.
Well, I guess from olympiads you might expect to get to these formulas out of thin air
17:16
to put it a little differently: If you start from the solution (2,1,1) then you can keep doubling and get new solutions
so you'll get an infinitely family of them
I'm not sure how to solve it differently
question is whether or not all rational solutions can be obtained in this way
Yeah, that's what I meant
I was saying that's why we need the connectedness assumption
Mordell predates modern algebraic geometry so I don't know what the easiest proof is now.
Sorry for the confusion, and thanks for the clarity
17:17
hi @Lucas
@user2154420 Ah, I misread the "not. You are right, of course, then.
@Semiclassical but when you double everything you're just playing with equivalence classes
hey @Ted :)
2
Q: uniform continuity and which of the following statements are true??(NBHM-$2014$)

KayokenLet $g_n(x)=n[f(x+\frac{1}{n})-f(x)]$, where $f: R\to R$ is a continuous function . Which of the following are true? a. If $f(x)=x^3$, then $g_n\to f'$ uniformly on $R$ as $n\to \infty$. b. If $f(x)=x^2$, then $g_n\to f'$ uniformly on $R$ as $n\to \infty$. c. If f is differentiable and if $f'$...

please help me
17:18
In mathematics, the Mordell–Weil theorem states that for an abelian variety A over a number field K, the group A(K) of K-rational points of A is a finitely-generated abelian group, called the Mordell-Weil group. The case with A an elliptic curve E and K the rational number field Q is Mordell's theorem, answering a question apparently posed by Poincaré around 1908; it was proved by Louis Mordell in 1922. == History == The tangent-chord process (one form of addition theorem on a cubic curve) had been known as far back as the seventeenth century. The process of infinite descent of Fermat was well...
but $\frac{a}{b}$ is, in fact, equal to $\frac{ka}{kb}, \forall k \in \Bbb Z$
so you won't get new solutions
it's not that kind of doubling
This probably is done in a modern efficient way in Silverman's book.
I'm not getting the point
it's not (a,b,c) is a solution -> (2a,2b,2c) is a solution
17:19
oh
I'm sorry
how is the transform like?
@anon Hello !
hello
@TedShifrin Ted did you get my message ? =p
hey there @anon
17:20
it uses the group operation on elliptic curves
I got a hard question for you
but it amounts to the tangent-chord construction
Let me post a picture of it here :D
I know nothing about group theory
There's probably an easier solution
17:21
definitely
I'm almost sure it's a proof by construction or something that uses elementary number theory
Like, 'pidgeonholing'
$(a,b,c) \to (-ab^3-9ac^3,a^3b+9bc^3,-a^3c+b^3c)$
Let p be a prime , and suppose m is a number not divisible by p. prove that there can be only fintely many numbers k for which there is a simple group of order mp^k @anon
that's the doubling?
17:23
hooray
@MatheiBoulomenos heck, this looks awful
@LucasHenrique I know. But you don't need group theory to verify that it works
main point is that this (apparently) has a nice geometric interpretation in terms of the elliptic curve $x^3+y^3=9z^3$
in fact.
@Kasmir: Use your own judgment. I do not need to be such a babysitter at this point.
17:24
@TedShifrin omg :(
@TedShifrin I only asked because i dont know if you written that book for the same course as we doing or not
-.-
Well, seriously, the answer to that is clearly NO.
hmm
Then i dont see the point
Anyway ill figure it out , did not think this question would bother you , sorry again
@LucasHenrique okay, here we go
the blue curve is x^3+y^3=9z^3
the point on the right is (a/c,b/c) for (a,b,c)=(1,2,1)
Hi
I realized today that I don't actually know any good applications of the Jordan normal form
17:33
if you plug that (a,b,c) into @MatheiBoulomenos's formula, you'll get the point (-17,20,7) which corresponds to the point (-17/7,20/7). that's also a solution of x^3+y^3=9 and it's point on the left
Which felt like a fairly big lack when lecturing on it
Hi @Alessandro
if we now draw a line through these two points, we see that the left point is obtained as the intersection of the cubic with the tangent line through (2,1)
Hi @AlessandroCodenotti
@Tobias: There are lots in terms of matrix exponentials and dynamical systems. ... But there are more "straight algebra" applications as well. See, for example, exercises in Herstein's chapter on linear algebra.
17:35
and moreover we can repeat this: the tangent line of a rational point through a cubic intersects with the cubic to give another rational point
so that's a geometric construction of an infinite family of rational pointst
@TedShifrin In which of the books?
Topics or Abstract?
guys should one take homologic algebra and algabraic topology after abstract algebra?
My linear algebra professor used the real variant of the JNF to answer my question on which matrices have a square root, but I've never seen a real application
i'd suggest no
@KasmirKhaan Yes
17:36
The "real" book, Topics.
@TobiasKildetoft thanks tobias :D
@TobiasKildetoft: the Jordan canonical form let's you show that any linear endomorphism of a finitely-dimensional vector space over an algebraically closed field may be written as a sum of a nilpotent and a diagonizable endomorphism
@Alessandro: In geometry and dynamical systems, the Jordan form is used all over the place.
or, at least, i'd say those topics are probably not what you should be doing directly after abstract algebra
@Mathei: That's circular. That's merely restating the canonical form.
17:37
@MatheiBoulomenos That is much more trivial to show that JNF
@TobiasKildetoft like what does some need to know before studying homologic algebra and algebraic topology ( exept abstract algebra ) ?
as that is just bringing the matrix to upper triangular form
apparently it is used in the theory of Lie algebras as well, but I don't know any details
You want them to commute, @Tobias.
yeah, I missed that
17:37
@TedShifrin Ahh, right
I mean, I prefer that formulation over the matrix one
@MatheiBoulomenos Hmm, it may just have been hidden somewhere when I did the basics of Lie algebras
That's because you're a head-in-the-clouds theory person who doesn't believe in using math :P
@TedShifrin I trust you, I know nothing about those
What is it that we are talking about?
17:38
uses of Jordan canonical form
Classifying solutions to linear ODEs
@TedShifrin I won't even try to deny that
I said matrix exponentials and dynamical systems, @Balarka.
@MatheiBoulomenos Hmm, I suppose it is basically the same as the Jordan decomposition of a matrix. I just never really gave that much thought
@TedShifrin Oh well, you're sniping me
17:40
matrix exponentials and ODEs is really the same thing when it comes to the Jordan form
@Mathei I mean, columns of the matrix exponential span the solution space of the corresponding matrix ODE
@Tobias: Here's a reasonable one. Prove that $A$ and $A^\top$ are similar.
I don't think that's very obvious without something powerful.
That bit doesn't have much to do with the Jordan form
@MatheiBoulomenos Ahh, just found it in Humphreys. He indeed recalls the JNF (except he calls it the Jordan canonical form instead) in order to do stuff
@TobiasKildetoft so my memory was right
17:41
@TedShifrin Ahh, that is indeed a neat one
If only I had had more time to prepare before lecturing on it
Well, don't bitch at us about that!
The commutative algebra version of the JNF is the primary decomposition I believe
Pretty much
Hmm, @Balarka, I'd never thought of it that way.
@TedShifrin I won't. I will have to consider bitching to the guy who was supposed to lecture :)
17:43
It's an easy application of the classification of finitely generated modules over a PID
Right.
(which is a special case of the classification of finitely generated modules over a Dedekind domain)
that's how I think about it
@Tobias I'm pretty much learning about the Jordan form on the go while learning how to use them in ODEs
That's why I love this course so much, it gets the blood running and the linear algebra pumping
Hirsch-Smale derive all the linear algebra from scratch, Balarka.
Yeah I saw
17:44
But only linear algebra over $\mathbb R$ and $\mathbb C$, I always found that restrictive
They have a very clean exposition
Blah @Mathei.
It works for any algebraically closed field. Nothing different that I can recall.
I mean the ODE course
I think there's a non-algebraically closed version, the rational normal form or something
@BalarkaSen Well, there is the Smith normal form for integral matrices
17:46
True
I have forgotten these various things
And one can replace the Jordan blocks by larger blocks based on the degree of the extension of the field which contains the eigenvalues
@BalarkaSen that form is named after Frobenius I think?
Rational canonical form, @Balarka, but it's a very different decomposition.
similarly to how one can do it with those $(a\ b\ -b\ a)$ matrices in place of complex numbers
@MatheiBoulomenos Sometimes it's good to be concrete, even at the cost of being restrictive.
17:47
@Mathei: You're being ridiculous. People do not generally do dynamical systems over arbitrary fields.
Nah, abstract is the way to go
I hope you mean that ironically.
I'm gonna seriously end up putting you on ignore.
No, he's worse than Demonark.
I'm just joking
@Ted Nah he's joking
17:48
I don't mind intro linear algebra restricting to the reals and complex numbers, though I prefer if a note is made that the choice is not important (except where it is of course)
Just like we joke about pictures being the end of math :)
He's just less obvious
linear algebra over finite fields is important in applications
Pedagogy is a serious issue, folks. Most students are not going to end up being abstract algebraists, or even mathematicians.
@MatheiBoulomenos That's true.
That's true, @Mathei, but that doesn't mean that a first course needs to do finite fields.
17:49
I mean, are there ever any exercises that needs more than rationals plus square roots?
(until one gets to exponentials that is)
What are you talking about, @Tobias?
Exercises in what?
@TedShifrin I mean in intro linear algebra
Well, I'm glad I was taught linear algebra by an abstract algebraist how did everything over general fields :P
They work over the reals usually, but practically all exercises are really over the rationals
@MatheiBoulomenos someone ending up dealing with images do not need to know how matrices work with finite fields
17:50
Right.
And I have no problems with that.
@TedShifrin Neither do I, I just find it curious
@LeakyNun finite fields are pretty important in image processing
Indeed, in my books I've gone out of my way to be extra artificial and try to make arithmetic not the point of the course. But I'm not opposed to some use of computers/calculators to do RREF, etc. Just why make the computations horrendous unless it's a truly meaningful application?
@Mathei The thing is, historically most of the algebraic abstractness are truly motivated by concrete, analytical/geometric happenings over C or R
Honestly, I find it easier to work in a small finite fields than over rationals where sometimes the denominators get huge
17:53
@Ted I saw the Lypapunov function yesterday, in dynamic classification of linear ODEs
@TedShifrin I agree with not making computations the main point. Thought there can be a good opportunity to teach the students to keep a $\pi$ around in calculations rather than replacing it with a decimal.
Eh, just do pi^2 =10. :P
(That’s a surprisingly good approximation)
just do pi = 3
engineering intensifies
Other than matrix exponentials, I can't recall $\pi$'s making an urgent appearance, @Tobias.
@TedShifrin I meant in general, by introducing it in some linear equations in such a way that the answer comes out nicely if one just keeps it around
17:57
Talk about contrived.
@TedShifrin maybe when you derive canonical forms for orthogonal endomorphisms in terms of trigonometric functions?
pi = 3 is off by 4.7 percent, whereas pi^2 =10 is only 1.3 percent off
Please someone answer this
@MatheiBoulomenos Realification?
But then you're not typically doing row operations or solving linear equations when you do a normal form for a rotation matrix, etc.
17:59
@BalarkaSen you mean restriction of scalars?
Of course, pi = 22/7 does a lot better than both of them
lol, yes

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