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12:00
@BrianMScott is what I said not correct?
I don’t see its relevance.
@BrianMScott But I won't do it again.
@BrianMScott to prove continuity it suffices to prove the preimage of every basis element is open
Oy! Read Asaf’s comment on Allen’s latest!
so proving that $\pi$ is an open map is equivalent to proving that it's inverse is a continuous function
12:02
@BenjaminLim Continuity is a given: the product topology is defined to be the coarsest topology that makes the projection maps continuous.
@BenjaminLim It doesn’t have an inverse: it’s not 1-1.
@BrianMScott I am talking about the specific case above
@Daniil Morning!
of the projection map $\pi : X \times y_0 \rightarrow X$
12:03
@BenjaminLim Why bother to prove that its restriction to $X\times \{y_0\}$ is open when you can prove that the map itself is open?
because that's all we need in that case here no?
Because david and I were talking about the tube lemma
just needed to see that $X \times y_0 \cong X$
anyway you're right we should do it in full generality
why build a sidewinder missile when you can build an intercontinental ballistic missile
@BenjaminLim Okay. Yes, that’s true, and the restriction of the projection is a homeomorphism.
@BrianMScott I concur that we should prove it is an open map in full generality
@KannappanSampath I don’t get 192, but I do get 193-4.
12:10
@BrianMScott Right this is dead easy. Suppose $U$ is open in $X \times Y$
take $x \in \pi[U]$
Then there is a $y\in Y$ such that the pair $(x,y) \in U$
Now by definition of the basis for the product topology, $U$ open means that there is a basis element $B \times W$ such that $(x,y) \in B \times W \subset X \times Y$
Look! Didier was wrong! Hail to the mean king!
@Matt: You’re making me dizzy!
It follows by taking projections that $x \in B \subset \pi[U]$
Although I'm quite sure it won't have any effect on his general arrogance.
@BrianMScott Oh, I have 192 but not 193-194! But, I have no clue how you'll be able give me those two pages. Do you know of some way? (Ymar did some thing like screenshots but I am not sure it works without doing some trick!)
12:11
@BrianMScott Sorry. Will stop now.
It follows that since $x$ is arbitrary, every point of $\pi[U]$ is an interior point so $U$ is open
@BrianMScott that's correct right?
@MattN Not a problem $-$ just startling.
@BenjaminLim Yes.
@robsquare banzai!
let me get back to tube lemma
@KannappanSampath Let me see whether I can figure out how to get a screen capture.
12:14
@BrianMScott I'll be grateful if you get that for me. Thank you.
are we back to the tube lemma yet?
@DavidWheeler yes
since the product topology has a basis
it suffices to consider a covering of $X \times y_0$ by open sets
and by compactness there are a finite number of basis elements $U_1 \times V_1, \ldots U_n \times V_n$ that cover it
The claim now is that $W = U_1 \cap...\cap U_n$
ok, now just take the finite neighborhoods of $y_0$ in the covering, and intersect them all
this is open
that is $ V = V_1 \cap \dots \cap V_n$
12:19
crap
I got stuff the other way round
reboot:
that's a neighborhood of $y_0$, right?
it doesn't matter, Ben, just pick a convention and stick with it
yeah not $U_1 \cap ...\cap U_n$
it should be the $V's$
stick with the V's
V is a neighborhood of $y_0$ we use to make our "tube"
and notice it is entirely within the open set we have covering $X \times {y_0}$
and that's essentially the tube lemma part...so now we use that the show the projection is closed
12:23
wait wait
let me digress everything slowly
@KannappanSampath It’ll be a rough and ready job, but I should have it in a few minutes.
well, you see how we got the tube, right?
@BrianMScott Sure thank you. Take your time.
wait
@DavidWheeler Let me get this right
12:25
the tube lemma says: if we have an open set in the product containing a "slice" there is an open subset of it containing a "tube"
because $N$ is an open set containing $X \times y_0$
right N contains a slice
why can we choose $U_i \times V_i$ that contain $X \times y_0$ and at the same time are completely contained in $N$?
we haven't used this yet, and it's been kind of a detour, but we'll get there
because Y is compact
you mean $X$
12:27
Ben,if we are going to use the slice lemma for a slice by $y_0$ we use the compactness of Y
if we are assuming that $X$ is compact, we need to consider ${x_0} \times Y$
like i said before, pick a convention and stick with it
No I think you've got it the other way round
Good evening!
@KannappanSampath Look here; there are four files, each half a page. Let me know when you have them, and I’ll delete the folder.
ok, let's start over...which set do you want, now and forever, to consider compact?
$X$
so we need to consider the slice $X \times y_0$
you see
12:30
$\frac{\Gamma(x)\Gamma(y)}{\Gamma(x+y)}$ is called Beta-function $B(x,y)$. Is there some name for function, when we use $x_1,...,x_n$ instead of $x,y$?
we want the fact that $X \times y_0 \cong X$ that is compact
@BrianMScott Thank you. Downloading...Please wait.
so that $X \times y_0$ is compact too
@DavidWheeler see?
ok, then we want to create the $U_i \times V_i$ that cover $x_0 \times Y$
for...?
I don't understand the switch from $X \times y_0$ to $x_0 \times Y$
12:31
now i'm getting confused...ok X is compact.
@BrianMScott Thank you done now. :)
we want to look at $X \times y_0$
@KannappanSampath They came through okay?
12:32
there is no point looking at $x_0 \times Y$ because how can we deduce this is compact?
and we have a set N containing $X \times y_0$
and we found a finite subcover of $X \times y_0$ contained in N
@BrianMScott Sure they did. They are also useful in that: a proposition for a file. I must thank you for being patient and doing this for mu sake. Thank you so much.
@KannappanSampath No problem: I’m glad to find out how to do it!
12:33
@DavidWheeler LIke I said how can we find a subcover such that each element of the subcover is contained in $N$?
@DavidWheeler Like this:
N is open, so it is a neighborhood of each of its points
for each $x \in X$ consider the point $(x,y_0)$ in $N$
$N$ open means that there is a basis element say $U \times V$ about it completely contained in $N$
now take the union over all $x \in X$
is there an another way to write (a mod (x*y))?
12:35
so for each point $(x,y_0) \in X \times y_0$ there is a basis element contained in $N$ containing $(x,y_0)$
@WhatsInAName Well, I’d just write $a\bmod xy$.
@DavidWheeler Like this we get a subcover of $(X \times y_0$ such that each element of the subcover is completely contained in $N$
right, so now we have a (possibly infinite) open cover of $X \times y_0$
@DavidWheeler Gesundheit!
12:36
@DavidWheeler But we know that $X \times y_0 \cong X$ so there is a finite subcover
and by our construction above each element of the subcover is completely contained in $N$
I can't write a mod x*y because x*y is too large to fit in a data type
so we have a finite open subcover $U_1 \times V_1 \cup \dots U_n \times V_n$
so take V to be the intersection of all the $V_i$
yes
@DavidWheeler sorry for doing a jordan before
12:38
then $X \times V$ is our tube
ok, now the fun part
let's pick a closed set in $X \times Y$
don't spoil all the fun just yet!!!!
i will call this set S, for the sheer joy of it
@WhatsInAName I’m not clear: is this a question about notation, or a question about how to express the number $a\bmod xy$ in terms of $a,x$, and $y$ in a way that doesn’t require using excessively large numbers?
12:41
since S is closed $(X \times Y)\setminus S$ is open
@DavidWheeler Let me figure this out on my own
yes
one that doesn't use large numbers
a way to break up a mod xy
pick an element y in $Y \setminus \pi(S)$
$a\bmod xy$ can be uniquely reconstructed from $a\bmod x$ and $a\bmod y$, though the details are a little messy.
For that you want the Chinese remainder theorem, which has a decent article in Wikipedia.
@DavidWheeler Let me figure this out on my own please
12:44
@BenjaminLim that's all the terms i was going to define....knock yourself out
thanks
now I just need to follow my nose
@BenjaminLim if you get stuck, i'll give you a hint
@Nimza I think you're looking for the multinomial Beta function
It’s 0845 here, and I’m starting to fade; I’m off to bed. I’ll see you folks later.
@BrianMScott See you, Brian. Bye.
12:48
This is part of the Chinese Remainder Theorem
that's why this is so annoying
the CRT itself is overflowing
the problem is that my modulus is a huge semiprime
int64_t modPow(int64_t a, int64_t x) {
    int64_t res = 1;
    while(x > 0) {
        if( x % 2 != 0) {
            res = ModM(res * a);
        }
        a = ModM(a*a);  //right here

        x /= 2;
    }
    return res;
}
the problem is that a*a overflows
@BenjaminLim how are you coming along?
wait
it's getting there
i'll tell you where i'm up to
by the tube lemma there is an open neighbourhood $V$ about $y$ such that $S \subset (X \times V)^{c}$
i would actually look at the pre-image (under $\pi$) of y instead, and then use the tube lemma
do you see why?
wait
well because then there exists an $x \in X$ such that $\pi^{-1}(y) = (x,y) \notin S$
13:04
what is $\pi^{-1}(y)$?
hint: it's not a point
isn't it $X \times y$?
yeah
sorry
why did you say preimage under $\pi$ of $y$?
what did that mean anyway?
recall we are projecting onto $X$
@DavidWheeler
all i meant was $\pi^{-1}(y)$, sorry if that was confusing
how is that even defined?
$\pi: X \times Y \rightarrow X$
if we are taking X to be our compact set, then the projection that is closed, is the projection onto Y
13:12
that's why i wanted to be clear on which one we were doing
this means the proof before on the graph of the function being compact is incorrect
stay calm, don't freak out...just think about the set $X \times y$
@DavidWheeler i'm not freaking out just yet :D
ben....forget about that for a second
hhahahahahhahahahaha
love you man, no homo :D
ok so now we deal with $X$ compact, $\pi : X \times Y \rightarrow Y$
13:15
what is $(X \times \{y\}) \cap S$?
not rendering the latex
shoot..have an error
not right
Wonderful!!!! I just checked out a combinatorics book. All Hail Erdos.
$(X \times \{y\})$ is not open
13:16
there....that's what i meant
it's closed
yes, it's closed, but which closed set is it?
how did we pick y?
$ y\in Y\setminus \pi(S)$
right
so y isn't an image of ANY element of S
this forces $\pi(X \times \{y\}) =\emptyset$?
13:20
that is: $X \times \{y\}$ and $S$ have no "Y-coordinates in common"
correct
yes
so $\pi$ of that is the empty set
therefore, $X \times y$ must lie entirely within the complement of S, right?
do you see that $(X \times \{y}) \cap S = \emptyset$?
$y \in \pi(S^{c})$ that is open
yes
i see the above
@DavidWheeler I am going to have to go soon I am really tired
now apply the tube lemma to $X \times y$
Ok the tube lemma tells us that if we have an open set $N$ containing $X \times y$
there is a neighbourhood $V$ about $y$ such that $X \times y \subset X \times V \subset N$
13:27
so there is a neighborhood $V$ of $y$ so that $S^c$ contains a tube $X \times V$
and that $N$ is actually $S^c$
by the result above
it's the tube we want
because what is the projection of this tube?
it's just $V$
right, so every point y of V contains a neighborhood of that y contained in $(\pi(S))^c$
$\pi(S)^{c} = \pi(S^{c})$?
13:31
which means $(\pi(S))^c$ is open
which means $\pi(S)$ is closed...done
@DavidWheeler wait why is $\pi(S)^{c} = \pi(S^{c})$?
i meant every point y of $Y\setminus\pi(S)$
in general they aren't equal
Still proving that projections are closed?
@tb yes
oh, boy :)
13:34
@tb doesn't matter, knowledge is all that matters
the general structure is this: S is closed. take the complement. look at the complement of $\pi(S)$, and pick an arbitrary point in it.
the pre-image of that point is a slice in the complement of S
@DavidWheeler I know that.
the complement of S is open, so we can apply the tube lemma to get a tube in the complement
The problem now is that we know that $X \times V \subset S^{c}$
so taking the projections of both sides
project the tube, we get a neighborhood of y.
13:36
we get that $y \in V \subset \pi(S^{c})$
perhaps $\pi(S^{c}) \subset \pi(S)^{c}$
that would do it
do this for every y in $\pi(S)^c$
we then get a whole bunch of neighborhoods of y, union them all it's open
which means that the SET $\pi(S)^c$ is open
@DavidWheeler You don't get me
so $\pi(S)$ is closed
all we have shown now is that $\pi(S^{c})$ is open
not $\pi(S)^{c}$
one of my first answers here was precisely this lemma...
13:39
when we project the tube to Y, we get a neighborhood of y
@DavidWheeler you agree with me that $X \times V \subset S^c$?
so that taking the projections on both sides gives $V \subset \pi(S^{c})$?
@tb see the problem I'm talking about?
the problem david is that you only have shown that $\pi(S^{c})$ is open
@BenjaminLim No, I haven't followed the discussion.
that is not the same as showing that $\pi(S)^{c}$ is open
forget about $\pi(S^c)$
13:42
But maybe it would help if you recap from the beginning.
(I'm not saying you must, but it might help)
So we want to show that the projection map $\pi : X \times Y \rightarrow Y$ for $X$ compact is a closed map
you agree that for each y, the neighborhood $V_y$ we get is in $(\pi(S))^c$ right?
@DavidWheeler No.
@tb Let $S \subset X \times Y$ be closed.
13:43
ok
Now let us take $y \in Y$ such that $y \in Y \setminus \pi(S)$
why is there such a beast?
Then david has argued that $X \times \{y\}$ is completely disjoined from $S$
That means that $X \times \{y\} \subsetneqq S^c$
but fine. I'm with you
i will say it again $y$ is IN $(\pi(S))^c$
13:44
@DavidWheeler Ok
Well, if $S$ contained a point $(x,y)$ then $y \in \pi(S)$, right?
@tb So by the tube lemma, we have a neighbourhood $V$ about $y$ such that $X \times V \subset S^c$
whatever the tube lemma is, yes.
so therefore from here, taking projection on both sides gives that $V \subset \pi(S^{c})$
@DavidWheeler Do you get what I'm saying?
yes i do, but i don't think you're seeing what i am saying
13:46
I know that $y \in \pi(S)^{c}$
I just don't get how $V$ is completely contained in $\pi(S)^{c}$ at the end
from the tube lemma
why do you apply a lemma? what does the tube lemma say, actually?
@tb Let $X$ be compact, and suppose $y\in Y$
@tb the tube lemma: let X,Y be topological spaces, with X compact.
If $N$ is an open set containing the slice $X \times y$
then there is a neighbourhood $V$ about $y$ such that $N$ contains the entire set $X \times V$
basically, if an open set contains a slice, it contains a tube
13:49
yes, of course. But then you're done already.
(you find a tube disjoint from $S$, project it down then the image is disjoint from $\pi (S)$, open and contains $y$, hence $y$ is in the interior of the complement. Since $y$ was arbitrary $Y \smallsetminus \pi(S)$ is open.)
Now that is 100% clear.
right...there's no way anything from the complement of S can project down to the projection of S
no doubts
which is what i've been saying the set V is outside of $\pi(S)$
@DavidWheeler ok now I get it
13:53
and all those V's put together union to the complement, since we've covered every point and none of the neighborhoods are outside it
pheww
now the problem about the graph of $f$
Let $B$ be a closed set in $Y$
ok, now we'll have to change our X's and Y's
Look at $X \times B$ that is closed in the product topology
but there is an obvious homeomorphism between $X \times Y$ and $Y \times X$
then $(X \times B) \cap f$ is a closed set
$f$ is the graph of the function
@DavidWheeler So you're saying that
13:56
we just have to remember to project PARALLEL to the compact set
so you mean like if $X$ is compact we project to $Y$
So like now
to use the result above
I would have to project $(X \times B) \cap f$ onto $Y$
what I actually want to do is project on to $X$
god dammit
You're not going to use that projection lemma. You're going to use that the graph of $f$ is compact.

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