« first day (2702 days earlier)      last day (2615 days later) » 

09:00
but we can rewrite that as H is contained in gHg'
so H=gHg'
that isn't a particularly good proof
by good I mean rigorous
we have the condition for all g in G that saves us
but let me do it Another way
@LeakyNun that made no sense whatsoever to me
@Typhon exactly
Exactly what?
What does Q[sqrt5] mean?
is it a function?
09:02
the smallest field extension of Q containing sqrt(5)
An example of a theorem in number theory that you're probably familiar with is the fact that every natural number may be written uniquely (up to rearrangement) as a product of prime numbers
Thats a theorem?
@Typhon that's the fundamental theorem of arithmetic
09:03
and yes, you need to prove it
it's not obvious
by "you" I mean the generic you
i assumed it was true but i never had that actually assserted
let h_1 be in H, and we consider gh_1g' = h_2
by generic I mean just about everyone
09:03
we can do this because gHg' is contained in H for all g in G
by everyone I mean each individual in this room and not
I thought there were numbers with non unique primes
by room I mean this particular setting where we discuss mathematics or other things
so h_1 = g'h_2g , we took element in H , and we showed that is an element of gHg'
09:04
by mathematics I mean the study of numbers and shapes and abstract notions
@LeakyNun that what u wanted?
by number I mean the real numbers, complex numbers, integers, or quaternions
What about divergent limits?
by real number I mean the cauchy sequences of rational numbers modulo some relation
does math study those?
09:04
no, divergent limits are not numbers, and hopefully we don't have to go there again
or else I can invite someone to this room
I wasnt meaning that
i meant the expression exists so its not just numbers we study
leaky
i want to understand the second part
Surely we also study statements that are and are not true or whatever
that gHg' is contained in H without being equal to H
amd also pepperoni
Lllilillilil
09:07
@KasmirKhaan To prove that "gHg' contained in H for all g" implies "gHg'=H for all g":
Assume that gHg' contained in H for all g. Now, we want to prove that gHg'=H for all g. Fix an arbitrary g. We know that gHg' is contained in H by our assumption, so we need to prove that H is contained in gHg'. By multiplying g' on the left and g on the right, we only need to prove that g'Hg is contained in H. However, that is true by assumption, since gHg' is contained in H for all g, and in particular for g'.
I did that
the exact arguemnt
yes, but I don't like your rigour
or the lack thereof
14 mins ago, by Kasmir Khaan
@LeakyNun but I dont see the distinction why would that fail to be normal, ( did not do the example yet )
if you understood the argument, you would know which element to choose as a witness
of the failure of the normality of the subgroup in question
Sorry about the lilli post
i nodded off
Im awake now
$\nexists$ crisis intensifies
3
Sorreee
ill stop falling asleep
09:11
@LeakyNun hmm by saying that gHg' is contained in H, for all g in G, what are we excluding here?
the two definitons look exactly the same
@LeakyNun there's no finite-dimensional representation of that
@LeakyNun for a surface made up of trianglws
@MatheinBoulomenos why not?
if you have a line connecting two points
@MatheinBoulomenos can you help clear my comfusion ? :D
09:13
@LeakyNun nitpicking: that's the smallest ring containing Q and sqrt5 (which also happens to be a field)
@KasmirKhaan we are excluding H is contained gHg'
can you state that locally the circle is the same as a regular circle?
@AlessandroCodenotti you're right
You're asking for a matrix which is conjugate to its own square. Look at the Jordan normal form to see that this is impossible (two matrices are conjugate iff they have the same JNF)
Im trying to figure out how to construct obe
09:14
@MatheinBoulomenos ah, the JNF has to have all 1
yeah, so we get only the trivial representation
the JNF has to be the identity
thanks
but leaky, we just said that gHg' is contained in H for all g in G, is equivalent to gHg' = H
now we saying that it can be that gHg' is contained in H for all g in G, without being equal
that is a contradiction to me
@LeakyNun anything interesting that would be worth doing over the winter break that yo
you can think of
ive ran out of interesting things to look at
no idea
09:16
@KasmirKhaan the thing is: the statement $\forall g \in G: gHg' \subset H$ is equivalent to $\forall g \in G:gHg'=H$. But for one single $g$, $gHg' \subset H$ is not equivalent to $gHg'=H$
29 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
but you can't pull out the "forall g in G" and claim that I have said that "gHg' = H and gHg' is contained in H" is equivalent for all g
@KasmirKhaan did you even read this?
aha so the idea about "for all part"
fixing g in G, it can happen that gHg' is contained in H, without being equal
but to be equal, we need that gHg' in contained in H for all g in G
I see it now
thanks for help guys :)
I think logic is really helpful to maths
by saying that g In G
i did not Think of that g being fixed
i thought we could pick any G
and that gHg' is contained in H
that's why you should learn logic
09:19
that way the defintions are identical
then you will stop saying nonsense like "g is fixed" and that stuff
the course starts in marsh i will take it
and start using "for all" to make your statements more precise
@KasmirKhaan I would be very expectant for a change in you
what does that mean?
:D
For all means something is true with every element in a set
09:21
that means
I expect you to write more rigorous and precise proofs after your course in march
so I can stop being frustrated over your imprecision
aha thanks :)
there exists means there is some element in a set for which a statement is true
well it was very delicate point
@LeakyNun me?
first we say that g in G, an elemnet of G, it is abstract
09:22
@KasmirKhaan which statement implies the other? 1. "for all x, there exists y such that P(x,y)." 2. "there exists y, such that, for all x we have P(x,y)."
so I assumed it was not fixed
2 ==>1
@KasmirKhaan this is true:
"gHg'⊆H for all g" and "gHg'=H for all g" are equivalent
this is false:
"gHg'⊆H" and "gHg'=H" are equivalent for all g
now I don't want to see any more "fixed"
@KasmirKhaan does 1 imply 2?
well putting it that way it was good
09:24
NO
it doesnt
@Typhon I'm not asking you
Srry
I know i just realized
@KasmirKhaan is it any different from what I said at the beginning?
38 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
"gHg' =H for g in G" and "gHg' is contained in H for all g in G" are equivalent
37 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
but you can't pull out the "forall g in G" and claim that I have said that "gHg' = H and gHg' is contained in H" is equivalent for all g
well it is not i know
@LeakyNun i thought basic logic was how to make number sets from the empty set?
09:25
but it was a Communication problem
first i thought they were identical because i assumed for all g in G
which was wrong assumption
@Typhon I wouldn't think so
Oh
my bad
Then what is basic logic?
@Typhon well, statements and rules about $\neg, \lor, \land, \implies, \iff$
that's zeroth order logic, or predicate logic
@LeakyNun oh so common sense?
and after that you have $\forall$ and $\exists$, aka first order logic
09:28
XD
@Typhon you'll realize that it isn't that common of a sense
Eh?
doesnt everyone learn that?
Well, stuff like the basics of logical implication and interpreting a simple statement probably is common enough
as demonstrated above
But studying logic takes things to the next level
09:30
("as demonstrated above" didn't send out)
it was supposed to follow "you'll realize that it isn't that common of a sense"
@LeakyNun if that is all there is to logic then why do people claim i dont know logiv and use me not being able to come up with a formal function for some abstract concept as evidence? Isnt thst more of an engineering failure?
@Typhon well as demonstrated above, someone confused "$(\forall g \phi) \iff (\forall g \psi)$" with "$\forall g(\phi \iff \psi)$" for like a week
Me no latex
"(∀gϕ)⟺(∀gψ)" with "∀g(ϕ⟺ψ)"
and that comment follows "as demonstrated above", not your rant
Ah
Yeah i know
09:33
I hardly care about your rant
I know
Hoe
is that a rant though?
its a question
a serious question
@LeakyNun what is real analysis anyways?
@Typhon is this a typo?
Yes
@Typhon that isn't all there is to logic, try browsing the questions tagged with logic on mse
No thanks
im more interested in geometry and graphics
Ill probably study that if i go to college
which is unlikely
Im not interested in being a logician
Cant study too much or i wont have room for programming stuff
09:44
good luck programming without any logic
curry howard correspondence, anyone?
Well theyll teach m e what logic i need to knlw
surely i need no
not lesr.
*learn second order logic though
Ok now my head actually hurts
is that a sign of sleep deprivation
?
 
2 hours later…
12:20
Hello. Where can I find proofs of Ehresmann's theorem that a proper surjective submersion is a fiber bundle? I would like to see as many different proofs as possible.
13:06
Do authors usually exclude fields from the definition of local rings by requiring that the unique maximal ideal be non-zero?
No, fields are not usually excluded from being local rings.
Alrighty cheers
13:41
Hi guys. Can somebody tell me what the notation $(x,\to)$ means?
13:56
Is ;; a full colon
@Akiva lol
14:31
@Arrow I don't know a reference, but I think it's a Morse theory argument.
@philmcole it means $(x,+\infty)$
@GFauxPas interesting
14:34
if you look up the chat by searching p-adic
you’ll find it being used in physics
@Semiclassical any idea?
Locally you have a proper smooth submersion to R^n. You wan o lift yeah be n basis vector fields downstairs to fields upstairs. Flow along them to get the desired local triv respecting the projection.
@Arrow
Play this argument out globally when the codomain is R to see that every smooth fiber bundle over R is trivial
Of course one provavly already knows this but whatever
That flow argument is where Morse theory comes in right? You have a map M --> R with no critical points
Maybe it's easier than Morse theory :p
btw this is an exact sequence: $1 \longrightarrow 1+J(R) \longrightarrow R^* \longrightarrow (R/J(R))^* \longrightarrow 1$
where $J$ is Jacobson radical
@LeakyNun interesting. I think I saw special cases of this for $R$ p-adic integers
something something Nakayama's lemma
14:40
There may be a few mathematical physicists who use p-adics but they’re a minority within a minority
An experimental physicist won’t have a clue about them, and even among theorists they’re an obscure subject
it's not hard to prove, but I never thought about it
@Daminark: New sensation of today's meeting was that Anosov diffeomorphisms are structurally stable. If $f : M \to M$ is Anosov, any small $C^1$-perturbation $g : M \to M$ is $C^0$-conjugate to $f$ by a homeomorphism $h$ of $M$ such that $h$ and $h^{-1}$ are both close to the identity.
right, coz the kernel is just things mapped to the unity of R/J(R), ie 1+J(R)
as Balarka mentioned, you need Nakayama's lemma to prove that $R^\times \to (R/J(R))^\times$ is surjective
ie if x+J(R) is a unit then so is x?
14:46
Ya
ie if xy in 1+J(R) then xy is a unit
well you also need that to prove that 1+J(R) is a group
the proof is that otherwise there would be a maximal ideal containing xy
but xy-1 is also in that ideal
so 1 is in that ideal, contradiction
do 3 lines get named after someone?
Yes, because it's extremely important, but easy to prove.
It's like an inverse function theorem.
@BalarkaSen You saw the exercise I pinged at you that I couldn't get?
@Akiva I pinged you a reply :)
btw is there any reason (maybe from graph theory) that 0+1+2+4 in V(2^7) after cycling through the 7 generators and adding 0 forms a vector space?
14:50
Ah, I didn't see.
It didn't look closed at first glance…
@LeakyNun The most general form is if M is a f.g. R-module and IM = M for some ideal I of R, then there exists an r that annihilates M such that r = 1 (mod I).
(Closed is the $d\omega=0$ one, right? Or is that exact?)
(The names make no sense)
ie (0+1+2+4)+(1+2+3+5)=3+4+5+1
@Akiva Yeah that's closed. I think it's exact, actually.
is there some graph theoretical reason why it is closed under addition?
@BalarkaSen do you get me?
@LeakyNun I'm not paying attention.
i should ask @MatheinBoulomenos
@Akiva Okay so maybe it's worth checking if it's closed.
That's the first obstruction to being exact :p
$$(3x+y^2+2xz)dx+\\ (2xy+ze^{yz}+y)dt+\\ (x^2+ye^{yz}+ze^{z^2})dz$$
So hold on, if I integrate that first part wrt $x$ I get
$\frac32x^2+xy^2+x^2z+C_{yz}$
14:55
where $C_{yz}$ is something that only involves $y$ and $z$
Similarly, for the second term $xy^2 + e^{yz} + y^2/2 + C'_{xz}$ should happen.
Now differentiating that with respect to $y$ is $2xy+C'_{yz}$, so $C'_{yz}=ze^{yz}+y$, or $C_{yz}=e^{yz}+\frac12y^2+C_z$
So so far I have $\frac32x^2+xy^2+x^2z+e^{yz}+\frac12y^2+C_z$
@BalarkaSen I would say the other way around: Morse theory runs on this flow argument
@MikeMiller That's true.
$C_z'$ should be $ze^{z^2}$
So $C_z$ is $\frac12e^{z^2}$
So in the end I have that this is all$$\boxed{d\left(\frac32x^2+xy^2+ x^2z+e^{yz}+\frac12y^2+\frac12e^{z^2}\right)}$$

« first day (2702 days earlier)      last day (2615 days later) »