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17:18
What I do when I am bored :)
$$\prod_{y \in \Bbb{R}}\left(\int (\cdot) dx\right) \sin x$$
Now do this >:D
(Integrating sin x uncountably many times)
What does $(\cdot)$ mean?
it means put whatever that is on the right hand side into it. For example:
$$\prod_{n=1}^3 \left( \frac{d (\cdot)}{dx} \right) \sin x = \frac{d^3}{dx^3}\sin x = -\sin x$$
Oh like $\left ((\cdot) + 1\right)5=6$? :P
yup
17:23
Cute
I use that notation because nobody bother to apply an operator uncountably many times (for reasons), thus there is no literature symbol for such operations
I see
@Secret Is that really possible?
That I am not really sure, as I said, almost no one is interested in doing uncountable number of operations
(for unknown reasons)
But I suppose on the reals, one can define a net in order to compute uncountable limits
and then having the operators to be indexed by an uncountable set
I think my formula doesn't apply here (:P:P:P), otherwise I'd joke that (:P:P:P):$$
\prod_{y \in \Bbb{R}}\left(\int (\cdot) dx\right) \sin x = 0^{\infty\%2}\cdot \sin(x)\cdot(-1)^{(\infty / 2) \% 2}+0^{(\infty+1)\%2}\cdot \cos(x)\cdot(-1)^{((\infty + 1) / 2) \% 2} + \sum_{k=0}^{\infty-1}\frac{Cx^k}{k!}$$
@Mr.Xcoder Don't even think I am serious, just a joke :P
Well, on the other hand, there does exists a notion of integration that is basically like a countable version of what I wrote: Those are the path integrals that appear in QFT and functional analysis
17:29
QFT? Quantum Field Theory?
yup
Uhm huh, ok
(and in the meantime, we haven't even studied integrals in school...)
The precise maths is not very well defined and the mathematical physics community are still scratching heads trying to ground that from category theoric appeoaches to defining some weird objects
You know what, nevermind
41
Q: Mathematics of path integral: state of the art

QfwfqI was told that one of the most efficient tools (e.g. in terms of computations relevant to physics, but also in terms of guessing heuristically mathematical facts) that physicists use is the so called "Feynmann path integral", which, as far as I understand, means "integrating" a functional (actio...

So, measure theory, category theory, and it seems the notion of nets were indeed used
The major issue is to construct examples
O, and semiclassical might be able to tell slightly more
18:21
Quick question: If $\{f_n\}$ is a sequence of complex-valued functions that are bounded and that uniformly converge to $f$, is $f$ necessarily bounded too?
18:40
@user193319 yes. uniform convergence is the same as convergence in the norm $\|f\|=\sup |f(x)|$. By the reverse triangle inequality, every norm is continuous, so convergence in the norm implies convergence of the norms $\|f_n\| \to \|f\|$ (using the supremum norm)
you can also do this with explicit epsilonics, but I'd prefer not to do that
Hi @Daminark
> explicit epsilonics
-- der Sylowmeister, 2018
Epsilontology
18:58
Petition to retitle analysis to "Greek literature"
Morning
Howdy, @Faust
So happy i got a hole bunch of bursarie money today =)
money down a hole?
Hey Ted and Faust!
19:01
lol
a whole buncha
hi Demonark
also got a meeting monday to do discuss doing a research project this summer =)
should i know what i want to do when i go into the meeting?
well, gotta learn stuff to research, then
I have no idea what sort of meeting this is, with whom ... but, generally, yeah, probably.
well i asked a prof whos more ot what i kinda of like
So, yeah, it shouldn't just be "all the cool kids are doing research, so I suppose I have to also."
19:03
i wanna do something realting to dif geometry or topology or algerbra
or some conmbination
That's super broad and vague.
You aren't very far in any of those :(
nope
Do algebra
So basically research will just mean working some really hard problems or learning some stuff from a book.
but its not until the summer
and ill be better at all of those by then
well not dif geo
19:05
If you're trying to pick up background in the meantime so that your summer stuff is more substantial I'd probably recommend picking something (not necessarily algebra, I'll understand :'( ) and focusing on it
can i like google something to see what options i have?
the prof i asked speciliazes in Operator algebras and
Noncommutative geometry whatever those are
but hes one of only two profs that does geometry at my uni
Given a vector space V if U is a subspace how do we know that U is non empty?
It contains 0
thats what im tring to prove
That's an axiom of a vector space
facepalm
19:24
@TedShifrin hi
@Faust ...
19:40
hi @Liad
@TedShifrin thanks for the help the other day with Laurent series , it was really helpful. and btw , you help like 4-5 other students too with it :P
Oh, how did I do that?!
You mean, you went and taught them? That's the best way for you to learn.
yea they had no clue either how to get the series because we did not see any examples, so i gave them yours :P
I hate teachers who do no examples.
4
$$\log (x)=\lim_{n\to \infty } \, \frac{n \sum _{k=1}^{n-1} \frac{x^{k-1} \left(\sum _{j=0}^k (-1)^j \binom{n+1-1}{j} (k-j)^{n-1}\right)}{(x-1)^{n-1}}}{\sum _{k=1}^n \frac{x^{k-1} \left(\sum _{j=0}^k (-1)^j \binom{n+1}{j} (k-j)^n\right)}{(x-1)^n}} \; \text{ if } x>0$$
19:42
Hi chat
Hi @Ted
hi demonic @Alessandro :)
HNY
ignores Mats
I am unable to understand this question asked on Math.SE
@AlessandroCodenotti Happy new year
Happy New Year, Alessandro :)
Could someone explain what the first line of the question means?
19:44
Oh, thanks, to you too!
@Abcd: It means you're allowed to arrange the numbers in any order when you assign them to A,B,...
But what is A ?
Is it the sum?
No, it's one of the numbers.
Oh, I was misinterpreting the question all this while.
I thought it's a set, a permutation of digits from 11 digits.
19:46
Fine.
Are there any good function analysis notes online?
*functional analysis
(You can edit for a minute or so and fix typos.)
@AlessandroCodenotti Thanks.
20:02
hello @AkivaWeinberger
are you here
@Vrouvrou Momentarily
21:07
@AlessandroCodenotti that's the book my class is using actually!
It's even possible you suggested it to me, I don't remember how I stumbled on those notes
Wait weren't you using Kolmogorov-Fomin?
21:23
Last year, this year it's the ones linked up there. And lol that'd make sense
@Alessandro: How's the running over of innocent bystanders proceeding?
Still no casualties
I consider that quite the achievement
Italy's got some ninjas
I don't think I'll be returning to Italy any time soon.
@Ted Salut et meilleurs voeux !
21:26
@Ted it'd be good practice for your reaction times
Bonne année, @Gabriel.
Demonark: Let's start with yours!
Salut, @Astyx! Bonne année.
Bonne année !
Comment ça va ?
Ça va bien, merci, et toi?
Ça va ça va
et Palaiseau?
21:30
J'y suis pas encore
Mais je pense qu'ils vont bien
Dans la mesure du possible
Oops, pas encore. Ma faute.
Quoi de neuf ?
Pas grand'chose chez moi.
21:46
hi @TedShifrin
hi @Daminark
@Daminark have you learned about localization yet ? I would like to verify something with you.
@TedShifrin teach me french
:D
@Adeek not exactly
@Adeek If it's not hard stuff I might be able to help
I do want to help you as much as I can but I think you overestimate me somewhat
Balarka surely knows more but he's not here atm
@AlessandroCodenotti It is okay I figured it out. But here is the deal. I am just working through Ravi Vakil note's
here is the issue
Show that $\phi : M \rightarrow S^{-1}M$ exist, by constructing something that satisfies the universal property.
@Daminark No I don't agree your great :)
@AlessandroCodenotti Define $S^{-1}M = (M \times S) / \sim$ such that $(m_1,s_1) \sim (m_2,s_2)$ iff there exists $s \in S$ : s(s_2m_1 - s_1m_2) = 0$.
21:55
Ok, there should be an obvious candidate for a map $M\to S^{-1}M$
This wasn't the issue however 1 moment.
The universal property is that if $\phi : M \rightarrow N$ is $A$ module morphism such that $\forall s \in S$ : $\alpha_s : N \rightarrow N$ given by $n \mapsto sn$ is isomorphism. Then we need to constrcut $\psi : S^{-1}M \rightarrow N$ that fills the diagram.
such construction is given by $\frac{m}{s} \mapsto y$ where y is the unique element of N such that $sy = \phi(m)$.
The issue I was having is $S^{-1}A$ module morphism property, which actually hugely depend that the ring is commutative in order to get it. @AlessandroCodenotti
I forgot I was working with commutative ring, so that is why I was running into issues fixing that last step.
Ok, so that's solved now?
yeah
thanks for listening though
22:00
you're welcome :P
btw if Ravi Vakil notes is amazing.
if you want to ever learn algebraic geometry
@Adeek give em to me adeek :)
give what @Jacksoja ?:D
Ravi Vakil notes Karim
@Adeek I'll keep that in mind if I ever do
22:08
they are online for free
okay thanks Karim :)
@Adeek 764 pages?
yh
22:43
@Daminark Btw, thanks for the help last night. I can see the path now from Constant rank Theorem. I'm ambivalent about taking the time to prove it myself though.
23:19
Hi, Laczkovich proved that $\pi $ is irrational by first showing that ${\pi^2 \over 16}$ is irrational and then concluded that $\pi $ is irrational. I wanna ask you,does the fact that ${\pi^2 \over 16}$ is irrational imply that $\pi^2$ is irrational?
It might be odd to ask such a question but I need to show whether $\pi ^2$ is irrational or not
Suppose not, for a contradiction. Then $\pi^2/16$ is irrational, yet $\pi^2$ is rational.
What does it mean to say "$\pi^2$ is rational"?
then ıt should be written as a/b where $a$ and $b\neq 0$are in $\mathbb Q$
$a$ and $b$ are in $\Bbb Z$ you mean. But yes.
oh yes
If $\pi^2 = a/b$, $\pi^2/16 = ?$
23:26
okay
ı got that
thanks
23:45
@Jacksoja yeah that is correct
I am using the 2017 version

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