« first day (2736 days earlier)      last day (2582 days later) » 

19:00
@MatheinBoulomenos What is this about?
Counting primes…?
I'm sure theres lots of tactics in mental arithmetic that I don't know that would improve my arithmetic substantially, and it'd be a complete waste of time to learn them (really at any stage of my life)
Analytical and algebraic number teory
when i was small i was boggled when a neighbour's kid started counting his fingers in opposite 10,9,8... For first five fingers in first hand he said 10,9,8,7,6 and 5 fingers in the other hand. 6+5 =11 and therefore we have 11 fingers :O
it deals with qudratic forms over Q, mostly
I'm not talking crazy idiot savant things, PVAL. I'm not that good at mental arithmetic.
19:01
I don't know even for 72-39 I don't naturally have any tricks
I once stunned an auditorium by knowing sqrt(5776) off the top of my head
but that was just a lucky thing since I already knew that 25^2=625 and 76^2=5776 were the only two-digit numbers whose squares ended in themselves
I'd say there is no point at all in a speed competition on matrix calculations. You should be able to them in reasonable time, yes. It's better to test some understanding of the concepts. And if you care about applications, it's better to learn how to implement this stuff on a computer
One of my AoPS students knows all sorts of esoteric things I don't know. I don't say we should all be good at competition math.
ah mental linear algebra is probably more important than mental arithmetic to me.
Hello, Donald Knuth wrote in his The Art of Computer Programing, Vol 1, about his notation for Fibonacci numbers "The notations we are using in this section are a little undignified. In much
of the sophisticated mathematical literature, $F_n$ is called $u_n$ instead, and $\phi$ is
called $\tau$." Why does he define is notation "undignified"?
19:03
@Mathein: I made sure my test questions came out simply in very few steps. Occasionally, I would give the echelon form and they only needed to do one step to get reduced echelon form to read off the kernel. Again, I don't object to using technology for any number of things once you have the basic skills. But I insist that you acquire those first.
He's being funny, @AlessandroJacopson.
I don't get it
I guess I've always used the unsophisticated notations.
He's being $F_un$ny
but i don't see how computing inverse matrix of 5x5 is necessary to do by hand ?
i terms of learning
@TedShifrin I said that you should be able to them in reasonable time, yeah
19:05
I would never ask students (or me) to do that, Tuki.
@TedShifrin Thank you, I am Italian and maybe I am missing something in his English.
@PVAL-inactive :-)
Wow, we have two @Alessandros coming to chat now :P
We had to compute the Smith normal form of a 7x7 matrix with coefficients in $\Bbb F_{11}[x]$ or something like that. We had no time pressure, this was on a homework sheet
We have had tests that had this type of question
@MatheinBoulomenos This sounds like a programing problem.
19:06
Well, I think I give fairer (and more interesting) tests than that.
This is partly the reason i don't like exams very much
The most efficient way to do that is to write $[X|I]$ and reduce I think
Like that's how computers do it
Although my students often whined at the time, in hindsight they all said my tests were fair and not that hard.
Yeah, DogAteMy, that is.
In general.
if its big there are other tricks probably
row reduction is pretty cost inefficient.
In our exam, we were given the Smith normal form of $XI-A$ with base-of-change matrices and we were asked to compute the Jordan normal form of $A$ from that
19:08
especially if you only need an approximate answer.
I thought that was reasonable
someone told me that LU decompositon is also good for this use ?
Rehi everyone
Rehi @Daminark
Re: Rehi everyone - Hi
19:10
@Ted i cant think of an example for the sectional thing but im brain dead and have lab today so i will try to think of one later
@Dam, said Amsterdam
LOL, ok, @EricSilva.
@Akiva kek
How's it going @PVAL?
Oh, maybe a torus in $S^3$?
Not the Clifford tori, of course.
@EricSilva "have lab today" I am sorry. I will say goodbye to the sun for you while it's still up
19:12
@Daminark sobs uncontrollably
Too many drama queens.
What about the boundary of a tubular neighborhood of the whitehead double of the (3,-5,7) pretzel knot? @Ted
Though if you're in E&M at least the labs are far more interesting than those in mechanics so long as that oscilloscope or whatever it's called isn't going haywire
That's a torus in S^3
19:13
the oscilloscope was going crazy last time
lol
With everywhere positive curvature, PVAL?
Does the torus even admit an every positive curv. metric?
Oh, duh, that was dumb.
If you have a torus in a very hyperbolic space can you get it to be positive everywhere?
19:14
No, no ... Gauss Bonnet.
PVAL, did you see my original question?
You want a product manifold with everywhere pos. sectional curvature?
was that the question?
pls no spoilr
Right. The Hopf conjecture is that there is one on $S^2\times S^2$.
I think the Hopf conjecture is that there is none on $S^2\times S^2$
well the conjecture is that there isnt one
yeah
19:16
Oh, sorry.
cause no one believes that there is one
Elon Musk has sold 15,000 flamethrowers online at $500 each to raise money for a company that has nothing to do with flamethrowers
I'm still having trouble believing this is real
Right. I don't see any product example with nowhere vanishing sectional curvature.
atlast, a joke i can understand, lol @AkivaWeinberger
at least it would be weird to me if there were considering $\mathbb{R}P^{2} \times \mathbb{R}P^{2}$ doesnt have one
19:18
I'm trying to think about inversive geometry and writing some exercises for my class for the weekend. So I'm distracted.
oh inversive geometry that's coooool
They're making me do Möbius transformations, so I want to give them something geometric ...
The Peaucellier–Lipkin linkage (or Peaucellier–Lipkin cell, or Peaucellier–Lipkin inversor), invented in 1864, was the first true planar straight line mechanism – the first planar linkage capable of transforming rotary motion into perfect straight-line motion, and vice versa. It is named after Charles-Nicolas Peaucellier (1832–1913), a French army officer, and Yom Tov Lipman Lipkin (1846–1876), a Lithuanian Mathematician and son of the famed Rabbi Israel Salanter. Until this invention, no planar method existed of producing exact straight-line motion without reference guideways, making the linkage...
^That thing has to do with inversive geometry apparently
@Ted Do you want the metric on the product to split?
Aren't Möbius transformations geometric?
Sure, DogAteMy ... Inversion will in general turn lines into circles :)
Though ^that's the simplest straight-line mechanism by far
@PVAL: IF it splits, then of course you get some sectional curvatures 0.
Ya gotta think outside of the box (or plane) sometimes
oh i see
19:21
@MatheinBoulomenos: If you do projective geometry, of course. But in this elementary course, we're only doing a few ad hoc things.
young pups dont need any fanciness
@AkivaWeinberger this makes me dizzy
I'm trying to remember any manifolds which are a product but not obviously.
Too late for me to edit it, sorry
I am enamored of the inverse form of the triangle inequality (Ptolemy's theorem).
19:22
If it gets starred, will it show up as a gif in the sidebar?
it will be a link
Maybe if we make Demonark dizzy enough he'll stop his relentless ill-punnery.
Actually, he's been sorta dull the last few times I've seen him.
I think it's weird how some trivial answers get a lot of upvotes, but answes that took a lot of effort barely ger any upvotes
@TedShifrin shrug
IRL I make more puns for the most part but also I'm just too tired for wit, if we will be so generous as to call it that
19:24
I wrote like a 5 character answer that got 3 or 4 upvotes and got accepted.
@Mathein: I've complained about that for years. For me the only one that took serious thought that got lots of upvotes was the answer to Zev's Thurston question. But numerous others get hardly a vote.
@MatheinBoulomenos Accessibility.
If it's on a topic not a lot of people know about, most people won't read it, let alone answer it. On the other hand, if you correctly state that 4+4=8, that's accessible.
math.stackexchange.com/a/2624012 it took me quite some time to come up with that stuff. But I might submit one of the lemmas to the stacks project, so there's that
My most upvoted answer is this, and it's something anyone here could have written.
The vector bundle PDE question I just answered, finally, took hours and hours and hours. But no one's gonna notice.
Yikes. That answer is so long I'd never read it, Mathein.
19:28
that answer is a book
I think my most upvoted answer was on a question about fake proofs
My answer was the classic fake proof of Cayley-Hamilton and it got over 10 upvotes I think
The question was really vague, about "characterizing" certain rings, whatever that means
Hi @Tobias
@MatheinBoulomenos Hi
Hey @Tobias!
19:29
Heya @Tobias
@TedShifrin at least you know it's a good answer i guess
@TedShifrin basically I'm giving criteria for when the Zariski topology on an affine scheme is Noetherian (ignoring the sheaf)
@MatheinBoulomenos @TedShifrin@TobiasKildetoft hi :D
@KasmirKhaan hi
Well, I actually sent Rafe the link cuz he had a murky PDE argument I didn't follow. @EricSilva
19:30
:)
hi Kasmir
what was the idea @Ted
Tomorrow I will have a meeting with the external evaluator. Then we will see if he agrees with me or if I have been too nice in my grading.
@EricSilva: Here's what he wrote me. "The general theorem that if E is a C^\infty bundle which carries a partial connection \dbar
which satisfies \dbar^2 = 0 then E is holomorphic is a softer version of Newlander-Niremberg —
it is not quite so coupled since E is not the tangent bundle. The proof is a bit of PDE,
and I really think it cannot be reduced to Frobenius. The idea is simply to produce a local
frame of holomorphic sections. If E has rank k, then first write down k independent smooth sections, say
Wow, @Tobias. Is this just 'cuz it's your first time lecturing there?
19:34
So what is the idea of algebraic numbers
@TedShifrin No, most courses require an external evaluator (or examiner if the exam is oral)
are numbers divided into algebraic and transcental?
-__-
in fact, one of the requirements for a bachelor's degree here is a certain number of credits from courses with external evaluation
@KasmirKhaan a lot of things get better if you add "algebraic" as an adjective
Interesting, @Tobias. That's way too much work/effort/time for the US universities to do something like that.
19:35
@TedShifrin Yeah. It is meant to make sure that the quality of the universities stay consistent (I think)
@MatheinBoulomenos what does that mean mathein :D nd btw I kinna need your help to understand tensor Product :D
I was just joking
-.-
not good time for that -.-
But the external evaluators may have inconsistent standards, @Tobias. Certainly if I were one, my standards would be far more stringent than those of any number of my former colleagues.
@TedShifrin Sure, but at least it is not possible for the university itself to lower standards, since the external evaluators will be from outside.
19:37
Yeah, I get that.
One nice thing about algebraic numbers is that if $\alpha$ is algebraic and you take the subvector space of $\Bbb C$ spanned by all the powers of $\alpha$, this vector space is just finite-dimensional
that's equivalent to $\alpha$ being algebraic, in fact
@MatheinBoulomenos you mean the subspace as a rational vector space
oh yeah, I should've mentioned that
jesus christ geometric analysis computations are off the wall
do the students have any say in this evaluation system? @TobiasKildetoft
19:38
@TedShifrin I have no idea if it really serves that much of a purpose, but it is one of those things that has been done this way for a very long time
Hmm you guys kinna lost me there :D
the numbers can be algebraic or transctenal right?
@skullpatrol not as such. They can of course complain if they don't feel they got the right grade, but not apart from that
@EricSilva: Was that addressed to me?
I see.
no it was just a general exclamation of my suffering
im working on some Simons' equation stuff
19:40
@skullpatrol I mean, the system just consists of me mailing the exams to someone else who also grades them, and then we discuss those grades we did not agree on
I adjudicated a number of grade complaints when I was associate department head. Most times, I was able to reassure the student that on balance the grade was actually fair. I might have been more generous on these problems, but less generous on those problems and the grade came out roughly the same.
@MatheinBoulomenos can I invite you to a room tonight? :D I kinna need some help :)
(or rather, I have the department mail them, as I want no responsibility if they get lost)
@MatheinBoulomenos only if you dont have other things to do ofc :D
I don't have that much time, I'm doing homework on the side @Kasmir
19:41
@MatheinBoulomenos okay good luck :D
@Tobias: The problem — aside from how that's a ton of work for the external person (does he/she get paid?) — is that this delays students' grades by a month.
I don't think I've ever written a long answer on this site.
Kinda like cross validation @TobiasKildetoft
I've written some involved ones, PVAL, but never that length!
i think ive only written like 3 answers
19:42
@TedShifrin They do get some amount of compensation (no idea if it is reasonable, but since it is voluntary to be part of the pool of evaluators, I assume it is not terrible)
i hate answering questions on mse
which I don't have any recollection of.
As for the delay, yes, but not by that much, as we only have a total of 4 weeks before the students must have their grades.
In what order should one read serres books?
From front to back.
3
19:43
@PVAL: Your $d$'s need to be $\partial$'s :)
Pval I wish someoen could hit you now
I've never read Serre's books, so I cannot comment.
okay thanks Ted =p
Pure gold
I used iff too.
Yuck.
19:44
Ehmm so dami ?
I guess you know the answer?
Same. They are supposed to be good, but I usually find that newer books on representation theory have a huge edge since a lot of the concepts have been developed a lot in the mean time
Which allows for a much more structured approach to many things
I've never quite read Serre's books, I am intending to look through his rep theory at some point but rn I'm in the middle of other stuff
Hmm ._. i meant for general knowlegde Tobias
I want to read about stuff in advance
Kasmir: Probably you should find more readable sources, until you're far more advanced.
I liked his book on rep theory, but Tobias knows a lot more than I do, so he's probably right
19:45
since the time at school aint enuf for me
Good Point Ted ._.
Humphreys and Fulton/Harris have modern style representation theory books. The latter is very chatty and has lots of concrete stuff in it.
I tried reading parts of GAGA at one point. That's all I know about Serre.
I meant more like hmm, algebra books
but in certain order
@Ted i just figured out why minimal surfaces suddenly become horrible in dimension 7
it's cause 25>24 apparently
Oh, the cone.
19:46
yeah the bombieri-de giorgi-giusti guy
I remember hearing about this from Lawson and Frank Morgan independently.
But I don't remember the crucial numbers.
Ted there is an online version ?
I googled it and found soemthing , could be it ?
I'm not the right person to ask such questions, Kasmir.
19:47
@TedShifrin Yeah, Humphreys' book on Lie algebras is still my goto for introductory stuff, despite being old enough to have some things done in somewhat different ways than one would do them now (mainly in terms of notation)
@Ted Isn't Humphrey's only about Lie algebras? (Maybe I'm thinking of a different book)
@Ted ambient has dim > 7
Right, but what happens to the 7 to make 25>24? :P
He has lots of books, Mathein.
the whole construction boils down to the inequality $(n-2)^{2}/4 \geq n- 1
I know he has a book on Lie algebras and one on algebraic groups
19:49
so false until 7 then you get $25/4 > 24/4$
but I think Kasmir is looking for stuff on finite groups
(which are technically algebraic groups, but I don't think that helps much)
What's the smallest order non-interesting finite group?
Oh, I guess you're right that his representation theory is of Lie algebras. I stand by Fulton/Harris. I like their mathematics and their exposition.
and then the singular sets go fucking crazy and have codimension 7 for higher dimensional dudes and i think knowing more about the singular sets properties is like a black hole where we know nothing beyond the basics
I don't remember at all where that would come from, Eric, but OK :)
Oh right ...
19:51
it comes from spectral estimates for the Jacobi operator
Nah, there's a GMT viewpoint.
the dude that comes from the second variation formula
ah maybe,i dont know it
Too bad I burnt all my files and notes. :(
Press F to pay respects
19:52
Hmm
Ted that book has stuff on lie groups
hulton
fulton/harris
Hi chat
Hi @Ted
fulton/harris yes
hi @Alessandro: You had a namesake here earlier :)
19:53
second part is lie Groups onward
but first part was rep theory :)
Yeah, Fulton/Harris is a good one. Lots of examples, and makes you work through them to get to the base ideas
@TedShifrin what do you mean?
Another Alessandro was here
@TobiasKildetoft can you please give ISBN ?:D i Think i found wrong book
I've been doing more the pde side of minimal guys so far this quarter I guess
19:53
There's only one book by those two, @Kasmir.
@Ted Now I know why California has been having so many issues with fires.
@TedShifrin What did I find then >< let me look again
Why, PVAL? Other than droughts ...
That was supposed to link to your comment about burning your notes.
Oh, nice, the Alessandros will conquer the chat
19:54
Ohh, no, that burning happened in my office in GA.
Hi @AlessandroCodenotti
that link , second part is lie groups
should I read just first part?
@KasmirKhaan Sure, Lie groups and their representations
It's representation theory of Lie groups.
19:55
We dóing finite Groups only
finite groups are zero-dimensional compact Lie groups
Oh.
For finite groups, you could read a little bit in Artin's Algebra, too.
I too can make up new Words mathein :D
okay :D because serres book so far
very dense
19:56
@AlessandroCodenotti: I didn't ask the other Alessandro if he was going to run me over with his car.
\o @AkivaWeinberger
@KasmirKhaan did you look at the book I recommended you?
@MatheinBoulomenos Yes, it has fourir analysis approch
19:58
\o/
@MatheinBoulomenos did not take that course yet
ö <- face
I want to follow one book from start to end, without having to deal with stuff I did not take yet ><
@Kasmir: As you get farther in mathematics, it gets harder and harder to separate everything perfectly like that.
20:00
@TedShifrin hmm ._. each time I feel am missing something, i feel like in a loop
like never took a course i was ready to take from strat
allways extra work
-.-
the Thing is , they assumed only knowledege of linear algebra and group theory
@TedShifrin is he Italian? In that case most likely
then one sees modules there
-___-
math builds upon itself
@AlessandroCodenotti: Yes, Italian also.
OK, I'm off to make lunch. Bye.
modules are just linear algebra over rings
20:03
Cya
See you @Ted!
Hmm what eigenvectors in hessian matrix represent ?
The vectors that stay on their span during linear transformation but what does this mean in terms of second derivatives ?
When we have a short exact sequence of groups $1 \longrightarrow N \longrightarrow G \longrightarrow Q \longrightarrow 1$ with $N \trianglelefteq G$ and $Q = G\ N$ and say that "$G$ is an extension of $Q$ by $N$" is this kind of like reversing the act of quotienting? If I didn't know what $G$ was but knew $N$ and $Q$, is it possible to determine the structure of $G$?
@ÍgjøgnumMeg No, certainly not knowing only the groups
20:21
@TedShifrin Thanks Ted
$1\to \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{Z}/4\mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z} \to 1$ and $1\to \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}\oplus \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z} \to 1$ give non-isomorphic groups
Yet they're both extensions of $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$ by $\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$
(Semi)direct products
@AkivaWeinberger assuming the sequence splits
Suppose $f$ is continuous, and a<b, under which circumstance can I say $sup_{u\in[\frac{j-1}{k},\frac{j}{k}]} |f(u)-b|<sup_{u\in[\frac{j-1}{k},\frac{j}{k}]} |f(u)-a|$?
Apart from $f(u)>b$
20:40
@Secret : about the empirical reasonning, yes, it's better if even the rules are discover, the only fixed affirmation is the définition of, the EC affirmations (the rules)
@quallenjäger I don't have an answer, but draw pictures
0
Q: Are two functions $f$ and $g$ with linear independent derivatives neccessarily linearly independent and vice versa?

The Great DuckSuppose that there exists functions $f$ and $g$ defined on the real numbers and differentiable everywhere. If their derivatives $f'$ and $g'$ are linearly independent on some nonzero interval then are $f$ and $g$ linearly independent on the same interval? Similarly if $f$ and $g$ are linearly ind...

does anyone know if that is true?
@AkivaWeinberger Hi Akiva
Well, let me formulate the original problem
Now this is a good question
I have a two dimensional $C^1$-path with $|x'(t)|+|y'(t)|=L$ at every point $t\in[0,1]$, where $L$ is the length of the path under $l^1-norm$, which is defined as $|(x,y)|=|x|+|y|$.
20:50
@Tuki who?
@TheGreatDuck your question is quite good
I want to estimate $|\frac{x'(t)}{L}-\frac{|\Delta_i x|}{|\Delta_i \gamma|}|$
Say $\alpha f'+\beta g'=0\implies\alpha,\beta=0$. Suppose $\alpha f+\beta g=0$. By differentiating, we see that $\alpha,\beta=0$.
Thus, if $f'$ and $g'$ are linearly independent, so are $f$ and $g$.
@quallenjäger What are $\Delta_i x$ and $\Delta_i\gamma$?
where $\Delta_i x=x(\frac{j}{k})-x(\frac{j-1}{k})$ and $|\Delta_i \gamma|=|x(\frac{j}{k})-x(\frac{j-1}{k})|+|y(\frac{j}{k})-y(\frac{j-1}{k})|$
$j/k$ is just the partition of [0,1] into k pieces.
I imagine the Mean Value Theorem would be relevant
20:55
I have rewritten everything in integral, especially $|\Delta_i \gamma|=|\int x'(t)dt|+|\int y'(t) dt|$
The thing is, I cannot really pull the absolute sign under the integral, as the derivative might change the sign
@Tuki thanks
If $x'\ne0$, then there exists a small neighborhood around $t$ in which $x'$ does not change sign
otherwise I would have $|\Delta_i \gamma|=\int |x'(t)|+|y'(t)|dt=\frac{L}{k}$
due to $x'$ being continuous
@AkivaWeinberger oh. duh. Would the equality be preserved by differentiation, though?
20:58
@TheGreatDuck If $\alpha f+\beta g=0$ is true on the whole interval, yes
@AkivaWeinberger ah
ok
If $x'$ doesn't change the sign, the $y'$ would still be able to change the sign.
proof by contradiction shall yield my third law of piecewise trivial exclusion then.

« first day (2736 days earlier)      last day (2582 days later) »