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16:00
I'mma just see if there's anything in Chapter 0 that I don't know
but its cool i guess
@BalarkaSen stop trolling
pot calling kettle
Is the Riemannian category badly behaved?
Or, other side, is it too nice?
It's rigid
16:01
It's not even a category
He's trolling
You don't have morphisms?
Depends on what you want to be morphisms
It's not clear what "the" morphisms should be
And it's not useful in any case
Weird, for most things it's obvious
@AkivaWeinberger Riemannian geometry simply does not benefit from categorification.
16:02
a Riemannian manifold is not a categorical object. It has too many informations imposed on it
^ this
The most basic categorification is to realize that a Riemannian manifold is a smooth manifold $M$ with a section of $T^* M \otimes T^* M$. Then you make it a category by defining morphisms to be the smooth maps $M \to N$ which preserve that section. (This is just fancy language for saying the Riemannian metric is preserved under the map)
But that's at the cost of loosing a lot of local information.
I'm literally assigning isometries to be morphisms
> Although the necessity of an abstract idea of a surface (that is, without involving the ambient space) is clear since Gauss, it was nearly a century before such an idea attained the definitive form that we present here.
Weird
> One of the reasons for this delay is that the fundamental role of the change of parameters [meaning transition maps?] was not well understood, even for surfaces in $\Bbb R^3$.
Transition functions, yes
16:07
@BalarkaSen Is there a category of metric *spaces?
Sure, @Akiva.
Isometries are the morphisms
But then all morphisms are isomorphisms
Well, you mean, metric spaces?
So the morphisms are isomorphisms = shit category
@BalarkaSen Yes whoops
16:07
Well a better one is to say the morphisms are isometric embeddings
Isometric immersions
Hi
Hm
So like there's a morphism from $[0,\infty)$ to $(0,\infty)$ and vice versa?
But still, the geometry here is about individual manifolds (sometimes the extrinsic geometry of submanifolds). The way they relate is not so interesting.
(Cont'd) I guess that's kinda interesting but it does sound like a shitty category. And Riemannian manifolds are kinda just a variation on metric spaces, I think, so it makes sense that they'd make a shitty category as well.
Some kinds of special maps (isometric immersions, Riemannian submersions) are intetesting
16:10
@Akiva The length metric coming from the Riemannian metric is just one facet of the Riemannian metric
Riemannian submarines?
o/
The most common way I would think about changing Riemannian manifolds is either changing the metric on a fixed manifold or through Gromov-Hausdorff limits
Riemannian submersions are great!
Hm, what's a quick example of the same (isometric?) length metrics coming from two different (non-isometric?) Riemannian metrics?
(Bonus question: What's the right question here?)
(Thanks for both asking and answering my question in advance)
I think maps that are metric-space isometries are Riemannian isometries too, and vice versa
(maybe you want some basic condition on the map)
I think C^0 is good enough
Strange.
@MikeMiller It is.
16:13
Right
It's why isometries are closed in Homeo
> Differentiable always signifies of class $C^\infty$.
Isometries of metric spaces are continuous anyway
What happens if we change that to "analytic"?
We lose bump functions.
Does it get too rigid?
Then everything is bad :D
16:14
(Bonus: What happens if we change that to "polynomial"? :P)
You get back the theory of algebraic varieties
More or less
What is the intersection of $SO(4)$ and $SO(2,2)$?
(besides the multiples of the identity?)
Weirdly, do Carmo uses $\phi$ for the empty set
(Or at least the translation does)
(Rather than $\emptyset$ or $\varnothing$)
I think that's an artifact from the early days of TeX
Right so you just need a bijection (@BalarkaSen @MikeMiller @0celo7) according to Petersen's book.
16:16
What does $SO(2,2)$ mean?
@Mike @Danu @0celo7 Ah OK the point is not that the length metric is not determined by the Riemannian metric (which is false, as you three answered). The point is the subspace theory of the length metric space and the subspace theory of the Riemannian manifold are different
@Danu Yes
Like Ocel07 said
@Akiva preserving the standard symmetric bilinear form of 2,2 signature
@AkivaWeinberger orthogonal group for metric of signature $(2,2)$
Right, so I don't know what that means
Never mind then
16:17
$dx_1^2+dx_2^2-dx_3^2-dx_4^2$
@AkivaWeinberger $(x,y)=-x_1y_1-x_2y_2+x_3y_3+x_4y_4$
So, not rotations.
No, something more sinister
Weird Lorentz-looking things.
So the right question here should be about the space of Riemannian submanifolds of the Riemannian manifold, whatever that means
16:18
you can still think in analogy with rotations
Just have some hyperbolic stuff to deal with
These live inside GL(4)?
@BalarkaSen It's true that the metric can be recovered from the distance function.
Like rotating around a hyperbola instead of a circle?
@MikeMiller Yea
That's where I'm thinking about the intersection, I mean?
16:19
yea
@MikeMiller As do most lie groups
I think I found one element that lies in both
accidentally
@Danu the identity?
@0celo7 Yeah, I did not know that. Should I do the exercise?
but I somehow thought they shouldn't really intersect except in the obvious part
no
it's the image of $$ \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ b^* & a \end{pmatrix}$$ ($a$ is real, $b$ is complex, $a^2-|b|^2=1$), viewed as an element of $GL(4,\Bbb R)$ under the natural inclusion of $GL(2,\Bbb C)$.
16:21
@BalarkaSen I should probably give you a hint. Given a curve $c(t)$ with $c'(0)=v$ (any vector), show that $|v|_g=\lim_{t\to 0}[d_g(c(t),c(0))/t]$. Then obtain the metric via polarization
So when the book says "The family $\{(U_\alpha,\mathbf x_\alpha)\}$ [parametrizations or systems of coordinates, where $U$ is a subset of $\Bbb R^n$ and $\mathbf x$ is a function] is maximal", it means that if any potential new $(U,\mathbf x)$ pair that has differentiable transition functions with everything else is included?
That was poorly worded
@0celo7 Oh well you gave away the idea
But like, I can't add anything new, either it's already in there or it's not compatible with existing stuff
is what it means, right?
@Danu The intersection is 0-dimensional at least
@MikeMiller because?
16:23
Something I want to learn at some point is Lie theory. But, Jesus fucking Christ, the list of things I "want to learn at some point" is as long as the list of movies I "should watch at some point"
Friggin' immense
Write uh $I'$ for the diagonal matrix (1,1,-1,-1)
I think I messed up some part of the computation, so I guess it's not in $SO(4)$ afte rall haha
(I recently saw The Social Network. It was good)
it's definitely in $SO(2,2)$
@MikeMiller Yes..
@BalarkaSen I don’t think it’s trivial to show what I claimed
16:24
Then the Lie algebra of SO(2,2) is X^T = I'X
Right
differentiate X^T I' X=I'
@0celo7 You want to show that $|-|_g$ is a norm, you mean?
on $T_p M$
No, I mean that limit gives the norm given by the metric
Yeah sorry. Anyway this intersecfs trivially with the Lie algebra of so(4)
Computing that limit is not so easy, IIRC
16:25
Ah ok. I'm guessing you need geodesic coordinates for this computation
@MikeMiller Oh, cool
Also, Ocelot, you're becoming a permanent resident of the chat, you've been here so often lately
Yes it will involve some sort of expansion
thanks
You get an equation just in terms of X and I' which is unsolvable except 0
16:26
@AkivaWeinberger Thanks? What do you mean by also
yeah, makes sense
I apologise for lack of detail, typing on my phone is a pain right now
it's clear enough
@0celo7 "In addition to the completely unrelated thing I said before that"
@BalarkaSen there’s a good post by John Ma on expansions of the distance function for small distances
@AkivaWeinberger you mean the removed thing?
16:28
Nah, the thing on how I want to learn Lie theory at some point
Irrelevant either way
I forget geodesic coordinates. It's a chart $(U, (x^1, \cdots, x^n))$ such that the flowlines of $\partial/\partial x^i$ at the origin gives geodesics inside of $U$, right?
(So $\nabla_{\partial/\partial x^i} \partial/\partial x^i = 0$)
I’m on my phone
Can I also choose "orthogonal"? $\nabla_{\partial/\partial x^i} \partial/\partial x^j = 0$?
I think so
@BalarkaSen at the origin, yes
@BalarkaSen yes
But just at a point
Right, of course
Otherwise I'll get a flat chart which will break curvature
Speaking of I should prove that
Get an expansion of the metric in terms of curvature etc
16:38
My thesis has the computation to fifth order. Ugh
It will have it.
Maybe
@BalarkaSen the easiest way to do the computation is Jacobi fields.
You again use a polarization trick after using Jacobi fields to compute the norm
I shall spend some time thinking about the story on the large
Hi chato!
any help on this1
0
Q: Conversion of Surface integrals to a suitable Volume integral.

BAYMAXWhile deriving the Euler's equations of motion in case of Fluid dynamics, I came across this part - Here $p$ denotes the hydrostatic pressure(scalar function) I am unable to understand how it transformed this - $\int \int _{\Delta S} - p\hat{n}$ ds $= -\int \int \int_{\Delta V} \nabla p dv$ ...

16:53
$\hat\chi$
$\hat{\chi}$ \ $\{c\}$
Translating a math textbook must be easy and hard at the same time
Does anyone have experience with wiki software for math use? If so which software are you using? Preferable one with full latex integration.
Easy 'cause you probably don't have to deal with foreign idioms, wordplay, or words that have different emotional connotations in the source language than the target language
Hard 'cause you have to know what every bit of jargon translates to, which you won't find in a regular bilingual dictionary
I plan to write a mathematical hard science fiction at some point which will be written in $\infty$-categorical language
17:00
@berrygreen Whatever ProofWiki uses apparently works
@Akiva they use MediaWiki, the same software as proper wikipedia. That is too bulky for my needs.
Also their latex integration really poor
Suppose $\limsup_\limits{n\to \infty}\sqrt[n] {|a_n|}$ is $+\infty$, does $\sum a_n$ converge? Similarly, does ratio test work for $+\infty$, $-\infty$?
If I have a submanifold $S$ of codimension 1 of a connected manifold $M$ such that $M \setminus S$ is disconnected in two pieces $M^+$ and $M^-$, is there a level-set function that exists such that $f(S) = 0$, $f(M^+) > 0$ and $f(M^-) < 0$?
Good
Where might I find a proof for this?
($S$ isn't necessarily connected, by the way)
17:08
@AkivaWeinberger I’ve translated some technical French, it isn’t so hard. If you already kind of know what’s going on, it almost writes itself
Something very wordy like metric geometry might be quite hard though
@BalarkaSen id read it tbh
@Slereah Say $N$ is a tubular neighborhood of $S$ inside of $M$. That has a projection map $p : N \to S$ which makes $N$ into a line bundle (in fact it's the normal bundle). Your condition implies $N \setminus N_0$ where $N_0$ is the bundle's zero section is disconnected; this gives a trivialization $\varphi : N \to S \times \Bbb R$ of $N$.
The second component of this trivialization is a map $f : N \to \Bbb R$ which is a homeomorphism of $\Bbb R$ fixing zero on each fiber - that automatically means $f$ is positive on "$N^+$" and negative on "$N^-$", the two components of $N \setminus S$. $
Thank you my dude
There's some details to be made clear here
One is that the trivialization of $N$ guarantees the positiveness/negativeness of $f$ on each fiber of $N$ is consistent. Another is to write down an extension of $f : N^+ \to (0, \infty)$ to $M^+ \supset N^+$.
i'm trying to show that the Israel junction condition makes sense
Not easy because it's all gobbledigook
17:22
The extension can be done by taking the constant function $1$ on a neighborhood of $M^+ \setminus N$ and then using partition of unity on $(M^+ \setminus S, N^+)$ to glue $f$ and $1$ to an everywhere positive function on $M^+$.
Similarly do it with $-1$ on a neighborhood of $M^- \setminus N$ to get an everywhere negative function on $M^-$
These agree on $N$ and is zero on $S$.
Thanks!
No problem.
I was worried there might be weird cases where the function is positive on both connected parts
Yeah the point is you can do it locally on a neighborhood of $S$ by the tubular neighborhood theorem
@BalarkaSen check discord
17:25
In this scenario that local disconnection is in fact a global one
@0celo7 Beautiful
@BalarkaSen look at all the norms
I didn't write that shit down
I took a picture for later reference but then thought you'd enjoy it
I appreciate the meme
17:50
@0celo7 Cool!
Let $(a_n)_n$ a real sequence such : $\forall n \in \mathbb N, \forall m \in \mathbb N^*,\exists n_0 \in \mathbb N,\forall k\geq n_0, |a_n-a_k| \leq \frac{1}{m} $.

Is it true that $\forall n\in \mathbb N, a_n=a_0$ ?

Is the BGR (Big General Result) lemma true ?
I also imagine the ratio of words to equations influences things
@0celo7 What did you do if there was a technical word you didn't know how to translate?
Perhaps buy textbooks on the subject in each language and compare, or something
What does activating notification do?
ok :)
@Silent Probably something on how, if someone pings you, you might get a notification on the main site
@Dattier $\Bbb N^*$?
@Dattier I think $a_n=(-1)^n$ is a counterexample
Is $\mathbb CP^m$ a submanifold of $\mathbb CP^n$?
17:55
It sounds like you want every point in the sequence to be a limit point of the sequence
If $m < n$, it sits as a submanifold, yes @mathsta
ok, thx
@AkivaWeinberger choose m=2
@AkivaWeinberger that's rather rare
In lots of ways, often, @mathsta. I presume you mean just as a "linear subspace."
Hi DogAteMy, Balarka.
17:58
@TedShifrin What do you mean with often? On what does it depend?
@Mathsta: For example, you can embed $\Bbb CP^1$ into $\Bbb CP^2$ as a line or as a conic (and there are lots of ways to do each).
Hi, is the Verdier dual of a sheaf usually defined as the right derived functor of $Hom_{Sheaves(X)}(-, S_X)$ where $S_X$ is the complex of singular chains?
This is how my text introduces it but it seems a bit too on the nose
or P^1 in P^3 as twisted cubic, say
just to give a fancy example
@TedShifrin So you say, that we can find CP^m in many different ways in CP^n, but not all of them are actually submanifolds
No these are submanifolds
18:00
No, I'm giving embeddings, so the images are submanifolds.
You could take a map of $\Bbb CP^1\to\Bbb CP^2$ whose image is a nodal cubic (so it would not be a submanifold).
We are doing topology and the text is trying to motivate how a dual needs to look and then says well its just $RHom$ with the singular chains of closed support, which somehow as a sheaf is too topologically relevant to be believable as a candidate for an algebraic idea
There are interesting embeddings, called the Veronese embeddings, of $\Bbb CP^m$ into $\Bbb CP^n$ if you pick a particular value of $n$ in terms of $m$.
Sorry, I am having troubles to follow
@mathsta: Where did your question come from?
@Dattier Oh, I see. Sorry
18:03
DogAteMy: I'm not paying attention, but I sure would guess that it needs to be a constant sequence with those crazy nested quantifiers.
@Dattier Right, I think you're right, then, it would be a constant sequence
Sorry
@TedShifrin Actually I was wondering if $CP^1#CP^1$ is a complex submanifold of $CP^2#CP^2$
If you said $\exists k\ge n_0$, then it would be about subsequences converging to any given element of the sequence.
Is there a complex structure on CP^2 # CP^2?
@mathsta: First of all, connect sum does not stay in the holomorphic category.
<--- yields to Balarka :)
18:05
$\forall n_0\in\Bbb N,\exists k\ge n_0$, yeah
CP^2 # \bar{CP^2} does
The reverse of what it actually is
But those are different manifolds
Dumb question: if I take the arbitrary union of a collection of path-connected sets, all of which have at least one point in common, will the union be path-connected?
18:06
Yes.
@mathsta This question, for example, says $\Bbb{CP}^2 \# \Bbb{CP}^2$ does not even admit an almost complex structure.
To connect two points, draw a path from the first point to the common point and from the common point to the second point
Oh, ok.
@Balarka: Make sure you send Mike a royalty check.
But without requesting a complex structure, is it a submanifold?
18:08
So you're just staying in the topological/smooth category ... What's the big deal? Is there a manifold structure on the connected sum? Sure.
And we can embed it in the connected sum the manifolds these are submanifolds of?
Sure, CP^1 # CP^1 is just S^2. You can embed S^2 in CP^2 # CP^2 in many ways
Dumb way: Take a chart in the manifold and embed S^2 inside that ball.
Connect summing with $S^2$ sure is boring :(
ok, thx
@Mike shows empty pocket; cricket.avi
18:14
There should be a big sign for connected sum
$$\underset{i}{\large{\#}} T^2_i$$
$\large \#$
$\huge \#$
Hmm, I am not sure I know how to do that in chat.
@Balarka: You're preoccupied with the empty connected sum. A new meme.
Use \large and \huge
Hahah
I'll star that just to reverse psychology this room into making that a meme
I guess I hadn't thought those font controls would work in ChatJax.
Me neither
18:17
Hello :) I am looking for example linear function but not continuous ..
What's $X\#\emptyset$?
:P
I imagine undefined
I wonder if Demonark and @AlessandroC figured out that question about $\ell^\infty\to c_0$.
How do you remove a ball from the empty set
It's defined, DogAteMy.
You do it vacuously.
But you can't puncture the empty set
18:18
Wouldn't $M \# \varnothing$ just be $M \setminus B$
Hmm ...
Since it's vacuous, you don't puncture $M$ either. :)
Nah it's M
Can you remove a ball of radius 0
Yeah @Ted
I dunno
18:19
I guess $d(p,\emptyset)=\infty$ as well :P
Yale will be so proud of how we've trained little DogAteMy :P
why can't you find iqr in ungrouped frequency table using cumulative frequency?
This is not a statistics room, Fred.
why only in grouped data
oh vell
its still math
We only have one chatter who knows any of this stuff, and he's rarely here.
18:21
so what do you talk about
More mainstream math from middle school level to graduate level and more.
Some of us know a little probability, but that's very different from technicalities of statistical inference.
i'm only doing my gcse , i'll post it to the forum but everyone will probably vote it down becuase I need to upload a picture of the table
I have no idea what you just said, but OK.
and no-one likes pictures ,it has to be in latex
Sorta like turning in scribbled and crossed out homework exercises — frowned upon.
18:24
no its straight from the textbook so we'll see
How do I find the maxima of $\dfrac{x^2}{1+x^2}$?
Do you think you know what the graph looks like?
I am trying to solve this question: $\arctan{\dfrac{x^2}{1+x^2}}$
Till now I have reached $\arctan y\ge 0$
I am trying to find the maxima of y to get the upper bound.
@TedShifrin Yeah, it's tending to a maximum but not reaching it.
You're right. It approaches $1$ asymptotically.
heh
do you know about derivatives?
18:29
You don't need calculus for this.
@XanderHenderson Yeah.
You didn't finish, @Abcd. What is the question you're trying to solve?
2 mins ago, by Abcd
I am trying to solve this question: $\arctan{\dfrac{x^2}{1+x^2}}$
That's not a question.
@TedShifrin Indeed, you don't, but that is a pretty quick tool for showing that it is monotonic on $[0,\infty)$
18:30
Find the value of $\arctan {\dfrac{x^2}{1+x^2}}$
Just write it as $1-1/(1+x^2)$.
Though, come to think of it, the direct approach might be easier
What does that question mean, @Abcd? Find the value??
@TedShifrin Such tricks don't strike me :/
@TedShifrin It means the range...
It's elementary algebra. Like with your complex number thing. You mess up on easy stuff because you're too busy trying to be fancy.
Oh, the set of values ...
So $0\le \frac{x^2}{1+x^2}<1$.
@Abcd: Saying the values would have been clear. I'm sorry such tiny details in English make such a big difference in understanding.
If all you want to do is find the range, note that $f(x) = \frac{x^2}{1+x^2}$ is continuous, $f(0) = 0$, $\lim_{x\to \pm\infty} f(x) = 1$, and the function is monotonically increasing on $[0,\infty)$, and that $f$ is even
this implies that $f(\mathbb{R}) = [0,1)$
NO, Xander.
what am I missing?
$f(\Bbb R) = [0,1)$.
18:34
oh, right.
ALL REAL NUMBERS ARE EXTENDED REAL NUMBERS!
what is happening.
the only reason that I care about monotonicity is that I want to make sure that $0 \le f(x) \le 1$ for all $x$; you can also do this directly
Yes, you could easily invert the function on $[0,\infty)$.
But IVT is just lovely.
and it isn't really that hard: $f(x) \ge 0$ for all $x$ as it is the ratio of positive numbers
and $x^2 < 1+x^2$ for all $x$, so $f(x) < 1$
in either case, as @TedShifrin points out, there is an application of the intermediate value theorem going on, which is why continuity is important
18:43
Does anyone know the proof of $\sum a_i + \prod (1-a_i) \ge 1 $ via derivatives?
$a_i \in [0,1]$. It considered the LHS a polynomial, iirc.
Hello chat
I can't find it online anywhere.
I think it said $ f= \sum a_i + \prod (1-a_i) $ is a constant polynomial or something.
@TedShifrin Ted :D
@MatheinBoulomenos How did it go on your exam? :D
your function is discrete @Bennett ?
That doesn't sound believable, @Bennett.
Hi, Kasmir
18:48
@Turi yeah, @TedShifrin I must be misremembering it. It first defined a family of sequences (subsequences?) or something.
I even know where I saw the proof first.
But the website is down.
Bennett: So think inductively. It's clear with one $a_i$.
If $\alpha = e^{i\dfrac{8\pi}{11}}$, then find $Re(\alpha+ \alpha^2 + \alpha^3+\alpha^4 + \alpha ^5)$
@TedShifrin Yeah, I know how to prove it via induction. It's just that particular proof left an impression on me.
planetmath.org/node/34744/pmgroup
That's where it was.
Its so simple, I don't know why I don't get the right answer.
Using euler's formula and cosine summation series:
18:50
Now when we go from $n$ of them to $n+1$ of them, we add $a_{n+1}$ and subtract $a_{n+1}$ times a number that's between $0$ and $1$. So it works.
Both are unreachable.
$Re(\alpha...\alpha^5)= \dfrac{\sin 20\pi/ 11}{\sin 4\pi/11}\times \cos(24\pi/11)$
Can anyone help me prove this: arctan 4/3 +arctan 12/15=pi- arctan 56/33.
But answer is $-1/2$
18:56
Hi @Alessandro
Hey @Ted! Did you reach a conclusion regarding that $\ell^\infty$ question?
I was asking if you did? :)
Ted, in order to have a vector space
we need those axioms and a scalars from a field
but my comfusion is what field is it?
You have to declare what field it is when you define the set of vectors itself.
Nope, I didn't think about it, I studied for an exam today
18:59
Well, that's a crummy excuse, @Alessandro :P
if we take a Z/pZ

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