Actually, I just had a godly vision involving the Christ and compact support. I think if $L$ is a noncompact connected $n$-manifold, $H^k_{c}(L)$ is isomorphic to exactly $H^k(L^*, \text{End}(L))$ where $\text{End}(L)$ is the space of ends of $L$ and $L^* = L \cup \text{End}(L)$ is the end-compactification
No, uh Ok, no, I think my vision is correct. Lord has saveth my soul.
In this case, for example, $\Bbb R^2 \setminus \{0\}$ has two ends, and the end-compactification is $S^2$ (the end space being the north + south pole). H^1(S^2, (north and south pole)) = H^1(S^2 v S^1) = Z
In fact, in fact, in fact. If the end is nice enough, then $H^k(L^*, \text{End}(L)) \cong H^k(L^+)$ should hold, where $L^+ = L^*/\text{End}(L)$ is the one-point compactification. Eg, if the end has a cone neighborhood.
The Kazdan-Warner trichotomy states that for $n\ge 3$, a compact $n$-manifold falls into one of three categories:
(A) Every (smooth) function is a scalar curvature.
(B) The manifold is strongly scalar flat.
(C) The manifold only admits negative scalar curvature metrics.
Of course class (A) i...
my thesiis advisor gave me some lecture from Geramita about Waring's problem (and in the introductory part is all about zero schemes), and I honestly do understand anything ahahaha
@mago Read this post by lush: chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/43058565#43058565 an affine scheme $\operatorname{Spec} A$ is a geometric object that contains the information about a commutative ring $A$. A general scheme is a geometric object that looks locally like an affine scheme (similar to how a manifold looks locally like an open subset of $\Bbb R^n$).
Here the notions "geometric object" and "looks like" are made precise by considering a topological space with algebraic data attached to open subsets
@0celo7 in math.cornell.edu/~sjamaar/manifolds/manifold.pdf in exercise (4.9) (ii), i don't understand what to do with the product of rho and c, also since rho is a closed path, can we assume the winding number of rho is finite? or else presumably something should cancel out
You have morphisms of schemes which are compatible with the topology and the algebraic data in a certain way. If you have a morphism of schemes $X \hookrightarrow Y$ that is an embedding onto a closed subset on the topological level, then one calls $X$ a closed subscheme. A closed subscheme is not uniquely determined by specifying a closed subset! For an affine scheme, closed subschemes correspond to ideals, whereas closed subsets correspond to radical ideals
Hey, quick question. Let's say there are x number of ways (combinations) to add up 1 penny and 5 penny coins to make 1$. Now, the question is - how many combinations are there to make 2$ out of 1 penny and 5 penny coins? Would you have to re-run the entire calcuation, or would the knowledge of the first question help to answer this? (E.g. if there are XYZ ways to make 1$, then there must be ... different ways to make 2$)
In computational geometry, Chan's algorithm, named after Timothy M. Chan, is an optimal output-sensitive algorithm to compute the convex hull of a set
P
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of
n
{\displaystyle n}
points, in 2- or 3-dimensional space. The algorithm takes
O
(
n
log
h
)
{\displaystyle O(n\log h)}
time, where
h
{\displaystyle h}
is the number of vertices of the output (the convex hull...
Full disclosure, I'm looking for an algebraic map between algebraic subsets $X\to Y$ that is an epimorphism but not a surjection. My first guess was to include the coordinate axes into the plane, but this doesn't work
Write down the pullback by $c(t)$ explicitly, and then write down the pullback by $\rho(t)c(t)$ explicitly. First think through what happens when $\rho$ is constant.
@JoeShmo: Honestly, (iii) is telling you what's going on geometrically. Projecting the curve to the unit circle gives the same $1$-form when you pull back.
@TedShifrin meaning, i know what the winding numbers are, and i can prove what they are in each case, but i can't compute them explicitly, which is alarming to me anyway.
Determine the winding numbers of the following paths c˜: [0, 1] → R 2 \ {0} by using the formula, and then explain the answer by appealing to geometric intuition
@PVAL: That's what started this whole thing. I don't know the difference between monic/injective and epic/surjective in the category of rings as opposed to the category of sets.
damn, now Kasmir is sounding as bothersome as Demonark and Balarka.
@Daminark I suffer the same fate as you, especially because I specialize in stochastic stuff, and most discussions here are never relating to that topic
@BalarkaSen In my talk which is next month I was gonna mention how things in complex analysis the genetic code of holomorphic function is determined at very small level
@TedShifrin I only know of the definition $U_f[\varphi] = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} f(x) \varphi(x) dx$ for distribution $U$ that can be represented by locally integrable function $f$ and $\varphi \in \mathcal{D}$