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00:00
NOOO, check your exponent laws, @DarkRunner.
first sem @TedShifrin
bout to read the others
Oh, OK, @Antonios. You can see my style is far more concrete, but they still have to write real proofs.
yeah that's probably a good thing
I guess I went about learning all these things very abstractly, just by the nature of my courses.
@TedShifrin It's $(10^{ 10 })^{ 10 }$
So if I can reduce the scenario to $a=c$, then I can characterize the image in a nice way.
00:01
And then, you can repeat the same for the rest!
Right, @DarkRunner, and you keep taking $10$th powers.
I've found that this year I've been working on fully understanding examples, and it's really complemented my understanding quite well.
Right, right
Of course, @Antonios. But too many teachers fail to teach that way.
thanks a lot, @TedShifrin
00:01
Sure thing, @DarkRunner.
Especially in grad school, faculty tend to think that students can think up examples and work them out ... all on their own. Which very few can or do.
One needs to develop that skill.
And the examples we come up with as grad students aren't always the best ones...
Even in grad courses I assign (often quite hard) explicit computations and examples.
So, @Semiclassic, it's sorta interesting writing out that matrix.
yeah, @TedShifrin. I think in my case, it was strange because I started math relatively late, and since so much of it built on the earlier material I should have been more comfortable with, I ended up crutching on "abstraction" in some way.
Of course, now that I'm beginning to see it both ways, I think it's really made life a lot easier.
00:05
@Semiclassic: Ignoring the denominator, all the entries are sin of differences of the four angles.
And those differences can vary from $0$ to $\pi$ or something, non-inclusive.
I guess there's some relation, though, among $\beta-\gamma$, $\beta-\delta$, $\gamma-\alpha$, and $\delta-\alpha$.
Alternating sum is 0.
So three of the matrix entries determine the fourth.
This philosophy of rings first is very interesting @TedShifrin.
00:10
I can justify it in many ways, @Antonios, although I realize it's only about 25% popular among teachers.
For a student headed to math grad school, I'm fine with Artin and groups first :) And I love the linear algebra he intermingles throughout.
Well, I do agree that rings are more intuitive coming from HS math.
[commutative rings*]
But when a significant number of the students are going to teach high school and a significant number of the math majors are not super strong, rings are easier (despite the two operations) and more important [integers, mod arithmetic, polynomials, no worry about normal subgroups].
Right, although I did use matrices a bit, too. But, yes, commutative rings.
It's interesting. I feel like a good highschool algebra course can actually prep you so well for basic ring theory
My point was for the teachers to understand things like setting factors = 0 to find roots of a polynomial. And to understand where they're using integral domain, etc.
I also had fun asking them how we know 1/2 isn't an integer.
I could send you separate exams from my summer course, when 80% of my students were math ed. I biased that course a bit differently (especially cuz of the shorter time span, and generally weaker students).
A few of those students are still Facebook friends and occasionally thank me for training them :)
Sure, the more exams the merrier. I've been doing undergrad exams a lot recently for personal edification/fun.
00:15
Well, it might help you teach/TA better, although the course is out of your hands.
Good to practice doing problems that you (should) know how to do.
I'm going to try to get her to take the max of the midterm scores.
Might give you pedagogical ideas, though.
Doesn't seem right to condemn students to a max grade of ~B after one test.
None of her attitude sounded "fair."
Yeah, the students don't have a very high opinion of her, it seems.
[the ones who are with it, mind you]
00:16
Students pick up quickly on teachers who don't really give a damn about the students.
I pushed students pretty hard because they knew I cared and would help them try to succeed.
Well it seems worse than that. She's always going on about how some of the students are just "stupid" or won't stop asking "stupid questions."
As you can tell from talking with Alessandro, Kasmir, and Mathein (and others in Europe), that's not the prevalent attitude amongst profs in Europe, e.g.
She's an entitled asshole.
Contrary to semi-conventional wisdom, I do agree that not all questions are created equal, but more in the sense that some are for office hours, rather than class.
00:18
Of course.
She just seems to judge the students immediately based on questions
Maybe she should think about how that reflects on her presentation of material?
I mean, some of the students definitely have to be blamed for things, but ...
You can't just teach to the top 5% of the students.
I want to sit in on the lecture
The students will give up and quit asking, and she'll have succeeded.
But I'm not sure what that's going to tell her...
00:19
Well, you can be polite and say that you want to see what you should concentrate on in discussion section.
Might be a good move.
I'm not really brave enough to do this, but I think jokingly insulting the audience can be entertaining.
I can do that because I've established a great rapport with my classes, almost always, PVAL, but without that, it will backfire badly.
Witness our dictator in chief.
I mean he was joking. I think. I hope.
He has negative sense of humor.
00:21
what happened this time?
if you are referring to his comments on china
He thinks he should be anointed emperor. No joke.
Deprecating the audience works better when you (implicitly or explicitly) allow self-deprecation as well.
As I said, empathy and rapport.
00:22
Yep.
in good taste, i would appreciate it if the professor had pointed out that my question is idiotic
@TedShifrin
i would still expect an answer, of course.
Morning
most people don't @JoeShmo
00:23
I prefer "silly" to "idiotic"
@JoeShmo: Did you want me to say that to you when you were stuck on that pullback?
Hi @Faust
in good taste
I have excellent taste, thank you.
if he says that it's idiotic (which i probably already know) in a demeaning fashion, i wouldn't appreciate it
00:24
The thing that Hippa memed years ago from my multivariable class was totally taken humorously by my students, but I'm not sure Hippa's meme quite carried that humor :P
yeah i'd seen you let them have it in class @TedShifrin
@JoeShmo: I have been known to tell people in here — "You go figure that out." Or "you can do that yourself."
Is it true that a simple extension of $\mathbb{F}_q$ of degree $m$, where $q=p^n$, is isomorphic to $\mathbb{F}_{p^{mn}}$?
@TedShifrin if you still answered it, sure :) i dont take it personally. and again, in good taste. and most questions out there are idiotic when you're learning new material. once you get to the good ones, you want to work on them yourself..
There was a question on main, and I immediately commented "of course not." and my comment received like 3 or 4 upvotes.
00:26
Yes @user2154420. Easier to think of it as $q^m$ :)
I think a lot of people have a quite condescending attitude on MSE.
@Antonios: I get angry when people give complete solutions to homework problems, and I get angry at those people if I'm engaged in hinting with the OP. But I assume you're not talking about me.
@Antonios-AlexandrosRobotis agreed ...
I think that because I've bitched in here, people like Balarka and Akiva (and even Leaky) have improved their pedagogy and patience.
Mathein isn't always condescending, just to me.
00:28
loll
Seems most of the people in here are fairly well-behaved so to speak.
A lot of the grad students at Berkeley were very very negative towards undergrad students, as I recall.
ive developed thick skin over the years. some of my professors in college had a major pole up their behind
@TedShifrin I honestly don't know what happened. After converting all the 10s to 3s, I found that the period for the powers of 3 was 4, and then found the powers of 10 up to 10 mod 4.
I got that 10 (mod 4) =2, and everything thereafter is 0, thus I did 2+1+1...+1, and got 11 mod 7, which is 4
@Antonios: I spent a lot of time talking with and helping undergrads when I was at Berkeley.
one of my math professors congratulated me on having found "the worst possible question to ask in class". After protesting, he clarified -- "I'm not scolding you. I'm congratulating you. Congratulations, you found it" -- needless to say, that wasn't done in good taste
Cool. So say I have extensions of $\mathbb{F}$ of degree $m_1$ and degree $m_2$. Does this mean that the composite of these extensions has degree $lcm(m_1,m_2)$?
00:30
@JoeShmo I've had similar experience in my ex-university ... but my current one (Nottingham) they actually listen!!
*$\mathbb{F}_q$
There were DRP talks (directed reading program) at the end of each semester: these were programs where undergrads would pair up with grad students and read some stuff, then present on it at the end of the semester. A number of grad students would show up to the talks and absolutely roast the undergrads with questions they knew they wouldn't be able to answer.
the correct answer is 5
What a good way to feel superior.
Qiaochu asked me a fairly tough question, but they were quite reasonable with me. The other students were not so lucky.
00:31
Qiaochu knows more math than ten faculty put together.
I usually ask what I'm curious about.
It's quite disturbing.
Qiaochu is... impressive.
Is what I said hogwash?
Mariusz Wodzicki called him "a genius" which means a lot coming from his mouth.
... I should have congratulated him at the time as well, since he also found the worst possible answer to give to a student.
00:32
@DarkRunner: Why are you doing mod 4?
nvm, I got it
stupid mistake
The idea that you should only ask questions during a talk if you're convinced the speaker will be able to answer is silly.
It's a matter of tone, PVAL, and this isn't a visiting research faculty member.
Sure, but if you see a clearly nervous undergrad giving a talk, would you ask them about XYZ research topic if they're presenting a basic result like Stone-Weierstrass?
00:34
I got asked plenty of questions in geometry seminar at Berkeley that were tough ... but that was a seminar presenting (someone else's) research.
@user2154420: Too many things to think about too quickly.
So we need the smallest exponent divisible by $m_j$ for both $j$. Isn't that what you have?
@MoreAnonymous: I find your post very hard to read. Is $s$ an indeterminate? If you're thinking of $\hat K$ as a linear mapping, you'd better specify the domain and range, for starters.
I mean if you don't know the answer you say, "I don't know the answer". If this is really an issue the mentor should explain this to the student beforehand. I'd never ask a question in a situation like this where I already knew the answer though, so that means typically the questions are not going to be that easy.
I think you should treat an undergrad giving his first talk a bit differently from the way you treat a 40-year old research seminar speaker.
It shouldn't just be about you.
Don't bother going if you don't want to be constructive.
@TedShifrin I guess I ask this because of this special case:

Suppose $f$ and $g$ are two monic irreducible polynomials over $\mathbb{F}_q$ of degrees $16$ and $20$ respectively. Let $F$ be the splitting field of $fg$ over $\mathbb{F}_q$. Then I want to say that $F$ is really just the composite of $\mathbb{F}_{q^{16}}$ and $\mathbb{F}_{q^{20}}$, which I guess is $\mathbb{F}_{q^{80}}$? So this is a degree $80$ extension?
@TedShifrin thank you for looking! s is a variable. I was just reading wikipedia I should have used the word transform perhaps?
What are your proposed domain and range for $\hat K$?
00:40
If someone likes spotting mistakes, please see my question math.stackexchange.com/questions/2677073/…
I think that's right, @user2154420. You could test it out with smaller numbers, too. :)
Sweet, To sage I go
@MoreAnonymous: So you're working with polynomials in $s$ where the coefficients are matrices?
@TedShifrin Thanks!
00:42
Sure ...
But you've only defined it in a very special case, @MoreAnonymous. How is it defined for a general expression $\sum f_j(x)s^j$?
Oh, I guess it's not even polynomials. It's certain formal power series in $s$.
Hi all, could you show me how to get those upper limits of integrals that I marked with blue pen? I find all the other limits, but have problem with those marked ones.
I would have to power expand $f_j(x)$ as well
for that
and then apply the algorithm
@Leyla: What's the equation of the bounding tilted plane?
00:46
@TedShifrin I think asking questions expressing my own personal ignorance and confusions are generally better than lobbing softball questions I know the answer to which test the ability of the student to answer, especially in a situation like this when I am not supposed to be evaluating the student.
@MoreAnonymous: I don't see how you have defined $\hat K$ other than on one single expression. So I don't see how to abstract to a general situation.
@TedShifrin I didnt understand, what are you asking exactly?
@PVAL: I'm surmising your own personal ignorance won't be involved with the subject of the talk, but if it is, I don't preclude that as a reasonable question.
@Leyla: You have a 3D region there. It's bounded on the left, bottom, and back by coordinate planes. What is the top of the region?
oh I'd never ask anything not involved with the subject of the talk.
@PVAL: I'm sorry if I misunderstood. Antonios specifically mentioned something clearly out of line with the topic of the talk ...
00:48
@TedShifrin Yeah, but I dont know that. Thats why I am asking :)
It's the equation of a plane. $Ax+By+Cz=D$. How do you find the equation? Hint: You know three points on the plane.
Now I'm trying to remember some of the questions I asked.
LOL ... I won't try to do that, although I've sure asked lots more questions than you have :)
In Ph.D. orals and defenses I was notorious for asking for a specific example if the speaker hadn't given me one.
@TedShifrin $hat K$ can only be defined by take the modulus difference of the powers of x (which is the coefficient of s^r, which in turn can be expanded) ... Followed by leaving only the positive coefficients after this process
@TedShifrin if c is a k-chain, ∂c is a (k-1)-chain
00:51
@TedShifrin I dont know how to do really
Yes, @JoeShmo. Sure.
If $K_1 = \Bbb Q(\alpha_1)$ and $K_2 = \Bbb Q(\alpha_2)$, is the map $\sigma_2(\alpha_1) = \alpha_2$ necessarily $\Bbb Q$-linear, just because the powers of the $\alpha_i$ are a basis for $\Bbb Q(\alpha_i)$ as $\Bbb Q$-vector spaces, or does one have to give more information about the maps (i.e. that they are ring homomorphisms)?
@Leyla: Tell me the three points on the plane. They have to satisfy that linear equation I wrote down. Plug them in and what do you find?
i am asked to verify the Stoke's theorem works, i.e. compute both sides of the equation by hand. i have the l.h.s and am praying to G-d it's actually equal 1/4.
I remember a talk on Tychonoffs theorem where the student gave a proof of the theorem using the language of closed sets, and I asked if the proof was logically equivalent to one using open sets. The student couldn't answer that, but of course I couldn't either.
00:52
im not so sure how to proceed with the integral of alpha on the boundary
THat's a perfectly reasonable question, though, PVAL.
So you did the integral of $d\omega$ on the $k$-chain, @JoeShmo?
(Hmm ... Have you watched my Stokes's theorem vids? :P)
yes
and that's presumably = 1/4
um, yeah, i think
So what is the $k$-chain here?
im lying potentially
I did LOTS of examples ... even some in 4D.
00:53
c: (t1,t2,t3) --> (t2t3, t1t3, t1t2)
3-chain
sorry 1-chain
with domain a 3-cube or 3-simplex?
Huh? $1$-chain?
c: [0,1]^3 --> R^3, a 3-cube
@TedShifrin sorry for the sloe reply I was thinking about what you had said previously
it's a 1-chain correct?
@MoreAnonymous: I don't understand the construction well enough to even guess if it's
No, that's a $3$-chain, @JoeShmo.
00:55
well no its a 3-chain
And they gave you a $2$-form $\omega$ somewhere.
right. he defines k-chains as linear combinations of k-cubes. and since we have a 3-cube, its a 3-chain
ok
So you need to look at the 6 faces of the cube and pull back $\omega$ to each of those, integrate, and add up with correct signs.
The boundary of the cube has 6 faces.
they did... it's like you know
I took a totally wild guess!
In 4 minutes I can get a martini and make wilder guesses.
00:56
alpha = x1 dx2 /\ dx3
DO IT
dalpha = dx1 /\ dx2 /\ dx3 (you taught me that, not the other guy)
A bumblebee could have taught you that much.
hhaha...
So you need to pull back $\alpha$ by $c$ and then restrict to the 6 faces.
@TedShifrin I plugged $(2,0,0),(0,2,0),(0,0,1)$ and got $x+y+2z=2$
00:58
BTW, it's \wedge
i don't actually see latex on here. do you?
Perfect, @Leyla. Can you see how to finish now?
See the LaTeX in chat link over there >>>>>^^^^^^^ @JoeShmo
@JoeShmo I couldn't get Mathjax in chat to work in chrome
works fine in other browsers
might have been my own incompetence, though.
I'm always in Chrome in here.
lucky for me im on chrome
00:59
yes, then I can get 1-(x+y)/2 . Okay thanks!
I use Chrome on my desktop and on my iPad. Works fine.
You're welcome, @Leyla.
Probably just me, then.

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