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01:00 - 16:0016:00 - 23:00

01:08
Can ayone explain how (x + y)^p = x^p + y^p in a field of characteristic p?
All the explanations I have seen are confusing :(
use binomial expansion --- (x+y)^p = x^p + \binom{p}{1} x^{p-1}y + \binom{p}{2} x^{p-2}y^2 + ... + y^p

then prove that \binom{p}{k} are divisible by p, for k = 1,...,p-1, , so in a field of characteristic p they are all 0
Ok so it boils down to showing that (p choose k) is divisible by p
Hmmm, ok. Thanks.
for k up to p-1
Exactly correct.
@ALannister That's just wrong. :( What is correct is that $A^k = PJ^k P^{-1}$, where $A=PJP^{-1}$. And then $J^k = (\lambda I + N)^k$ becomes a finite sum because $N^s = 0$ for some $s$.
Does anyone here have math dreams?
Like when they sleep at night
I don't think I ever have, Nicholas.
01:23
Thats interesting. When I started getting more serious into math, I would start having math dreams. Some good and some bad. The good ones are me finally solving something that I was working on in real life and the bad ones are me freaking out about not being able to do a question. So weird
Or dreaming that you're sleeping through your comprehensive or oral exams. Friends of mine in grad school were tortured by that one.
Wow, that seems bad.
Btw can I ask you something? Is it any good to earn a master's degree in pure math? Not a PhD
I should've kept my mouth shut.
A masters is enough to teach at some community colleges. Certainly in the job market, a masters is better than a bachelors, but I would still encourage you to have some applied strengths — definitely computer skills.
I see you're at StonyBrook. I have some old friends there.
Yes, currently doing a masters there. Oh really? Who?
@TedShifrin i like just had a dream i overslept and missed my GRE
01:27
Blaine Lawson was one of my favorite professors at Berkeley (before he left for Stony Brook). Fabulous guy. And I know Mike Anderson and Claude LeBrun and a few others.
Sorry, Eric. I didn't mean to jinx you. :)
hopefully i dont atually oversleep tonight...
Wow! My friend currently has Lawson for complex and I will be taking his algebraic topology course in the fall! And Michael Anderson is phenomenal! I had him for Topology 1 just last fall.
Borrow 5 of Demonark's alarms.
And Claude is the head the PhD program over here. So cool that you know them
Say hi to them for me, Nicholas. Lawson is one of the top few teachers I've ever had.
01:29
Sure. I am very excited to have Lawson for Alg. Top.
He actually read my thesis and wrote letters of rec for me (39 years ago).
Do you know Alexander Kirrilov Jr? He is my Algebra 2 professor
@TedShifrin i actually have 3 alarms and i slept through all of them this morning so... does not inspire confidence
I know his name, but don't know him personally.
Thats so cool. What was your thesis on?
01:29
LOL, Eric. Should I wake up at 4 AM to call you?
nah ill just make em super loud
Chern form integrals and integral geometry for complex manifolds, Nicholas.
my roommate has work at 6am so i told him to wake me up if i dont wake up by that point
Oh, OK, Eric. Just for you, I would get up at 3 or 4 AM to call, if you needed me.
Sounds awesome lol
01:31
Excuse me. @TedShifrin And @EricSilva : Can u solve my Problem ?
Um, what problem is that?
ty but there will be 0 need
See my Question
Related to polynomials Tag
That's absurd, @Doraemon. Give us a link.
And generally you'll get more attention on main than you will from 1 or 2 people here.
01:33
main is blocked for me so im no help
Any reason to imagine it has a particularly sensible answer? For $a=2,3$ the answers look fairly random (though of course that might not mean much). — lulu yesterday
LOL, Eric. You'll never release yourself from purgatory.
ill release myself tomorrow after the hell-test is finally over
@Doraemon: When you have something like $\sqrt a + \sqrt b = c$, the trick is always to move one of the square roots to the other side and then square. You'll have to play that game twice.
I had done that
01:35
I see no evidence that you did that.
But there is no use after that as there will be root terms
Can u please solve that ?@TedShifrin
How can I get more help from main and what is main ? As I already posted the question.!
It seems like an unbelievable mess. What makes you think there should be an elegant solution?
I don't see any reasonable route now that I work on it.
See graph of that expression and you will find that x is order of √a like term and this question is asked in some community and though being solvable.
BTW, when you ask questions, please don't say "this is urgent." People will immediately ignore you when you do that.
I don't see a solution.
At best you're going to end up with a 4th degree equation, and in general those can be solved by radicals, but they will involve complex numbers.
Ok then do that way !
01:47
I'm not interested in working on it any more.
Why is it urgent? Is it homework? Take-home exam?
Just to get solved it early
By the way, $a\in\Bbb R$ is surely wrong. You need $a\ge 0$ for starters.
@TedShifrin excellent idea!
And then you need $a\ge \sqrt{a\pm x}$.
01:49
$a\ge0$ means ?
I have those once in a while, Demonark.
@Daminark hand em over
\ge means greater than or equal to
Ok Then
@EricSilva: Probably he needs to throw them (a distance) rather than handing them.
01:51
Well, the issue is that my phone is my alarm
@Doraemo: In fact, you need $a$ at least $1$ or negative for there to be any possible $x$.
I thought you had 6 of them, Demonark.
@TedShifrin but from here how can get solution as this is inequality ?
I have no idea how to solve it. I'm just telling you that for certain $a$ there will clearly be no solution.
I'm too old to find these sorts of questions interesting. Sorry.
I'm gone for now.
a > = 1.3 approx there will be solution
@EricSilva: Boa sorte !!!
01:54
Well, when I talked about setting 6 alarms, I meant that I'd set like, an alarm every 10-15 minutes
ohhh, Demonark. You need 6 simultaneously :P
That's probably true, I am way too heavy of a sleeper
It's all about series versus parallel (circuits).
One time in high school I slept through a fire
Oh, lovely.
01:57
valeu @Ted!
@Daminark did u do this when you missed complex
Yup
I had 6 alarms in succession but I ended up waking at 12:45
(I meant to wake up 9:30-10)
wow what a catastrophe
this complex class is so weird dude
it's just a cornucopia of weird conformal map factoids
What's the common practice around these parts on handling problems whose solution is "OP didn't feel like doing work"? I'm looking at that one Doraemon dropped in here and told Eric and Ted they needed help urgently:
1
Q: Solving $\sqrt{a +\sqrt{a-x}}+\sqrt{a-\sqrt{a+x}}=2x, \ a\in\Bbb{R}$

Doraemon Given $$\sqrt{a +\sqrt{a-x}}+\sqrt{a-\sqrt{a+x}}=2x$$ and $a\in\Bbb{R}$, express $x$ in terms of $a$. I rationalised the above expression and then again rationalised which gave me : $$\sqrt{a+\sqrt{a-x}}-\sqrt{a-\sqrt{a+x}}=2x+\frac{1}{\sqrt{a+x}-\sqrt{a-x}}$$ Now, what should I do? I...

Lol true, but it's quite a lot of fun I must say
There's a lot of rather straightforward work they show no work of having done.
02:13
@Daminark i think it's great
02:33
I love conformal maps
Can someone help me on a function/symbol that i do not know about
?
What does ω(P, C_1) mean?
Nvr mind I know it already
02:51
@Mike what we did today was quite nice actually. So, we've been considering conformal maps where we renormalize the derivative and fix $0$, so we have $f(z) = z + a_2z^2 + \ldots$
(From the unit ball)
And it turns you can guarantee that $|a_2| \le 2$, and that the image of $f$ contains $B(0,\frac{1}{4})$. We're later gonna show that if $f$ is such that $f(z) \in \mathbb{R} \iff z\in \mathbb{R}$, that you have a general bound $|a_n| \le n$.
03:07
@Daminark the general thing was proved in like the 80s, did she say she was actually gonna do it, i dont remember
Oh that’s quite neat
oh i see under a simpler condition
Yeah she's proving it with the realness assumption
And yeah I think that's gonna be the end of the conformal maps part of the class, next up is gonna be entire functions
03:23
i wish she had a syllabus
I mean on the first day she said she wasn't even sure what she'd do at the end. Applications of complex analysis to something TBD
Though who knows, maybe she has a clearer picture now of what she'd like to do
03:56
Hi @LeakyNun
$k\left(1- \dfrac{x}{\sqrt{x^2+r^2}} \right)$
k, r are constants
@LeakyNun Its impossible to graph this?
@Abcd desmos.com
Because at $x=\infty$ we get undefined form.
nobody told you to plot x=infty
03:59
@LeakyNun My physics teacher said "you all will not be able to graph this"...
SO I wanted to discuss about this
@LeakyNun at $x \to \infty$?
1 min ago, by Leaky Nun
@Abcd desmos.com
@LeakyNun I have already done that!
then you have plotted it and contradicted your physics teacher
I want to know how to plot it myself at $x \to \infty$
well evaluate the limit
04:00
A general physics graph is what I want to plot
well evaluate the limit
@LeakyNun L Hospital right?
you don't need that
divide num and denom by x
Limits is $\Huge{\text{next}}$ chapter in maths
@LeakyNun What do you mean?
?
nothing
04:05
@LeakyNun then?
it becomes 0 using L Hospital?
whatever
Why are you so angry?
i am not
limit is 1 anyway according to WA
but it contradicts the graph: desmos.com/calculator/alywljlqg4
of what?
you forgot the square root in the graph
04:14
Okay, done. Both results match.
04:52
@LeakyNun, will you please have a look at this?
no idea
Is anyone familiar with a reference that solves an IVP with an implicit Runge-Kutta ( of order at least 3 ) that includes all the steps? e.g. solving the implicit system of equations etc.
 
2 hours later…
06:33
Echo
06:43
Does anybody know about a result like "If $X$ can be described by sequences then it is metrizable"? By "described by sequences" I mean that the topology of $X$ is given by a sequence convergence notion.
See my last comment in the accepted answer to this question math.stackexchange.com/questions/2493715/…
The problem is: if the sequence convergence notion does not have the limit uniqueness property, then $X$ cannot be metrizable, since metrizable implies Hausdorff which implies limit uniqueness property.
 
2 hours later…
09:01
Hi, if a polynomial $p(t) = q(t)s(t)$ and $p$ splits in linear factors, do we know then that $q$ and $s$ split too?
Yes
Can you tell me why?
Write s and q as a product of irreducibles
Yes, and then?
write $s = \prod s_i$, $q = \prod q_i$, $p = \prod p_i$
Then $\prod p_i = \prod s_i \prod q_i$
All polynomials written are irreducible, then each $s_i$ is one of the $p_i$, and the same goes for the $q_i$s
09:09
I understand. Thanks!
It's polynomial arithmetics
Yeah it's not hard but we only skimmed it in class back then
Need to do some resfreshing
A more rigorous way of saying this is : Let $a$ be an irreducible factor of $s$, then $a|s|p$ so $a$ is an irreducible factor of $p$, and is therefor of degree 1
yeah that's concise
Hi: Does the sum of 1/2+1/4+1/8 + .... for infinite is the same as for finite case?
It is known that 1/2+1/4+1/8+...=1 (called geometric series), now suppose we have finite case, then does this equality holds?
09:26
Are you asking whether there exists some $n$ for which $\frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{4} + \cdots + \frac{1}{2^n} = 1$ ?
10:03
@DawoodibnKareem yes!
Well, the left hand side can be written as $1-\frac{1}{2^n}$
And since there's no $n$ for which $\frac{1}{2^n}=0$, I think the answer to your question is no.
@DawoodibnKareem Wow, so from infinity to finite, the answer completely different!! I thought it would equal some numbers between 1 and 0.
Well, not completely different. As you add more and more terms, the $\frac{1}{2^n}$ part gets smaller and smaller. The infinite case is where it vanishes to zero.
10:33
@BalarkaSen you around?
You'll have noticed that the PSE room owners/mods span a range of opinions.
Actually that's good because we end up with a mean that is mostly acceptable to most people.
I'm at the laissez faire end, which isn't always good because I've occasionally let things go too far and they get nasty.
When views at the other end of the spectrum are expressed I'd respect them and just move on.
I mean it's ok, it's just that almost 90% of the time it's not clear to me what the specific rule sets of the hbar are.
But isn't that always the case when you find yourself in any group of people? You have to kind of feel your way around.
Is anyone familiar with implicit Gauss methods for IVP's of relatively high order?
10:40
I feel like I've stepped into a parallel universe.
@JohnRennie Well, there's obviously a difference because in an arbitrary group of people there isn't a stratum of people trying to manage the conversations in a specific way. It's a management issue, isn't it? The rules beyond which the moderators think certain messages are not appropriate is unclear, not the differing opinions of the users.
I mean I am part of no crusade to point out the inevitable inner contradictions in the moderation. It's just that it's never clear to me how broad they are.
sorry about that pal
he pounces unexpectedly sometimes :P
The mods have a difficult balancing act to do. They have to consider the views of all the chatroom users, not just the noisy ones, and also the views of the SE management.
lol @Dawood I mean, I myself didn't think it was inappropriate, otherwise I wouldn't have said that. I have no problem with complying with the moderation rules, but adding one at a time just seems like an unplanned management issue
@DawoodibnKareem Thank you Dawood!
10:48
In this case I think the biggest irony is that the inside joke of hbar being ACM is a bot :p
@Dawood LOL
rip
@BalarkaSen I'm not sure I can claim to be consistent in my moderation of the room (though I'm consistently at the lax end :-)
@JohnRennie I am not even asking for consistency, which is probably unreasonable to some extent. It's simply uber-confusing to me given that I as a user should try to abide by the room ethics when the room ethics itself changes within such a short period of time
Trying to set hard and fast rules is impossible so the mods also have to feel their way to some extent. When eyebrows have been raised by the SE staff you'll find they are a bit more cautious.
Balarka, don't over-react. Think of it as a one-off ripple in space-time.
10:52
Yes, that would be my take. The weather changes all the time.
You're no worse off for having been told off by a grumpy moderator, right? I mean, you're not banned for 10 years or anything.
Lol
I'm not mad just vocalizing my confusion
And you weren't told off. David didn't criticise you personally he just said he didn't think the comment was appropriate.
OK. Humans are inconsistent. That's life. Get over it.
Life's like that ... then you die :-)
10:54
@JohnRennie Yeah, he was told off.
@BalarkaSen people are surely consonating
i'll show myself out
Anyway, I'm off to look at dmckee's question again and scratch my head some more ...
@LeakyNun yeah get outta here
go back to your algebraic hell
read the bible of Atiyah-MacDonald
Who the heck is Atiyah MacDonald and why does he/she need a bible?
11:01
*they
It's a very slim and terse commutative algebra textbook that every algebraist thinks of as their bible
I might ask how it compares with the real one, but I fear I might get censured.
lol
Maybe I should just say "religious textbook" than the bible in particular
I might say it has less violence and causes less deaths, but I fear I might get censored
I'd be worried if I found a commutative algebra textbook with as much bloodshed in it as the Bible.
Although it might make commutative algebra a more interesting field (no pun intended).
11:05
Eisenbud
certainly no talking snakes in atiyah-macdonald can be found
many a-people have died reading that text
@LeakyNun What, not even adders?
@DawoodibnKareem lol
The snake lemma is a tool used in mathematics, particularly homological algebra, to construct long exact sequences. The snake lemma is valid in every abelian category and is a crucial tool in homological algebra and its applications, for instance in algebraic topology. Homomorphisms constructed with its help are generally called connecting homomorphisms. == Statement == In an abelian category (such as the category of abelian groups or the category of vector spaces over a given field), consider a commutative diagram: where the rows are exact sequences and 0 is the zero object. Then there is an...
obligatory
11:07
you win
guys, how do we know that $s<1-1/2+1/3$?
@ShaVuklia the sum of the next two terms is negative
onwards
You can rewrite it as 5/6 - 1/20 - 1/42 - 1/72 - ...
Basically a whole lot of minus terms after the original 5/6.
@LeakyNun yea I saw that 'intuitively', but I didn't know I could use that?
@ShaVuklia sure you can
lemma: if $a_n \ge 0$, then $\sum a_n \ge 0$, provided that the latter converges
proof: exercise
corollary: $s < \frac56$
done
11:19
but we don't have $a_n\geq 0$? it's alternating
Usually, when you have to prove $ a \neq b$, there are loads of ways of doing it. You don't have to "spot" the same method that the book uses.
@ShaVuklia how about this
yea but I would like to follow their argument
let $S_n$ be the partial sums
then $S_3 = \frac56$
and by induction, $S_{2n+1} < S_3$
for sufficiently large $n$
Following an argument isn't the same as being able to dream it up yourself.
11:20
that's not my goal..
and subsequences converge to the same thing
so $S_{2n+1}$ goes to $s$ just fine
so $s \le S_3$
@BalarkaSen the second biggest irony is him wearing a christmas hat in the middle of April and preaching about "appropriateness." :P
right right
now use the same thing to show that $s \le S_5$ instead, and then it follows that $s<S_3$, since $S_5 < S_3$
so are you convinced lol
haha, I am rereading
right, yea I have to really refresh my 1D real analysis course
actually, that is what I'm doing right now:p
thanks, I could follow the argument
11:23
me too
you mean refreshing?
what book do you use?
I use Rudin now
but I learned real analysis from another book
just going through the lecture notes lol
fair enough
11:25
@DawoodibnKareem true, but some people like to get inside of the author's head...
well i learnt the stuff online before i even went into my uni
Yes, but often authors of a mathematics book will go to great lengths to hide their thought processes. Like, here's the theorem and here's the proof, but how I thought of it is a secret!
that's bs
11:28
yup, "I have a secret and it is your job to try and find out what it is" :(
profs do it in lectures too
lol if anything, mathematics books are the most transparent ones out there
@skullpatrol Bwahahah
That was funny
:-D
that's why I ::ran for cover:: so fast
the "appropriateness" argument is a recurring theme with him
(just my 2 cents worth of observation :)
well, given there's a crowd which systematically trolls on the boundary of inappropriateness in the room, it's natural
@BalarkaSen closure of inappropriateness sans the interior thereof?
11:39
Accurate
the space of inappropriateness is just a manifold away from a discrete set of singularly inappropriate events anyway
i'm still trying to find out what happened to Duffield?
specifically, who dropped the axe
a one year chat ban seems excessive, imo
just out of curiosity; if you're banned (from the chat), can't you just set up a new account (temporarily) to join the chat? of will that one be banned automatically too?
if the mods notice that it has the same IP you get super-banned for evading an existing ban
they can IP ban you altogather
11:54
makes sense
gotta learn hacking then
:p
I actually never really understood how IP addresses work, and I want to have an interview with Zucc the man for him to explain it to me
that's my future
this vid wasn't even that funny (well it was)
but the COMMENTS were so good
the Zucc was 10/10 on the congress
I have a meme-crush on Zuckerberg
@BalarkaSen defo
@ShaVuklia we all do, Sha, we all do
ugh I broke my headphones again
Hey I fixed it.
Haxxx0rman
12:37
he looks like a robot
13:20
@Leaky have some time?
@ShaVuklia ?
I have this question;
Let $A\subset R^n$ be a rectifiable set. I want to show that $v(A^0)=v(A)$, where $v$ stands for volume, and $A^0$ stands for the interior of $A$. I can show that $v(A^0)\leq v(A)$, because $A^0$ and $A$ have the same boundary, hence $A^0$ is also rectifiable, and for any rectangle $Q\supset A$ we have
$$
\int_{A^0}1=\int_Q1_{A^0}\leq\int_Q1_{A}=\int_A1.
$$
Now I want to show that $v(A^0)\geq v(A)$. Since the boundary has measure 0, we know that for each $\epsilon>0$, we can always find a covering of the boundary with rectangles $Q_i$, such that $\sum_iv(Q_i)<\epsilon$. So I was thinking of
no idea
@BalarkaSen
so I had this kind of idea in mind $v(A^0)\geq v(A)-v(A\cap(\bigcup_iQ_i))$, but I would have to think of a proper argument
If i take $O=\cup_{r\in L}\Omega_r=\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2, x^2+y^2=r^2\}$ and $S=\cup_{s\in S}\Omega_s=\{(x,y)\in\mathbb{R}^2, x^2+y^2=s^2\}$ what is $O\cap S$ please
13:29
yea I think that will work
someone have an idea ?
14:07
guys, can we say that manifolds have a tangent plane at each point?
Smooth manifolds do indeed
oh, I thought that the condition about the rank for the coordinate patch somehow ensured the existence of a tangent plane
You are correct, it does. The image of the derivative of the inverse of the coordinate patch diffeomorphism is the tangent space.
it shouldn't be the inverse right? because the coordinate patch maps onto $V\subset$manifold
Oh, your coordinate patches maps to the manifold? Then yeah. I thought we called those parametrizations, not coordinates.
I can never keep track of the terminologies anyway
:)
But same difference, yep
14:13
ah okay, but if I am correct, then why didn't my initial question yield a 'yes'?
I said they "do indeed"!!!
That's a yes!!!!! I can't speak Russian m8
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I thought you meant smooth manifolds do, but 'general' manifolds don't
maybe that's a terminology issue again
@BalarkaSen * laughs in Russian *\
@ShaVuklia What's your definition of a manifold? Subset of a Euclidean space which admits coordinate patches?
I think yes
14:15
Yup, that's what we call a smooth manifold.
There are more general notions of manifolds :)
oh, right, so we had confusion over terminology twice:p
alright, well I am glad all is settled
:thumbs: :upside-down ok-hand:
Anyone who can help? Suppose that for each $f \in L^p (\mathbb{R})$, the improper integral $$\int_{\mathbb{R}} f(x) \varphi(x) dx$$ converges. Show that $\varphi \in L^q (\mathbb{R})$.
I was about to use the Hölder inequality and "split up" the integral, then claim that since the integral converges, the "factors" converge, and so on
But then, I realize that it's possible for $$\bigg\{\int_{\mathbb{R}} \left| f(x) \right| ^p dx\bigg\}^{1/p} \bigg\{\int_{\mathbb{R}} \left| \varphi(x) \right| ^q dx\bigg\}^{1/q}$$

to converge even if one of the two factors doesn't.
14:36
@Balarka hm, one question tho; a circle $M$ is a 1-manifold without boundary in $R^2$, but my book also says that $M$ must be a subspace of $R^2$, however, how is a circle a subspace?
Topological subspace, not vector subspace :)
Just consider the unit circle in $\Bbb R^2$ with the subspace topology
ooh right, thanks
15:06
@BalarkaSen Can you help? Thanks in advance!
A is a subspace of B iff there is a monomorphism A->B :)
change my mind
@Abcd what brings you here
@LeakyNun I got the answer on physics chat. $\ln(r/0) \to \infty$ brought me here.
2
Q: Why is the force on the charge at the tip of a cone infinite?

NavyColors_BlueImagine a charge $q$ that is located at the top of a hollow cone with a surface charge density $\sigma.$ The slant height is $L$ and the charge $q$ sits at the vertex of angle $2\theta$. We are interested in the force acting on the charge $q$. Assume that there are shells inside this hollow co...

@LeakyNun?
@HarryEvans?
Can you help? Thanks
15:29
hello everyone
15:49
Let $V$ and $W$ be finite-dimensional vector spaces over a common ground field $F$. Let $T:V \to W$ be linear.
Let $T^\ast:W \to V$ be the transpose of $T$, i.e. the unique linear map $W \to V$ such that $\langle T(v),w \rangle_W = \langle v,T^\ast(w) \rangle_V$ for every $v \in V$ and $w \in W$
Claim: $\ker T \oplus_{\mathrm{int}} \operatorname{im} T^* = V$
Suppose you have an odd number of white balls and the same number of black. How many partitions have an odd number of white balls and an odd number of black balls in each subset?
Let $v \in V$
01:00 - 16:0016:00 - 23:00

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