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21:00
but yeah complex analysis is great
we're doing modular forms and it's not clear from the definition why they are so number-theoreticy
@LeakyNun around the same time - but i might work on my own stuff more
Hot take: complex analysis only feels cool because you're limiting yourself to such a small amd rigid class of functions
runs away
Ok I'm scared to ask this on main because it's probably incredibly stupid, but I'm currently modeling a problem where a guy is at height $h$ and has to get over a wall of height $1$, is there any way to create a function saying how far he has to go to get over the wall without using a piecewise function? Because if he's above $1$ the function should return $0$, otherwise just $1-h$.
@TreFox, piecewise it is, unless you use $\max(1-h,0)$.
21:13
Dang it. Guess I'll have to, thanks.
hi @Mathein
Morning
@Ted Here's a proof you'd probably like that a 2x2 matrix over $\Bbb R$ that satisfies $A^2=I$ and $A \neq \pm I$ is similar to $\begin{pmatrix}-1&0\\ 0&1\end{pmatrix}$ that avoids minimal polynomials (since they are less known then they should be imo): chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/44897351#44897351
I have exercises like (and more general than) that in my linear algebra text.
21:18
I see
I mean the general statement is that the image of any finite-dimensional complex represenation of a compact group is conjugate to a subgroup of $U(n)$
Your proof is unusual. You do need to check that you have an inner product. That isn't obvious to me.
I mean, why is it positive definite?
$\langle v,v\rangle + \langle Av,Av\rangle >0$
Hi @TedShifrin, I've just finished a proof that if $f_n \to f$ pointwise, and $f_n$ are $L^p$ bounded then $f_n \to f$ weakly for $p \in (1,\infty)$. But in my proof I didn't seem to use that $p \neq 1$ nor that $p \neq \infty$ even though the question gave $p \in (1, \infty)$. Do you know if the statement still holds for $p = 1$ or $\infty$, or should I pick through my proof once more?
Ah, right. My usual approach for problems like this is to show that the eigenspaces span and so it's diagonalizable, etc.
@B.Mehta: I know less of this sort of stuff (at this point in my life) than many people who are here, e.g., @Mathein, @Alessandro, @EricSilva, @Daminark.
@B.Mehta I think it holds for $p=1$ but not for $p=\infty$
21:23
let me see if i have this in my notes
since you know that the dual space of $L^1$ is $L^\infty$ so applying a functional is just multiplying by some $L^\infty$ function and then integrating, so you can do the Hölder + dominated convergence argument I assume you did
but the dual space of $L^\infty$ is just a mess
well you have to be careful because
@MatheinBoulomenos Ah yeah, I did use the dual space: that explains the $p < \infty$
$L^1 \subsetneq (L^\infty)^*$
so that's why, they're not duals
I don't see why it shouldn't work for $p=1$
21:26
take a picture and upload it to imgur?
if you dont have the proof typed out
If it helps, one of the steps was to show that for $f_n \in L^p(\mathbb{R})$ for $p > 1$ and $f_n$ are $L^p$ bounded then $f \in L^p(\mathbb{R})$
That seems to be the only place where the question enforced $p > 1$
@GFauxPas I would but it's not exactly legible
are you challenging me to a context of who has worse handwriting
be careful whom you pick a fight with
I did that part using Fatou, but I don't see why it requires $p \neq 1$
@GFauxPas Not a challenge, just sparing you from picking through my nonsense
@MatheinBoulomenos are you interested in algebraic groups, especially tori?
おはいお ^^
21:29
I'm interested in algebraic groups
@GFauxPas: conteSt
heya @Faust
surprised chat supports japanese
Doing lots of topology :p
@GFauxPas I will win that easily
well and japanese
Is your health improving, @Faust?
21:30
@MatheinBoulomenos should I tell you what a torus is?
I know what a torus is
it's a mug
so $GL_1$ is a functor $k\text{-Alg} \to \text{Ab}$ for a fixed field $k$
the easiest way to see this is via this computation
@TedShifrin small bit
i can mange 8-10hrs a day
21:32
$GL_1(A) = A^\times = \operatorname{Hom}(k[X,X^{-1}],A) = \operatorname{Hom}(\operatorname{Spec}(A), \operatorname{Spec}(k[X,X^{-1}]))$
well, don't overdo anything, @Faust
which is alot better than it has been
contravariant, contravariant, so covariant
@B.Mehta so yeah if you take the pointwise lim sup of the $|f_n|$, then you can argue either by Beppo-Levi or by Fatou that this is $L^1$ and this wil give you some dominating integrable function. Then you can apply dominated convergence. That you multiply by some $L^\infty$ function doesn't matter a bit
and you get representation for free
So now $GL_1$ is canonically identified with $\operatorname{Spec}(k[X,X^{-1}])$ as an affine $k$-scheme
21:33
got a problems textbook for topology it doesnt prove much is basically just 1600 exercises of proving relevant ideas and exercises with solutions to around half in the back of the book
For a field $k$, a $k$-scheme $A$ is a split torus if it is isomorphic to the scheme $GL_1^n$ for some $n$
if the field is ambiguous, we write $GL_{1,k}$ instead of $GL_1$
sounds like Schaum's Outline, @Faust.
Then, for a field $k$, a $k$-scheme $A$ is a torus if there is a finite (Galois?) extension $L/k$ such that $A \times_k \operatorname{Spec}(L)$ is a split torus over $L$
i.e. $A \times_k \operatorname{Spec}(L) \cong_L GL_{1,L}^n$ for some $n$
Hello again nerds
hi @Daminark
I should have written $T$ instead of $A$
21:36
@LeakyNun I think that's equivalent to being "geometrically split", so that if you take $L$ a separable closure of $k$ then ...
indeed
what I don't understand is why we say separable closure instead of algebraic closure
are they equivalent?
inseparable stuff is evil
what will happen?
work in char 0 and you won't need to worry
21:38
it can happen that your schemes are no longer reduced if you base change along inseparable extensions
@TedShifrin sadly not all local fields have char 0
even if they were originally reduced
oh
aha
all local fields are perfect ain't they
@LeakyNun the horror
we don't need to care about separbility
21:39
@LeakyNun no
$k((T))$ isn't perfect
RIP
but $k$ is perfect :c
if you adjoin $\sqrt[p]{T}$ where $p=\operatorname{char}(k)$
then rip
@B.Mehta it has something to do with $(L^1)^{**} \ne L^1$, im trying to find a page that explains why precisely
21:40
@MatheinBoulomenos can the separable closure of $k((T))$ be constructed explicitly?
@GFauxPas but why do you need the double dual in the argument?
@LeakyNun yes
@GFauxPas Surely the Fatou part still works?
@MatheinBoulomenos how?
What's the question here?
who are you asking?
21:42
GFauxPas and B. Mehta
@LeakyNun ah no wait I'm not sure
I probably wouldn't be able to participate in the algebra conversation just yet :P
I know how it works for $\Bbb C_p$
Now just wondering why $p > 1$ was necessary
Demonark: You were on my list of people who should consider that question.
21:44
Hmm, so right off the bat, I can say that in $\ell^1$, weak and strong covergence are the same
@LeakyNun you take Hahn-Witt series over the algebraic closure of $k$ and then a subfield of that
So that's already a bit suspect
In $\ell^1$ or in $L^1$?
The former, this isn't a proof so much as, that already feels stronger than what is true
@MatheinBoulomenos interesting
@MatheinBoulomenos i.e. separable closure of $\Bbb Q_p$?
21:45
ah lol no
Hahn-Witt series are for $\Bbb C_p$
Hahn-series are for $k((T))$
@LeakyNun it's a completion of the algebraic closure
In mathematics, Hahn series (sometimes also known as Hahn–Mal'cev–Neumann series) are a type of formal infinite series. They are a generalization of Puiseux series (themselves a generalization of formal power series) and were first introduced by Hans Hahn in 1907 (and then further generalized by Anatoly Maltsev and Bernhard Neumann to a non-commutative setting). They allow for arbitrary exponents of the indeterminate so long as the set supporting them forms a well-ordered subset of the value group (typically Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q...
how do you find $\Gamma$?
@AlessandroCodenotti buongiorno
oh, is demonic Alessandro here?
Buonasera, it's almost midnight!
Hi @Ted
21:47
buonasera
@LeakyNun you take $\Gamma = \Bbb Q$
@Daminark @GFauxPas @MatheinBoulomenos The full question is here if you're interested
how do you find the algebraic closure of $k((T))$ in the massive field $\overline k[[T^\Bbb Q]]$?
or more directly, the separable closure?
Is that even a field?
a) and b) are just walking through a proof of Egorov, which didn't seem to be used for c) and d) - I'm ultimately wondering why $p > 1$ was assumed
Buona quasi-mezzanotte! @AlessandroCodenotti
@LeakyNun you take the elements which are algebraic :P
@LeakyNun idk honestly
21:50
@LeakyNun you write a bar over it
fair enough
but note the remark "in fact, it is possible to give a somewhat analogous description of the algebraic closure of $K((T))$ in positive characteristic as a subset of $K\left[\left[T^{\Gamma }\right]\right]$" with a reference in the wiki article
@MatheinBoulomenos and for $\Bbb C_p$, what is $\Gamma$?
it's still $\Bbb Q$
21:54
for $K$ algebraically closed of characteristic $0$, the algebraic closure of $K((T))$ inside $K\left[\left[T^{\Gamma }\right]\right]$ is given by Puiseux series, i.e. $\bigcup_{n \geq 1} K((T^{1/n}))$
that quote is saying that there is something analogous to that for finite characteristic
If I want to solve $V \otimes_k L = U$ for $V$, where $L/k$ is a Galois extension, do I do something called Galois descent?
Are you familiar with Galois descent?
If you want to have the completion of the algebraic closure, you just take the topological closure of the algebraic closure inside $K\left[\left[T^{\Gamma }\right]\right]$
I know roughly what it is about, but I don't know details
RIP Galois descent
@MatheinBoulomenos can you tell me what you know about it?
21:57
@TedShifrin not sure what that is its a russian book but its pretty good theres some really hard questions in it
ah, ok
@LeakyNun there's some description in terms of non-abelian Galois cohomology, but let's not do that
@LeakyNun honestly, most of what I know is from this quite elementary exposition which I read some while ago. I couldn't explain it better from my memory than in that pdf istself
what a coincidence
I'm reading that exact paper
@B.Mehta so one thing that I could see as breaking it has to do with the fact that the unit ball is weakly compact in $L^p$ only for $1<p<\infty$
Like, I don't quite see how this would violate compactness
22:01
Or at least not immediately
but thanks
But that feels like the candidate for what breaks
if you have questions I can try to help, but I wouldn't want to explain it from the ground up
@MatheinBoulomenos understood
verstanden
but is it what I'm looking for?
6 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
If I want to solve $V \otimes_k L = U$ for $V$, where $L/k$ is a Galois extension, do I do something called Galois descent?
I don't want to spend my time on irrelvant stuff, I don't have much time
@Daminark That's reasonable - I don't think any arguments looked at a subsequence though
22:03
what kind of objects are $L$ and $U$?
$L/k$ field extension
$V$ is $k$-algebra
oh I meant $V$ and $U$
(so $U$ is $L$-algebra)
okay, so yeah that exposition is just for vector spaces
it's actually the coordinate ring of an $k$-algebraic $k$-affine $k$-group $k$-scheme
@MatheinBoulomenos but an algebra is a vector space
22:04
the thing with Galois descent for $k$-algebras is that it's just a special case of faithfully flat descent (which is a special case of mondacity theorems in category theory, but nevermind), so modern books don't tend to treat it separately
Yeah and I don't think it's true that a bounded sequence in L^1 has a point wise covergent subsequence
I haven't learned faithfuly flat descent yet
@MatheinBoulomenos so that pdf wouldn't help me?
@TedShifrin knows it, but it's probably too algebraic that he wants to talk about it :P
@LeakyNun only for motivation, I guess
@TedShifrin bitteschoen
@MatheinBoulomenos so do you have any reference?
22:08
@LeakyNun the one that I want to learn it from eventually is Görtz-Wedhorn "Algebraic Geometry I"
@LeakyNun maybe you could ask Tobias when he's around if the setting of (affine) algebraic groups simplifies Galois descent, that could be possible
thanks
god knows what I'm going to write in the "reference"
> many gods in math chat and in real life
@LeakyNun no offence, but why are you learning so much heavy algebraic geometry all of the sudden? This takes years to learn for most, I'm not sure if you can just read it up to understand a paper
it's for a project
"project"
I'm grateful that many people are willing to help me
@MatheinBoulomenos AG is just the first half of the correspondence though
the other half is the Weil group which comes from, you know, local class field theory
22:15
yeah
this is crazy
@MatheinBoulomenos let's give you the whole setting
I proved that the Weil group is isomorphic to the multiplicative group of a local field this tuesday
(building upon previous talks, of course)
but yeah, give me the setting, this sounds interesting
let $F$ be a field, and $K/F$ a finite Galois extension. Let $T$ be an $F$-torus (I just made this term up) that splits over $K$. Then, let $L = X^\ast(T_K) = \operatorname{Hom}(T_K, GL_{1,K})$ be the character group of $T_K$. Let $\Gamma = \operatorname{Gal}(K/F)$. Then, $\Gamma$ acts on $L$ on the right by the dictionary $l.\sigma : T_K(K) \to GL_{1,k}(K) : t \mapsto \sigma^{-1}(l(\sigma(t)))$. Then, the paper claims that it is well known that $L$ with the right-action of $\Gamma$
can uniquely determine $T$
And he goes on to say that this defines an anti-equivalence of categories between:
1. $F$-torus that splits over $K$
2. finitely-generated free abelian groups with a right $\Gamma$-action
@LeakyNun this won't help you much with your concrete situtation, but I can give you some general intuition what descent is about (from a categoric perspective) if you want
22:23
just ok leaky ?
thanks
show some appriciation -.-
:D :D :D
Hi yall :)
Morning @KasmirKhaan you doing well?
Hi @KasmirKhaan
@LeakyNun you know adjunctions, right?
22:23
@Faust hi thanks faust am ok and you ?
@MatheinBoulomenos hello :D
do you know the formulation with unit and counit?
I've heard of it
@KasmirKhaan sad missed the last page of my last japanese test cause it said it was two pages but there was a third so got zero on all the questions on it.
22:24
@Faust wait what ? you study japenese and math ? :D
Hom(L(R(-)),-) is naturally isomorphic to id, or something like that
@Faust and sorry to hear that
はいそおですか
@Faust masaka ? :O
@LeakyNun not necessarily
22:25
lol i said yes, that is correct
its good way to get extra units as the all count as two classes
Hmm ._. i only do math atm
and work extra
and im exceptional at rote memorization
Suppose $F$ is left adjoint to $G$
22:27
my poster can rip in peace
so i cna learn vocab words alot faster than most people ^^
okay faust let us let mathein and leaky talk and try to lean something :D
I'll spend the entire thing just defining what a torus is
lol, i have a meet now anyway have a good night everyone.
farewell
22:28
Then we can look basically at $Hom(FG-,-)$ and $Hom(-,GF-)$ to get some natural transformations $\varepsilon: FG \to id$ and $\eta: id \to GF$
you do the usual "Yoneda" trick, evaluate some map on hom sets at the identity
The naturality of the Hom-set bijections implies some equations for $\varepsilon$ and $\eta$, but let's not go too deep into details here
So now let's talk about something really cool in category theory: monads
Suppose you have a category with $C$, then a monad is a endofunctor $T$ of $C$ together with a natural transformation $\mu:T \circ T \to T$ "multiplication", and a natural transformation $1: \operatorname{id}_C \to T$ "unit", such that you have associativity and that $1$ is actually a unit basically
So basically like a monoid, but we have a endofunctor and our "multiplication" and "unit" maps are natural transformation
for the record I know what a group object is
(in case that will be helpful)
do you know what a monoidal object is?
yes
(just group sans inverse axiom)
22:35
not quite actually
is a monad a monoidal object in the 2-category?
a monad is a monoidal object in the category of endofunctors
where the monoidal structure (that takes place of the product in the definition of a group object) is given by composition
so a monoidal object is an object $M \in C$ with morphisms $m : M \times M \to M$ and $e : 1 \to M$, right
no
$m: M \otimes M \to M$
22:36
where $\otimes$ is like an additional datum that your category has
but in our case $\otimes$ is just composition of endofunctors
so let's look at a simple example: Take $C$ the category of sets
then we define $T(C)$ to be the set of all finite strings written in $C$ considered as an alphabet (including the empty string)
or "words" if you prefer that over strings
So let's define the unit first
it's obvious what $T$ does on morphisms I guess
free monoid generated by C?
we'll get to that later yeah
but right now, it's just a set
the unit is a natural transformation from the identity functor to $T$. So for any set $X$, we define a map $X \to T(X)$ which sends $x$ to the word $'x'$
now the multiplication
remember, we have composition of functors and not products
so this is not the multiplication in the free monoid
We have $m:T(T(X)) \to T(X)$
so we take a word consisting of words $a_1, \dots, a_n$ and then we take it to the word where we concatenate $a_1a_2 \dots a_n$
it's not hard to check associativity and that the unit is actually a unit for this
what is $T(X)$?
are we identifying $X$ as a subcategory of $C$?
22:43
it's the set of all words in a set $X$
lol sorry
that was dumb
$T(C)$ is nonsense
ok verstanden
I defined what $T$ does on objects
okay
so one cool thing about such a monad is that we can define algebras over a monad
So when we have a monad $T$ on a category, an algebra $A$ over $T$ is an object $X$ in $T$, together with a morphism $h:T(X) \to X$
such that some diagrams commute
so basically when you go from $T^2 (X) \to X$ you could apply $Th$ first to get to $T(X)$ and then $h$ to get to $X$
or you could apply $\mu_X$ and then $h$
and these should be the same
and you can go with $\eta_X$ from $X$ to $T(X)$ and then back to $X$ with $h$ and you want that this is the identity
So can you guess what algebras over the example of a monad on $\mathbf{Set}$ are?
your observation about free monoids is very relevant for that question
okay, I'll spoil it: algebras over the $T$ we defined are just monoids
when you have a monoid $M$ then how do you define $T(M) \to M$? you just multiply your finite elements in the string together
and when you have an algebra over that monad, to recover the monoid multiplication, you only need to look at what the map $T(X) \to X$ does on words consisting of two elements
these conditions we put on $h$ translate to associativity and existence of a unit, but because of the way that our monad works. If we had taken another monad, we would get other conditions
Are you still following? @LeakyNun
okay so what is the connection of monads with adjunctions?
you observed correctly that $T(X)$ is just the free monoid on $X$, but considered as a set
what is $\mu_X$?
22:56
@LeakyNun $\mu$ is the multiplication from the monad
that's a natural transformation
so we take the component for $X$
14 mins ago, by MatheinBoulomenos
We have $m:T(T(X)) \to T(X)$
$m$?
oh sorry
I thought I used $\mu$
$\mu := m$
So when we call the forgetful functor $G:\mathbf{Mon} \to \mathbf{Set}$ and the free monoid functor $F:\mathbf{Set} \to \mathbf{Mon}$, then $T$ is just the composition of the functors $GF$
oh yeah and $\eta_X$ is $1_X$
sorry for the notational confusion
but the point is, this monad comes from an adjunction, at least we saw that $T$ comes from an adjunction
and as it turns out, when you describe the adjunction with unit and counit you can use these to define $\eta=1$ and $\mu=m$

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