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00:15
Happy friday.
/saturday
Can linear algebra be replaced by algebraic geometry in a systematic way?
00:36
I have a numerical approximation problem. Given a rational polynomial $P(x)$, a complex number $n$, and a means of finding rational intervals as small as desired containing the real and imaginary parts of $n$, I need to be able to find rational intervals as small as desired containing the real and imaginary parts of $P(n)$.
00:46
I have a way to choose a sufficiently small size for the intervals $\mathrm{Re}(n)\in[re_{lower},re_{upper}]$ that if I evaluate $P$ at the corners of the rectangle demarcated by these bounds and choose the min and max of the real parts from among them, the distance between them is lecss than or equal to the desired distance, and likewise for the imaginary part.
If $P(x)$ were monotonic in that region, then this would suffice as an answer, but I don't know that a priori. I assume I'd have to do something involving using a root-finding algorithm to check whether $P'(x)$ has roots in the rectangle in question. Does that sound right? Or is there some more elegant method that doesn't require the extra complication?
Earlier I meant "the intervals $\mathrm{Re}(n)\in[re_{lower},re_{upper}]$ and $\mathrm{Im}(n)\in[im_{lower},im_{upper}]$."
 
6 hours later…
07:20
@William I think some kind of lattice will work. We knew that blood types are basically saying whether you have antigen A or B on the surface of the red blood cells, thus putting A and Bs together is bad and putting A or B with O (which has non of the antigens) is also bad. So O being the universal donor, will be some bottom element, while AB being the universal acceptor, will be the top
For example
AB + B = AB
AB + A = AB
AB + O = AB
A + A = A
B + B = B
O + O = O
A + O = A
B + O = B
So you end up with some semigroup where the acceptor is the left entry and the donor is the right entry, and AB will absorb everything on the left, while O will be the right identity element
....
wait a minute, this structure looks familar...
Ok nvm, its just some generic semigroup
Now, one thing that is apparent is that since addition of numbers is commutative, addition does not work.
Factoring might involve O being assigned to 1 since 1 is a factor of every number, and AB being assigned to be a number having A,B,O as its factors
Then the operation a|b should give all the entries and the dead ones will mean "a is not a factor of b"
So preliminary speaking, we could have A=2, B=3, O=1, AB=6
@TedShifrin So which one is it?!
07:36
@William So factoring does work, where all combinations that can kill you corresponds to a is not a factor of b
08:32
Hey guys, I was thinking about part (b) of this question recently: https://imgur.com/a/6LKHuRo

I can show that if a finite generating set existed, then $1$ must be in that set. All that'd be left to show is that $I \neq R$. However, it seems that any polynomial of $R$ is in the form of polynomials in $I$: $f = x_{t_1}f_{1}+\ldots+x_{t_m}f_{m}$.
namely, if $f$ is in $R$, then simply factor some $x_{t_i}$ from each monomial term the leftover is the $f_i$, then possibly collect some like terms if necessary. Clearly this is wrong, though.
what about the polynomial $x_1+1$? is it of that form?
Or the polynomial $1$ actually to keep it simpler
Ah yes, good point hahaha, thanks!
08:47
I find this is easiest to see via the degree
No polynomial in $I$ can have a term that's degree zero, because it's in the form you gave above; in particular $1 \notin I$
Yes yes, of course. Thanks again! I used similar degree arguments before, can't believe I didn't notice this.
Thanks so much!
09:08
$I$ however contains every polynomial with zero constant term
09:49
Behold: The Pythagorean theorem :P
10:29
hello
someone help me here
1
Q: Exemple about a set which is not connected but it's interior is connected

Poline SandraAs in the title i want to find a set $A$ from a topological space such that $$ A~\text{ is not connected but}~~ \rm int(A)~\text{ is connected} $$ i tryed with this space: $E=\{a,b,c,d,e\}$ with $$\tau=\{\emptyset, E,\{b\},\{c\},\{b,c\},\{c,d\},\{b,c,d\}\}$$ $E$ is connected, $\{b,c,e\}$ is c...

{2} is an open subset of that space.
You need to use the definition of the subspace topology.
The comment gives an example of an open set whose intersection with your subspace is {2}. By definition of the subspace topology {2} is open.
to see that (0,1)\cup \{2\} is connected i must find the topology induced by \{2\} ?
It is not connected. To see something about a topological space you should probably know its topology.
10:45
@PolineSandra Look at the subset ${2}$ of $(0,1) \cup {2}$ when your space is given the subspace topology as being a subset of the real line which is given the standard topology
i think that the example is given in $(\mathbb{R},|.|)$
so i must find the induced topology by $(0,1)\cup\{2\}$
it is to hard
i don't how to find all the topology
$(-\infty,a)\cap (0,1)\cup\{2\}= (0,a), a>0, =\emptyset, a\leq 0,$
$(a,+\infty)\cup (0,1)\cap \{2\}=(a,1), 0\leq a <1,= \emptyset, 1\leq a\leq2, =\{2\}, a>2$
like this
?
someone here?
11:06
\o @MatheinBoulomenos
hi @user1732
11:48
@MatheinBoulomenos I have been in the Munich airport since 5am :(
@MikeMiller regards to Franz-Josef Strauß!
@MikeMiller Are you flying with ryanair?
12:05
No, there was an incident with someone getting past security without being checked, and they had everyone leave their planes and wait for hours and then go through security again. And now it has been 2.5 hours of waiting in line for a new ticket. Half of the airport (termainal 2) was affected and no flights left
There are barely any employees and it takes forever for a single person to be taken care of at the desk (guessing 20-30 minutes)
Presumably they will refuse the 600 Euro payment for a very late flight as being the fault of the airport
I booked my plane ticket to Germany just a couple of days ago and now I kee hearing horror stories of delayed/cancelled flights
I am sick and need to get to a doctor at home as well
12:28
Urgh that sucks
sounds like there's nothing you can do :(
Anyway the moral is probably don't go to Bavaria
3
did you bring some good books with you?
Nope, only bad books
don't try to write any formulas down
12:41
@MikeMiller wow, that sounds horrible
sad that your first visit to Germany (I assume) has to be like that
Indeed my first. I got to the desk and the agent took a phone call
They have two people working to deal with a line I would guesstimate around 500
Maybe 300 is better
13:44
@MikeMiller Even Germans would agree with that
On a plane to Vancouver now
Here we go
Looks 2/3 full
Apparently we are leaving a ton of people behind
14:01
Can $(n,x)$ be principal ideal in $\mathbb Z[x]$ if $n\ne1,-1$ and $n$ is not prime?
What do you think?
And what if $n$ is prime?
Congratulations pal @MikeMiller
Vancouver is sunny and warm :-)
@AlessandroCodenotti $n$ is prime then $(n,x)$ can't be principle ideal. But since $(n,x)$ is set which consists of integral polynomials with constant term $n$, I think even when $n$ composite, it can't be principal ideal.
@Silent How did you prove that it's not principal when $n$ is prime?
@Silent And there are more polynomials in $(n,x)$ than polynomial whose constant term is $n$!
@AlessandroCodenotti Sorry, I should write constant term is integral multiple of $n$.
14:15
agreed now
@AlessandroCodenotti Its raining here, sorry! I will be back in a while
Sure, there's no hurry
 
2 hours later…
16:02
(ac)(acde) = (cde)
someone wrote in an exam that there are 36 primitive 8th roots of unity in $\Bbb C$
I want to know: why 36?
Because there are $36$ numbers between $1$ and $8$ (extremes included), which are coprime with $8$, I'm not sure what kind of explanation you're looking for here
duh
Jokes apart that's a weird number indeed, I could understand writing that there are $8$ by missing the "primitive" but 36 is a lot
16:09
I found out that I won't be able to finish my bachelor next semester as planned (yay!)
That sucks, why is that?
I have to take one of four courses for my bachelor, none of which is offered next semester
although it should be according to the documents
Can't you take the exam without taking the course?
no
I have to get enough points on problem sets to take an exam which is hard when there are problem sets
Hey everyone
16:17
@MatheinBoulomenos otherwise how many should there be? 4? don't be ridiculous
@LeakyNun oh yeah, you're right, 36 is correct
Can you still take more courses whose credits will count toward your Master's degree next semester?
@AlessandroCodenotti yeah I can do that
As annoying as it is at least you're not completely wasting a semester then, but still...
I just missed 32 roots of $x^4+1$
@AlessandroCodenotti yeah
16:19
Also that sucks @MatheinBoulomenos, if it holds you back, you should check with your uni if they give concessions (or some equivalent of that) so you can progress anyway without being held back
@AlessandroCodenotti well, about "a lot", someone wrote that there are infinitely many primitive 8th roots of unity in $\Bbb C$
@MatheinBoulomenos That's not wrong, but could be specified better, assuming CH there's $\aleph_1$ primitive roots, without assuming CH it can be any regular $\kappa$ with $\aleph_0<\kappa\leq 2^{\aleph_0}$
@MatheinBoulomenos where exactly are your true answers coming from?
are you teaching a class of geniuses?
Ok I'll stop writing nonsense now
Just joking, who wants to help me clear some confusion regarding tensor products? (of vector spaces)
16:27
ask away!
Notation: $V,W$ are the two spaces with basis $e_i$ and $f_j$ respectively
though I've had some scotch, so maybe I'll write nonsense
So I know I can think about $V\otimes W$ formally as a vector spaces spanned by $e_i\otimes f_j$, there is a nice map $V\times W\to V\otimes W$ and everything, or I can think about $V\otimes W$ in terms of its universal property
did you ask this before?
Now this thing I'm reading defines $V_1^*\otimes\cdots\otimes V_n^*$ as the space of multilinear maps $V_1\times\cdots\times V_n\to\Bbb R$ (and then defines $V_1\otimes V_2$ as $V_1^{\ast\ast}\otimes V_2^{\ast\ast}$ for finite dimensional vector spaces)
16:32
$(cd) (ab) \sigma = 1$, $\sigma = (ab)(cd)$
@AlessandroCodenotti \ast $\ast$
@AlessandroCodenotti that's a weird definition
and it doesn't work for infinite-dimensional vector spaces
or modules
He wants to talk about differential forms, so he is more interested in the multilinear maps than in the tensor products but it still confuses me a bit
are you asking why these are the same? (It's jus that the bidual is naturally isomorphic to the original vector space basically)
or what is your question?
@MatheinBoulomenos Oh no that's fine
Let's work with $V_1$ and $V_2$ to save time typing (because I'm lazy)
the space of bilinear maps $V_1\times V_2\to\Bbb R$ and $V_1\otimes V_2$ are obviously isomorphic (same dimension) but is this isomorphism canonical? It seems to me that I have to pick basis of $V_1$ and $V_2$
it's not canonical
the dual of $V_1 \otimes V_2$ is the space of bilinear maps $V_1 \times V_2 \to \Bbb R$, by the universal property
the isomorphism of a f.d. vector space and its dual is not canonical
16:39
@MatheinBoulomenos So we have $(V_1\otimes V_2)^\ast=V_1^\ast\otimes V_2^\ast$
if $V_1$ and $V_2$ are finite-dimensional, then yeah
and you don't need a basis for that
i think this definition is quite common in DG
that doesn't make it any better
if $E$ and $F$ are vector bundles over the same smooth manifold $M$, you maybe want to say that $\Gamma (E \otimes F) = \Gamma(E) \otimes_{C^\infty(M)} \Gamma(F)$, but that doesn't make senes if the RHS is not defined because you use a weird definition of tensor products
@Secret wow thank you that is awesome
Took a little bit to understand how it works but I believe I do now
@MatheinBoulomenos Actually I don't see the universal property argument here
16:48
any bilinear map $V_1 \times V_2 \to \Bbb R$ gives you a unique linear map $V_1 \otimes_{\Bbb R} V_2 \to \Bbb R$ that factors over the structure map $V_1 \times V_2 \to V_1 \otimes_{\Bbb R} V_2$. On the other hand, for any linear map $V_1 \otimes_{\Bbb R} V_2 \to \Bbb R$, you get a bilnear map $V_1 \times V_2 \to \Bbb R$ by precomposing with the structure map $V_1 \times V_2 \to V_1 \otimes_{\Bbb R} V_2$
@AlessandroCodenotti Sorry for taking so long. So, if $n\ne1,-1,0$, $(n,x)$ is proper ideal. Here I assume that $n$ is prime. Suppose $(n,x)$ is a principle ideal, hence $(n,x)=(a(x))$ for $a(x)\in\Bbb Z[x]$. So, $n=p(x)a(x)$ for some $p(x)$ and comparing degrees, and since $n$ prime, $a(x),p(x)\in\{+-1,+-n\}$.
If $a(x)$ was +-1, then $(a(x))$ could not be proper ideal. Hence $a(x)=+-n$, and so $x=nq(x)$, where $q(x)$ has integer coefficients, hence impossible. So, for n prime, $(n,x)$ not principle ideal.
these two assignments define a canonical isomorphism
@MatheinBoulomenos Oh, I see, but I can't spot anything that goes wrong with infinite dimensional spaces here
the part that the dual space of $V_1 \otimes_{\Bbb R} V_2$ is the space of bilinear maps $V_1 \times V_2 \to \Bbb R$ also holds in infinite dimensions
Try the same argument with $n$ composite, you get to $a(x),p(x)\in\{\pm 1\pm n_1,\pm n_2,\cdots\pm n\}$ with $n_i$ the factors of $n$ @Silent
16:53
But, I think that $n$ prime is used only at concluding $a(x),p(x)\in\{+-1,+-n\}=X$, and if $n$ composite, then set $X$ would have more than four integers, too, but, since we could rule out $+1,-1$, then $|n|>1$ and by above argument, $(n,x)$ can't be principle. Am I right? @AlessandroCodenotti
@AlessandroCodenotti oh! just saw
Thank you very much!
So the problem in infinite dimension is that the space of bilinear maps $V_1\times V_2\to\Bbb R$ isn't the same as $V_1^\ast\otimes V_2^\ast$?
My dislike for this definition has suddenly increased
16:58
in finite dimensions you have a trick to get back a space from its dual (just take the dual again) and that is used to define tensor products here, since you can describe the dual via bilinear maps
In infinite dimension you can have non isomorphic preduals so there's no hope for anything like that to work
given enough category theory, you might say that the space $V_1 \otimes V_2$ is "the" vector space such that for any vector space W, linear maps $V_1 \otimes V_2 \to W$ correspond naturally to bilinear maps $V_1 \times V_2 \to W$, that determines $V_1 \otimes V_2$ up to natural isomorphism, works for infinite dimensions and seems to be kind of in the same spirit as that weird definition
Well the author is mostly interested in $\Lambda V^\ast$ at the end of the day, I guess I'll just look up a construction of $\Lambda V^\ast$ as a quotient of the tensor algebra done with standard definitions and come back for the de Rahm stuff after learning about differential forms somewhere else
17:20
I think it's a good idea to understand how this definition of $\wedge V^*$ allows you to identify $k-$forms as alternating $k$ multilinear maps (something I found confusing before)
Which definition is "this definition"?
i think lee's smooth manifolds uses this to define the exterior algebra (he defines it as a certain subspace of the tensor product)

the upshot (which he doesn't mention because i don't think he defines the exterior algebra by quotienting) is that this subspace maps isomorphically to the quotient
@AlessandroCodenotti What book are you reading?
Some notes written by a professor at my uni for a course @Perturbative
Ahh I see
17:36
Hi @LeakyNun
never mind.
18:22
1
Q: What do you call this property involving a function between two complete metric spaces?

Rajesh DachirajuI have a notion, for which I am not able to find any reference name, as I am not that familiar with these concepts. Please help me by pointing to a definition for the below scenario. Is there a name for the following property of the setup? There is a an onto function $e : A \to B$, $A$ and $B$ ...

18:45
Hmm that's a weird property
It's not satisfied by all continuous functions to begin with
Hey everybody
Hi everybody! @AlessandroCodenotti , yes I am Italian but I live in the Netherlands
hi @Daminark
I see, did you study in Italy if you don't mind me asking?
Sup @dami
I did my bachelor in Padua
18:52
Did you end up in the Netherlands through the ALGANT program?
Yes, exactly. Are you considering applying for it?
@AlessandroCodenotti I can state it in a bit shrinked form, but with essentially same meaning.
@MaurizioMoreschi I considered it but ended up not applying since it's focused in areas I'm not really interested in (I just finished my bachelor in Trento and I'll do my master in Bonn)
Given a onto function between two complete metric spaces $A$ and $B$, for any point $b \in B$, every point in the pre-image of $b$ is a limiting point to every set that is a pre-image of some punctured neighbourhood of $b$.
@AlessandroCodenotti It makes sense, it is a very specific program. Is the master in Bonn also thematic? I have to say, I studied in Regensburg for one year and I didn't really like their approach that much, but I have no idea if it also applies to other German universities.
19:03
What do you mean with thematic? A classmate of mine did her erasmus in Regensburg and had mixed opinions
I mean specifically focused on a certain field
Kinda, they divide their courses into 6 main areas and you have to pick a major one to specialize in and a minor one (also a third one to be precise, but you can do just one or two courses from the third area just to fulfill credits requirements). So it is focused on a field but you get to chose which one you want to focus on
 
1 hour later…
20:20
Hey everyone :) I'm struggling with my mental health at the moment, so I'm reluctantly considering dropping down from my PhD programme in Mathematics to the MRes programme instead, meaning I'd graduate - if all goes well - in 2019, rather than 2020 or even later, so that I'll have time to concentrate on my health before starting a PhD elsewhere perhaps. I've wanted a PhD for about a decade now but I'm really struggling to do the work. Does anyone have any advice?
Hi everyone.
I was wondering if I could get some help with a problem. It seems to simple at the outset, yet is driving me mad.
Hi @A.Hendry. That happens a lot in Mathematics. Don't worry.
I'm sure!
Even knowing if there is no way to answer this problem would help. At least then I could move on to my next problem!
haha
@Shaun would you happen to have a moment to take a peek?
I just did. I specialise in group theory, however, so I won't be able to help, I'm afraid; I'm sorry.
@Shaun I think your (mental/physical) health should be your number one priority
6
20:30
Oh no worries! Thank you for trying! And sorry to hear about your health, btw. I'm hoping you get some much deserved rest and peace
@loch +1
@Shaun I'm not the person that can give you an advice about the PhD programme process etc., but I wanted to say that the health is way more important than anything else. Secondly, according to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, love/belonging is fairly important. For me, its simply the family.
And I think, usually it's likely to be the source of the problems.
@loch and @AbdullahUYU any chance you could take a crack at my problem?
Forgive my pertinence. I'm desperate and am reaching out to as many people as I can.
@A.Hendry No problem but I'm not even familiar to those you've written, sorry.
That's why I'm considering the change, @loch and @AbdullahUYU. It's still scary though.
Thank you, @A.Hendry.
20:45
@AbdullahUYU I can send you the link to the question if you like
Well you can, but don't wait a miracle. I don't want to waste your time after all.
Of course. Any help is appreciated. Certainly not expecting a miracle.
Is it true that the topological boundary of a set $E$ equals $\overline{E}- \mbox{int }E$?
@A.Hendry Ah, you meant the question on se. I've took a look of course, I wrote after reading it.
@user193319 I don't know much topology in regards to set theory. Sorry. Also, just fyi, I'm not able to render your Latex. It may be just an error on my end.
@AbdullahUYU yes, the question on se. thank you!
20:56
Hmm...Seems to be rendering on my computer.
@user193319 did you have to set anything up in particular to render the Latex? I'm suspecting the error is on my end
@user193319 That was it! Renders perfectly. Thank you!
No problem!
Can anyone answer me this? Suppose $F = F_1 - F_2$ is continuous on the real line with $F_1$ also being continuous on the line. Will this imply $F_2$ is continuous as well?
21:07
@NicholasRoberts Yes.
Can you give me a quick proof? or quick reasoning
been struggling to prove this for like an hour now
@Nicholas Hint:the sum of two continuous functions is continuous
Are you using the limit definition of continity?
im using epsilon-delta definition, yes
yes i know the sum of two cts functions is cts, but im asking a partial converse to that
Since you have that fact available, Alessandro gave you a good hint.
@NicholasRoberts Do you also have that multiples of continuous functions are continuous?
21:10
yes, i have all arithmetic properties of cts functions
OK, will use the hint. THank you guys
@NicholasRoberts Sum $F_1-F_2$ and $F_1$, after changing a sign
Just got that @AlessandroCodenotti, thank you
Was goin crazy with eps/delta, didnt think to exploit arithmetic properties.
21:25
I'd like to reiterate my plea for advice.
I've asked the same question in Ivory Tower, the main chat room of academia.stackexchange.
How is uniform convergence formulated in $R^n$
?
Do I have to specify a norm on $R^n$
euclidean metric in R^n
@Shaun I haven't gone for a doctorate before. I only received my bachelors in mechanical engineering and then went straight to work. That being said, is there any chance you could take a "sebatical" and recharge before pursuing any further?
So I need to specify a norm on $R^n$?
Everyone, I believe I found a good stepping stone to solving my problem on se.
I'll post on there.
21:37
Note that in $\mathbb{R}$ we use absolute values when defining convergence of sequences. This is simply the euclidean metric in dimension 1. For higher dimensions, i believe you just use the euclidean metric
$||p - q|| = \sqrt{(p_i - q_i)^2}$
with a sum over i inside the square root
Is $\Bbb R^n$ meant to be the domain or the codomain of the functions whose uniform convergence you want to talk about?
You only need a metric on the codomain to talk about uniform convergence
Rehi @Mathei
rehi @Alessandro
@A.Hendry Yes, I could take a Leave of Absence. That might be a better option. Thank you.
@Shaun I'm so glad to hear it! As it were, I resigned from my position at my previous company last Wednesday and am taking time to pursue new options. You are not alone and time is on your side.
22:11
Rehi @Mathein and @Alessandro
rehi @Daminark
How's everything going?
pretty well
today was the exam for the intro NT class I TA'ed
seems like it went pretty well, although it's not fully graded yet
I see, any particularly interesting questions?
22:15
nah, it was pretty easy
when I took that class, the exam was harder
there were a few interesting answers though
one guy claimed that there are 36 primitive 8th roots of unity in $\Bbb C$
why 36?
Nice, and lol yeah different professors give tests at different levels of quality
Wait 36?
also classes are now over, yesterday were the last classes
still have some exams next week though
Do you like groups?
ah and I found out that I won't be able to finish my bachelor next semester as planned
22:19
Rip, why?
I have to take one of four certain classes
none of which is offered next semester
although the syllabus says there should be at least one of those offered
Which are the 4 options?
all suck
but I have to take one
numerical analysis, statistics, linear optimization, nonlinear optimization
22:40
Rip
Well, if none are offered next semester, are you just gonna take the semester off, take fun classes instead and then try to take one of these after that, or what?
yeah I'll take fun classes
Nice, anything in particular catch your eye?
algebraic geometry, Galois representations and Galois cohomology (this will basically be ANT3, although it's not called that), analytic number theory, complex manifolds
and there's a seminar on a special case of Langlands
(for $\mathrm{GL}_2(\Bbb Q_p)$)
Oh shit that all sounds like a lot of fun
(Well, as for the analytic number theory... if it's along the lines of modular forms I guess, though what we did in complex analysis was heavy on stuff like integral estimates, which I didn't like quite so much)
(Sad part is, there was barely any reference to complex analysis in that part, except showing that Dirichlet series converge in a half plane and are holomorphic there)
having it focus on modular forms would be redundant since we have a separate class for those
it will have a focus on L-series which is fine by me
we already did some Dirichlet series in the modular forms course
we proved an isomorphism between spaces of certain L-functions (so Dirichlet series satisfying some conditions, e.g. a functional equation) and modular forms which was pretty cool
in the analytic number theory course we're going to prove stuff like the prime number theorem, Dirichlet prime number theorem etc.
22:53
I see, nice
ah and we will also do something with quadratic forms
Huh, neat
23:18
@MatheinBoulomenos
hi
@MatheinBoulomenos I would like to discuss something in Hartshorne
hi @Daminark
@Adeek hi
I haven't read Hartshorne and I've had some scotch, so I'm not sure if I'm so helpful right now
but I can try
@MatheinBoulomenos page 73
let me know when your there
Hey @Adeek!
I don't understand why the maps on the stalks $f^{\sharp}$ is $\phi_p$
@Daminark how are you
I'm alright, how about you?
23:24
I am good as well. Finished my master thesis. It is pretty nice. It is like 200 pages of hardcore things.
:D
so I am happy about that.
Now I am just preparing for my PhD I am gonna work on algebraic cycles and mirror symmetry.
How do you write $\mapsto $ without the line in the front
@Adeek exciting stuff!
yeah @loch
I am pretty excited. First semester I will just do research. In my second semester I will take number theory and mirror symmetry.
23:30
I see, how long is the PhD gonna be?
Also are you staying in the same place, with the same advisor?
sometimes the fact that these things are used in string theory allows me to pretend 'im doing things that's related to physics'
I will be same advisor with another one.
@loch I would like to eventually do string theory as well :D :D that would be so cool.
Lol I've heard that trying to bring physics into the picture somehow is supposed to be good for getting grants
my eventual goal is to work in algebraic geometry and mathematical physics.
@Daminark yeah you will get more money
i also would like to learn a bit about the physics side of the story eventually (although my physics background is... lol)
23:33
people like fancy stuff like explaining the universe and sh!t like that.
@Adeek ah, that's just commutative algebra so I can probably help. so for basic opens, the induced map on sections is just the map induced by localizations $A_x \to B_{f(x)}$. Now $A_{\mathfrak{p}} = \varinjlim_{x \not \in \mathfrak{p}} A_x$ for a prime $\mathfrak{p}$ and what you're trying to show is that the map that you get out of the universal property of a colimit is the localized map $A_{\mathfrak{p}} \to B_{\mathfrak{q}}$ (where $f^{-1}(\mathfrak{q})=\mathfrak{p}$.
You can just check this by the explicit construction of directed limits of rings. Just think of the directed limit as a
@loch mine too. I know classical mechanics 1,2,3, and 4 but no QM GR or those things.
Lol I took a year of physics first year and that was it, and I didn't learn it well because it required a lot more geometric intuition and vector calc than I had
it's just a matter of writing down all the constructions and once you've written everything out, you have the result @Adeek
direct limits (or filtered colimits, if you wish) have pretty concrete (and useful!) descriptions in a lot of important categories: sets, rings, groups, modules etc.
they can always be constructed as a quotient of a disjoint union
(it's crucial that the index category is filtered (or the index poset is directed in more classical terminology) for that)
@MatheinBoulomenos wait we defined the map f as $f \circ \phi_p$
what I don't understand is that once we take direct limit
that somehow transforms into $\phi_p$?
23:38
how do you get a map on stalks (just thinking about universal properties)? notation as above. For $x \not \in \mathfrak{p}$, you have maps $A_x \to B_{f(x)} \to B_{\mathfrak{q}}$, taking all those maps for different $x$ gives you a cocone and that induces a map $A_{\mathfrak{p}} \to B_{\mathfrak{q}}$
I'm just saying that this induced map has a concrete description based on a concrete description of filtered colimits of rings
hm 1 sec let me think
wait so the original map that we defined is
$f \circ \phi_p$ ?
ah well, this doesn't seem to be what Hartshorne does, he does the maps on stalks first
so it is $\phi_p \circ f$ ?
yeah
wait that doesn't make sense
$f^{\sharp} : \mathcal{O}_{Spec(A)}(V) \rightarrow \mathcal{O}_{Spec(B)}(f^{-1}(V))$
yes so it is indeed $\phi_p \circ f$
because elements of the domain are $s : V \rightarrow \bigcup_{x \in V} V_x$
and then we map those to $\phi_p \circ f(s) : f^{-1}(V) \rightarrow \bigcup_{x \in f^{-1}(V)} V_x$ ?
oh okay he uses the espace etale construction
yeah so what I said above makes sense
23:51
I think it's easier to just define it on basic open sets, but this works, too
okay now taking direct limit then things collapses to $\phi_p$ agree ?
yeah ok I see what you mean now
okay I agree..
actually one way to see this intuitively/geometrically is that taking direct limit means looking at what happens locally which is precisely given by $\phi_p$
the f gives a global picture
thanks @MatheinBoulomenos
yes that's the intuition (for morphisms induced on stalks in general), of course you still have to check that the algebra matches that intuition :)
@Adeek np
yeah
@MatheinBoulomenos to improve my algebra skills for research in the fall I am planning to solve Matsamura, Allufi, Reid,Michael atiyah, Allufi, and fields and galois theory by Patrick
I need to have very fluid algebra skills
23:57
these are a lot of books, but sounds great! being the algebraist I am I always enjoy working through such books
nice I will come over to discuss or email you if I have anything :)
I'm looking forward to it, I'm always glad to discuss some algebra
:D me 2 I like discussing math in general :D. In the fall I am planning to do a topological K-theory introduction in the student seminar.
I am excited for this

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