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03:14
one can only consider the individual elements of the two sequences for which a hypergeometric function is based to be independent variables in such a function right? and the other arbitrary parameters, being the cardinality of each of the two sequences, must also both be considered independent variables, making the total number of variables of a hypergeometric function for any two defined multisets A and B to be equal to |A|+|B|+3
How we can show a group of order 140 has a subgroup of order 2? Sylow theorem can only say it has a subgroup of order 4.
Pig
Pig
can you produce a subgroup of order 2 when you have one of order 4?
$\Bbb{Z}_2 \times \Bbb{Z}_2$
Hey guys, could use some hlep with this question: math.stackexchange.com/questions/2968638/…
@Pig how?
I'm only thinking about abelian property of order 4 group.
I have another question, how to search for a general question in math.SE. Like I want to search for "Does the group" __ "acts on"__ type question.
03:45
How can I show injectivity of a function which takes a matrix
Like $g(B) = BC$
but $B$ is a rectangular matrix and $C$ is a square matrix
Z3:=Group((1,2,3));
Group([ (1,2,3) ])
gap> Z3gen:=GeneratorsOfGroup(Z3)[1];
(1,2,3)
gap> Z5:=Group((1,2,3,4,5));
Group([ (1,2,3,4,5) ])
gap> g:=DirectProduct(Z5,Z5);
Group([ (1,2,3,4,5), (6,7,8,9,10) ])
gap> Auts:=AutomorphismGroup(g);
<group with 4 generators>
gap> AutsOfOrd3:=Filtered(Elements(Auts),elt->Order(elt)=3);;
gap> ExHom:=GroupHomomorphismByImages(Z3,Auts,[Z3gen],[AutsOfOrd3[1]]);
[ (1,2,3) ] -> [ [ (1,2,3,4,5), (6,7,8,9,10) ] -> [ (1,5,4,3,2)(6,10,9,8,7), (1,2,3,4,5) ] ]
gap> s:=SemidirectProduct(Z3,ExHom,g);
*Is there a way to identify the elements in that form?
04:12
help
please
0
Q: How to convert the normal vector of a point in some polygonal surface transformed onto the surface of a triangle in space?

The Great DuckIt's complicated to explain what the transformation I'm dealing with is but basically it is a transformation that takes a 3D model and maps it to the surface of one polygon on another model. The issue is that I'd prefer to not have to recompute the normal vectors of the post-transformation model ...

04:27
are the rules for SE regarding satire accounts the same as facebook?( ie admins wont auto delete after they ping your ip on the proviso you arnt upsetting zucc)
@Adam I don't even know what you mean
ok well you've never gotten bored and made a fake facebook account and taken on a persona of a person you know your friends would be really annoyed by?
@Adam define fake? SE has no real names policy.
lol ok that's fine I guess that's all that's necessary for me to know
@Adam If you mean sockpuppetry that's not allowed. If you mean a satire account for the purpose of posting satire questions then obviously no. If you're just taking on some weird personality that isn't your own to have fun then really that's a question of whether said personality is allowed according to the site's policies.
However
the most important thing of all
is why are you posting this on math stack exchange when there is a main meta SE that you can actually ask questions like that on?
04:36
hmm I guess because opening another tab is always an inconvenience
but at least I'm asking that already proves im reaching adulthood maturity levels and seeings im becoming so mature its not likely that I will get in a silly of the magnitude that's needed to do something like that anyway. but I just wanted to ask in case I relapse
@Adam that was a plural you in my comments. For all I know you've simply observed the existence of a satire account and don't know whether to report it.
 
5 hours later…
09:17
0
Q: Does a manifold with two disjoint compact boundaries have two disjoint collared neighbourhoods?

SlereahTake a Hausdorff manifold $M$, with a disjoint boundary $\partial M$ composed of $\partial M_1$ and $\partial M_2$, such that the boundary is compact (I think this doesn't hold for non-compact one, with $\mathbb{R}^2$ with $|y| > x^{-1}$ removed as a counterexample). Is there a collared neighbour...

plz halp
I am bad at topology
Pretty sure it's true but I always run into the same issue
09:28
Is it possible to use Bernoulli numbers and Euler numbers to express the $n$th coefficient of the Taylor series of $\frac 1{1+2\cos x}$?
At $x=0$
10:30
Just read that "the Riemann curvature tensor expresses the tidal force that a body feels when moving along a geodesic" and that "the Ricci curvature, or trace component of the Riemann tensor contains precisely the information about how volumes change in the presence of tidal forces"
How do I understand that?
In a sphere, for example, which has Ricci curvature 1 everywhere, what "tidal forces" are being felt?
Oh, I think I get it?
If I take an circular object living in a sphere and push it in a certain direction (and it continues moving under physics), its center of mass will travel in a geodesic
but most points won't
but they'll want to travel in a geodesic because of intertia
so they'll kinda just push inwards a little bit the whole time, and the object will fell a little compressive stress
This is assuming the object's not rotating, in which case it'll feel tensile stress outwards anyway 'cause of centrifugal force
@BalarkaSen Was that right or am I talking nonsense
And then I think this compressive stress will want to turn the object from a circle into an ellipse
11:03
I felt tidal forces is more complicated than sheer and stress
given the cube of the number of dimensions the riemannian curvature tensor has for a vector space of dimension n
It's as if placing a potato on the manifold, how it is squished depends on which coordinate direction it is travelling along
 
2 hours later…
12:45
@Akiva I think attempts to explain Ricci curvature physically are somewhat misguided. The bit about change of volume is more or less just them saying "Det is volume and trace is the derivative of determinant".
12:55
I have a question about associative algebras. Let $A$ be an associative algebra over a field $K$ such that $A \otimes_K L$ is isomorphic to a matrix algebra $M_n(L)$ for some field extension $L/K$. If an element of $A$ is diagonalizeable in $M_n(L)$, are its eigenspaces defined over $K$, i.e. do they have a $K$-basis?
@MikeMiller Determinant of the Riemann curvature tensor?
(Also, it's so fortunate that Riemann and Ricci are both R. Or unfortunate. I'm not actually sure.)
(Is the R in $R_{ij}$ for Ricci or Riemann?)
$R_{ij}$ is commonly called the Ricci tensor
Yeah but it's also the contraction of $R_{ijk\ell}$ so it's conceivable they just wanted to use the same notation for both
so like even if it were named the Sicci tensor or something it would still be R maybe
Moot point anyway
fairly moot
Gentlemen write it as $\mathrm{Ricci}$
$$\mathrm{Ricci}(X,Y)$$
13:13
@AkivaWeinberger No, just as operators on matrices, trace is the derivative of Det at the identity.
Slightly different at other points but basically still trace.
Ric is tr(R). That's the best intuition one can get, I think. But to make specific claims about what it "is, physically" I think is ill advised.
Read paragraph maybe 0.61 in Besse where they say something similar.
@MikeMiller Yes, but the trace of R is the derivative of the determinant of R at the identity? I don't understand, R isn't a matrix, how do you take its determinant
...you plug in two tangent vectors and you get a matrix? Taking the trace of that is exactly the contraction you're talking about.
I am not taking the determinant of R at any point here.
Okay, solved my own question. The matrix $\begin{pmatrix}0 & -1 \\ 1 & 0\end{pmatrix}$ is diagonalizable in $M_2(\mathbb{C})$ with eigenvalues $\pm i$ and the eigenspaces have no rational or real basis.
@AkivaWeinberger The precise reference I was looking for is Besse, Einstein manifolds, section 0.H and in particular 0.60
 
1 hour later…
14:41
I want to compute centralizer of $(13)(24)$ in $S_4$. Is there any better way than checking elements one by one?
Not really as far as I know
You can save a little time by observing that if $x$ commutes with $y$ then so does $x^k$
The converse helps you see quickly that any 3-cycle eg cannot commute with that
Ok
How you are saying powers of 2-cycles can't be a 3-cycle?
Can you show your argument please :)
15:00
@UnknownMathMan conjugation in $S_n$ has simple form. For $\sigma \in S_4$, you get that $\sigma^{-1} \circ (13)(24) \circ \sigma = (\sigma(1) \sigma(3)) ( \sigma(2) \sigma(4))$
So the centralizer of $(13)(24)$ will consist of those elements $\sigma \in S_4$ that stabilize the partition $\{1,2,3,4\} =\{1,3\} \sqcup \{2,4\}$
Yo Mathein
what I mean by this is that $\sigma$ centralizes $(13)(24)$ iff $\{\{\sigma(1),\sigma(3)\},\{\sigma(2),\sigma(4)\}\}=\{\{1,3\},\{2,4\}\}$
Hi @Daminark!
@MatheinBoulomenos by stabilize do you mean anything related to stabilizer?
How's everything going?
@Daminark pretty well thanks
15:06
hi, how can i find how much subrings $F_{p^n}$ has?
@UnknownMathMan $S_n$ acts on the set of all partitions of $\{1,\dots,n\}$, it's the stabilizer of a particular partition, yeah
@Daminark hi
Hey Liad, how's it going?
Also yo Eric
@Liad hint: try to show first that every subring is a field, after that you need to know some things about finite fields
good how are you ? @Daminark
15:08
How's your application stuff going? @Daminark
Doing alright, thanks! Dedicating today to the research statement, and then implementing some suggestions for the personal statement (luckily shouldn't be too difficult)
Prob gonna talk about elliptic curves for the research statement, since I have epsilon of a case that I know a little bit more than just "I saw a facebook meme about them and they seemed cool from that", and because it allows me to talk about cryptography a bit
@Daminark you should mention the facebook meme as well
Mathein :D
Hi @Kasmir!
Long time no see man !
How are you ?
15:15
Doing well, thanks. And yourself?
doing good at your new courses i hope ? :D
good good ! finally starting to understand algebra :D
yeah, ANT3 is really tough
took me a while but getting there =P
@MatheinBoulomenos I knew $$\sigma^{-1} \circ (a_1a_2\cdots a_k) \circ \sigma = (\sigma(a_1) \sigma(a_2)\cdots \sigma(a_k))$$, i.e; for single $k$-cycle, but here we have two 2-cycles between $\sigma$, and $\sigma$ may contain something common hence they can't commute I thought. Can you help me to understand what you have said for two 2-cycles assuming I know it for one cycle?
I am gonna soon start with ANT1
15:16
What are you guys doing in ANT3?
fazer book
Dami !_
;D
How's it going Kasmir?
@Daminark global CFT, Galois cohomology and Galois representations
Damn, sounds fun
currently working on the cohomological proofs for global CFT
15:18
am good ty ! :D
mathein that sounds way super hard ._.
@UnknownMathMan if $G$ is a group, then conjugation is a homomorphism, i.e. $g^{-1}(ab)g=g^{-1}ag g^{-1}bg$
I planning to do galois theory in jan but what is those things u just mention ?
you can apply that two $a$ and $b$ two disjoint 2-cycles and then get what I said
Galois cohomology and Galois representations
._.'
that would take a while to explain
but Galois representations are not that hard, they're "just" representations of a Galois group, you know representations and Galois groups you will encounter in january
15:21
okay neat :D
I notice that algebra the beginning at least
is just about knwoning the defintions properly
like really understand them
but afterwards I assume one would need alot more than that =p
but kas will cross that bridge once he is ready ._.'
yeah, for the basics knowing your definitions can go a long way
that what I did not do last time !
anyway glad to see you back here even for a short while :D
wish u good luck on ANT3 I know you can do it! @MatheinBoulomenos
thanks!
and good luck with your algebra! Galois theory is deep and has a lot of applications, although the proofs are not hard, but it brings together groups, group actions, rings and fields in a pleasing way, I'm sure you'll like it
thanks Mathein ! iam really looking foward for that :D
@MatheinBoulomenos thanks!
15:29
@Liad you're welcome
Hi @TobiasKildetoft
@MatheinBoulomenos Hi
@MatheinBoulomenos Did you see what I wrote about our centre director's reveal at the meeting with the funding body for the centre?
@TobiasKildetoft no, I didn't
any ideas on how can i find a maximal proper ideal in $k[x] $ ? k is some field
@MatheinBoulomenos After going through the various grants and awards people at the centre had gotten the past year, he had a slide stating that the following would have to not be repeated outside the room until noon. Then he revealed that he had just been awarded a 10M euro grant as PI.
wow!
@Liad hint: an ideal $I\subset k[x]$ is maximal iff $k[x]/I$ is a field
15:36
i just thought about something
we have $m \subset k$ maximal proper ideal
we can take $m[x]$
what do you think ? @MatheinBoulomenos
Hmm. Consider the dot product between two n-vectors. It’s a symmetric bilinear function, and it’s invariant under a rotation of both arguments.
Is it the only such function on n-vectors?
(Up to an overall multiplicative constant)
@TobiasKildetoft Can I have some?
@MikeMiller Well, do you do mathematical physics?
(I think it just boils down to Schur’s lemma?)
@Liad if $k$ is a field, then there no ideals except for $(0)$ and $k$
15:51
@MatheinBoulomenos ahh. right !
@MatheinBoulomenos well i already knew your hint , can i have another one ? ^^
it's hard to give a hint without spoiling it
@Liad So if you could do your idea, what would be two sets that generate that ideal?
@TobiasKildetoft That depends who you ask, I think
Put the word quantum in your work and pretend its physics :p
@Liad It would not be if $k$ was not a field. But just drop the "maximal" part and think about my question.
15:54
yea i saw the "could" only in second reading
Well it's already called gauge theory
@MikeMiller Because there will probably be several postdoc positions opening up in mathematical physics related to this
@MikeMiller Gauge theory is definitely something they do
On the other hand if you asked me I would only say that if I had a monetary incentive to :P
I'm working on quantum Galois cohomology and quantum Galois representations and global quantum class field theory
@MatheinBoulomenos Change that to global class quantum field theory and you'd do even better
15:56
I guess my question reduces to: is the n-by-n identity matrix the only one which commutes with every n-by-n orthogonal matrix?
@TobiasKildetoft you are asking about two sets that generates $m[x]$ where $m$ is some ideal in $k$ ?
hmm.
m and x ? @TobiasKildetoft
@Liad Ok, and this gave you something either too small or too big. How can you fix that?
@MatheinBoulomenos Thanks :) It needs only 8 computation and lot more easier. Can I know which book you have followed for Group theory(if you don't mind)? I haven't choosen any book yet, checking which one will fit for me.
16:01
what do you mean by "this gave you something too small" ? @TobiasKildetoft
@Liad You can ignore that and focus on the case where it was too big.
like when $m$ was maximal?
@UnknownMathMan I didn't learn it from any particular book, more from the lectures at uni
well, it became too big when $m$ was $k$. But could you then make it smaller?
@MatheinBoulomenos Ok, thanks for sharing :)
16:04
@UnknownMathMan but there are many good books. I personally really like "Aluffi - Algebra Chapter 0", but it's a bit unorthodox with its emphasis on categories
Anyone who knows if it is possible to specify the name given to the citation when using \nocite with bibtex?
Inb4 logicians create "Quantum model theory" and get all the funding because it's quantum and the NSF thinks model means mathematical modeling
the NSF deserves to be tricked
I have been given a definite integral and told to approximate it using left reimann sum. Is there a simpler way to get $+ C$ than first evaluating the integral directly, then using the answer to figure out $C$?
This question comes right before another that says "Evaluate the integral exactly", so I suspect there is a method to figure out what $C$ is without having evaluated the integral exactly, but I cant figure it out
@EricSilva can't argue with the truth
16:22
The math postdoc application specifically had a huge glitch where you couldn't check the "I am a citizen" box - but applications without that box checked would be desk rejected. So you had to call the helpline and have them do it for you. And once you did, you couldn't edit anything or it would break again
No other fields, just math
our government is broken on literally every conceivable level
WWWIII when?
After the impending climate catastrophe m8
that's pretty soon, given we only have 12 years left
hot take we’ve been doomed since the deformed beast that is modernity first crawled out of its leathery amniotic sac
16:29
D:
yea well the human race doesnt deserve to get far anyways :P
Yeah but you don't quit the struggle
Does a set in a cover have to be a contiguous interval? Or would something like "every even number in one set and every odd number in the other set" be a valid cover for $\mathbb{N}$? (lets say discrete topology)
@MikeMiller the beast has burrowed deep and so the struggle is within and without
@TobiasKildetoft what do you mean? It pulls the info from the .bib to decide how to cite it
16:37
How to find all homomorphisms from $\mathbb{Z}_8 \text{to} D_4$
@Rithaniel A cover is comprised of open sets, and every point is contained in at least one of the open sets in the cover. That is all you know.
$\mathbb { Z } _ { 8 } \text { to } D_ { 4 }$
Every set is open in the discrete topology.
so I know that $<1>$ is generator in $\mathbb{Z}_8$
and we know that $|1| = 8$ in z8
Doesn't that depend on the author you're reading? Some talk about open covers when they want open sets in the cover
16:39
so $\theta(1) | 8$
@AlessandroCodenotti maybe but I think open is meant here.
@SharathZotis Go on!
ive never said "cover" and without meaning open cover but that's me
Alright, so it's not necessary for them to be contiguous. Danke.
My professor always specified open cover. He also didn't assume nbhds to be open though
hmm Im kind of stuck here @MikeMiller
I think I have to find the order of the group $D_4$
16:41
@AlessandroCodenotti what fresh hell is this
and then $\theta(1)$ has to divide that also right?
well the order of $D_4$ is 8 as well so it doesnt give us new info
Contiguous doesn't even make sense in an arbitrary topological space!
so the order of $\theta(1)$ has to be either 1,2,4
@SharathZotis That gives you all of the information. What you know so far is that a homomorphism from $\Bbb Z/n$ is determined by where it sends 1, and the place it sends 1 must have order dividing n.
So you just need to know what elements have order dividing 8.
It's a legit first step right?
16:46
so if u map 1 to $\rho$ we get a homomorphism
as $|\rho| = 4$
I dunno what $\rho$ is. But you don't need to work this hard.
@TobiasKildetoft @MatheinBoulomenos (x) is a maximal ideal in $k[x]$ donesn't it ?
in reference to the image cbf with typing latex tonight and maples translator is gutter ball
16:48
$/rho$ is just a rotation
$/rho$
a rotation in $D_4$ has order 4, so mapping 1 to $D_4$ will be a homomorphism correct?
Yes, but I am trying to help you avoid unnecessary work.
If you want to check all the elements by hand I won't stop you.
great another night of homomorphic isomorphic might morphic power rangers that ignore me
how to go the other way
find homomorophisms from $D_4 to \mathbb{Z}_4$
*$\mathbb{Z}_4$
What do you think you should try?
well I dont think we can do what we did before as $D_4$ is not cyclic right?
we can't simply map 1 to all elements which divide the order
should we just map elements that have the same order?
17:03
why does u substitution not work with $$\int(4-x^2)^{1/2}dx$$ bounds 0 - 2
No, that's not all of the homomorphisms, and you don't know that it would be a homomorphism.
Last time you worked with a generating set (one element) and decided what to map it to based on the relation it satisfied (order 8). Can you try something like that here?
right, so would the generating set be the elements which have order which divide 8?
That would be every element. Not a very small generating set.
You want to minimize the amount of work you have to do.
Is a cover a subcover of itself?
@Adam You don't have a right to help. That entitlement makes it strictly less likely someone will be interested in spending time on you.
17:07
@Liad who's $k[x]/(x)$?
Which is a field
yes. just wanted to check im not missing something :)
Nope, it is maximal indeed
Can you tell me other maximal ideals of $k[x]$?
(x^k) ?
17:11
That doesn't work, think about why
Can you find a proper ideal $I$ such that $(x^k)\subset I$?
Ah. yes
the previous one
@AlessandroCodenotti I mean the name it uses for the reference (like ABC12 for a paper from 2012, but I have a series of papers I would like it to number from 1 and up instead, as ABC1, ABC2,...)
Ah, I'm not sure, there is the style parameter for global changes but I don't know how to change it for only some of them
I was hoping I could just pass some parameter to the \nocite command and then manually write the names (a bit of a hack, but I would like to cite the series as ABC1-11 rather than as 11 separate papers).
17:27
Hmmm, need a direct argument for the real numbers being Lindelof
$\theta : \mathbb { Z } _ { n } \rightarrow \mathbb { Z } _ { m }$ What pairs of nums gives us a surjective homomorphism, what are the homomorphism and its kernel?
Is it if n and m have common factors?
you already have all the information you need to answer this problem, and you demonstrated it while doing the first problem about homomorphisms from $\Bbb Z/8$ to $D_4$
I believe if m does not divide n
@MikeMiller inferring a sense of entitlement from my comment comes across as inept you really shouldn't be so presumptuous about a person's character with such little information about them
so m must divide n in order to get a surjective homomorphism
is this correct @MikeMiller
17:31
Yup! You should write down a proof, and calculate the kernel.
Thanks @MikeMiller
IM still struggling with the $D_4 \text{ to } \mathbb{Z}_4$
using ur idea of a generating set
where $t$ is a flip and $\rho$ is a rotation I have
$t^2 = \rho^ = (\rho t)^2 = e$
sorry $D_4 \text{ to } \mathbb{Z}_8$
@AlessandroCodenotti Ahh well, I just decided to cite as ABC01-16 since these were the relevant years. And now I also managed to get it down to exactly 2 pages without the bibliography as required.
So, take $\mathbb{R}$ in the discrete topology, and the cover where every number comprises one set in the cover. This cover does not have a countable subcover, so this space is not Lindelof, correct?
Which is great, because there will be wine and cheese in the library in less than half an hour.
Nice, what's being celebrated?
17:42
@AlessandroCodenotti Nothing in particular. We are on "retreat" here, and each evening there is cheese and wine in the library
(though of course we do still celebrate that huge grant)
@TobiasKildetoft remind me where "here" is, I'll need to find a place for a phd in a couple of years :P
@AlessandroCodenotti "here" is precisely an estate in southern Jutland. But the university is Aarhus, and the grant is for mathematical physics and geometry, the use thereof
The mathematicians on the grant are J.E. Andersen and M. Kontsevich.
(not familiar with the physicists)
Ah. That would do it
17:46
How to find all homomorphism $\text {from } D _ { 4 } \text { to } \mathbb { Z } _ { 8 }$
Im having some trouble and am stuck
Cant figure out how to start on this one, please help: "Suppose $\int f(t)dt=3$ (bound 0 to 1). Determine the value of $\int f(2t)-4 dt$ (bound 0 to .5)
How do i work with that 2t??
@WillNjundong Substitution
so.. 2t = u?
i need to find a condition on $k:[0,1] \to [0,\infty)$ (k is a measurable function) s.t $\int_0^1 |f(x)|^2 k(x)dx = 0$ iff $f=0$ (that is , $(f,g) = \int_0^1 f \overline{g} k(x) dx$ defines inner product ) . someone can help ?
@WillNjundong yes
$f\in X$ where $X$ is the space of functions modulo equality a.e.
i think $k(x)$ should satisfy that if $A$ has a posstive measure, then $k(A)$ also has. is that work?
so i've got ${1/2}\int f(u)du - {{1}/{2}}\int 4 du$ (bound 0 to .5)
17:55
@WillNjundong Wrong bound
so after that substitution i use bounds: 0 to 1?
you use $u = 2t$ so bounds are $2*0$ to $2*5$
aahh, so I can now put 2t back where i have u?
if u=2t then $du = 2dt$ so $dt = 1/2 du$ so the integral you wrote is $\int (f(u) -4 )1/2 du$ and the bounds are $0,10$
@Liad It was .5, not 5
17:59
shouldve corrected him the first time, sorry
ah , why not writing 0.5 ^^
but that's the same just write 2*bound
@TobiasKildetoft any thoughts about my question ? ^^
so will i now be replacing $f(u)$ with 3? I'm trying to figure out why its this way
you have $\int_0^1 f(t) dt =3 $ and you want to find $\int_0^5 f(2t)-4 dt$
Given $\vec C$ is a constant vector, while evaluating $\int \vec{C} x \vec{dl} $, can we take out $\vec C$ out of the integral and evaluate $\int \vec{dl}$ and then cross it with C? Note that 'x' in the middle is for cross product between the vectors
18:04
@Liad how to show those bounds in mathjax?
$\int_0^5 f(2t)-4 dt = \int_0^5 f(2t)dt - \int_0^5 4 dt$
ok so far @WillNjundong ?
now $\int_0^{1/2} 4 dt$ is easy.
$\int_0^{1/2} f(2t)dt = \int f(u) \dfrac{1}{2} du$ where $u = 2t$. now what are the bounds of the second integral ?
should be .5 :)
good thing i didn't wrote the bounds on the second one :-)
18:08
0 to 1
nice
so it is $1/2\int_0^1 f(u)du$
what's $\int_0^1 f(u) du$ ?
thats... precisely where im stuck. :/
it doesnt make sense to me to just plug the 2t back in and proceed
so change back u to t if that help
@WillNjundong dont
use $u = t$
in thats case thats 3
ok great.
18:10
so i would then add 3 and 4 to get 7?
wait why?
sorry thats wrong
you have $1/2 \int_0^1 f(u) - \int_0^5 4 dt$
wrong bounds
0.5 * 3 - 4*5 :)
18:11
Hi, I want to know how many 4-digit numbers have no same digit, how many have two same, how many have 3 same and how many have all 4 same. leading zeroes are allowed. please help
you can give answers only, instead of explaining
"0.5 * 3 - 4*5" Ive stared at that too long trying to figure out what u meant :/
3 mins ago, by Liad
you have $1/2 \int_0^1 f(u) - \int_0^5 4 dt$
i forgot the du
where are 3 and 4 from ??
what's $\int_0^1 f(u)du $ ?
or rather
Why are they factored in there? I know where theyre from
18:16
for the second term, you've got $\int_0^5 4\,dt = 4\int_0^5 dt$
@WillNjundong what do you mean?
I dont understand at all why that upper bound is 5 now
I understand how u got 5.
ahh wait it was $1$ at the first place?
or $.5$ ?
it's my mistake if so
ok so my bad ^^
its $1/2 *3 -4 *1/2$
18:18
@tatan 1) For future purposes, you can use \times to write the cross product nicely
now that's clear ? @WillNjundong
ok , nice! sorry for the confusion..
yes yes makes much more sense now haha
:)
18:21
thank you so much for the help, good day
2) One way to express the components of the cross product between two vectors A,B is as $(\vec{A}\times \vec{B})_i =\sum_{j,k=1}^3 \epsilon_{ijk}A_j B_k$
no problem, good day to you too
where $\epsilon_{ijk}$ is the Levi-Civita symbol; this is +1 if ijk=123,231,312, -1 if ijk=321,213,132, and 0 otherwise
0
Q: About Witt Cancellation in Modules over rings

ninja hatori I understand lemma 2.17 but in Theorem 2.18 I don't understand why $\beta(x,x)$ = $\beta(y,y)$ = $u$ and steps after that. Could somebody explain me this steps? I know that if we show $Rx$ isomorphic to $Ry$ then we are done since then its complementry subspaces are also isometric. How to show ...

With that in hand, you can write the $i$th component of that integral as $$\int \epsilon_{ijk}C_j\, dl_k=\epsilon_{ijk}C_j\int dl_k=\epsilon_{ijk}C_j \left(\int d\vec{l}\right)_k$$
and then it's clear that yes, you can indeed write $\int \vec{C}\times d\vec{l} = \vec{C}\times \int d\vec{l}$
(the point is basically that the cross product is a linear function of both arguments, e.g. $(\vec{a}+\vec{b})\times \vec{c}=\vec{a}\times \vec{c}+\vec{b}\times \vec{c}$. That's enough to ensure that you get $\int \vec{C}\times d\vec{l}=\vec{C}\times \int d\vec{l}$)
18:30
Hi, I want to know how many 4-digit numbers have no same digit, how many have two same, how many have 3 same and how many have all 4 same. leading zeroes are allowed. please help
you can give answers only, instead of explaining
would any1 plz help
Considering you're basically asking us to do the work of the problems for you...no, I think not.
nooo
I got this:
for all digits different = 10*9*8*7 = 5040,
for two digits same = 6*10*9*8 = 4320,
for three digits same = 4*10*9 = 360,
for all digits same = 10
total = 9730 but total should be 10000
leading zeros are allowed
can u please tell me which one is wrong and where am I wrong
18:56
@RahulJain the 10000 consists of all 4 digit numbers, with no restrictions on repeated digits. Hence it'll contain numbers like 4466. Where does it fit into your classification?
(Note that your second calculation correctly counts the number of 4-digit numbers with exactly 2 repeated digits.)
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