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00:11
Actually, I think my conjecture is slightly off. If $\mathcal{B}$ denotes the jordan basis, $\mathcal{B}_r$ its "reversion", and $[T]_\mathcal{B} = A_1 \oplus ... \oplus A_p$, then $[T]_{\mathcal{B}_r} = A_p^T \oplus ... \oplus A_1^T$.
So, I was close...Now I just need to figure out how to prove it.
00:40
i have an idea for a bijective function between a square and a circle
01:04
@MikeM: ETA not so shabby!
I named a subset in a proof "I," and now I'm giggling at sentences like "Therefore, I must be countable." (I never knew this about myself)
Are you sure I isn't giggling?
I might be.
Hey guys!
Hi Demonark
01:09
Sup Daminark.
How's everything going?
I'm busy scheduling alumni interviews of prospective MIT students. Never done this before. Should be interesting for the first few ...
Working on a proof to show that an uncountable set with the cocountable topology is anticompact, and working on rounding off Round 5 in a TIS-100 tournament I am hosting.
What the hell is anticompact?
I've never hoyd of this.
Only finite subsets of the space are compact.
01:11
Learn something new every year.
It might be something my professor coined for this particular homework, I don't necessarily know.
I've been around a long while and have never heard it. But I don't get that interested in point-set topology.
It does appear to appear under googling.
Yeah, I just googled it too.
But it's stilllllll obscure.
Yep, there's a lot of obscure stuff in math.
01:15
I'd like to think I prefer the less obscure.
Demonark, what are you up to?
I was about to say that we all would, but actually, I can see a person getting enthused about really obscure stuff.
There are such, yes.
Just finished up midterms, doing a rep theory pset right now and later I'll be reading a bunch of stuff for my various classes
I guess beginning of November makes sense for midterms. My sense of time is shot now.
UGA is 3/4 through its semester.
Do keep in mind that we have the quarter system, this is 5th week so smack in the middle
01:18
Right, I berember.
Then again, not all midterms are in the middle of the term. The chemistry department has a midterm Wednesday of 10th week. Now, turns out Thursday and Friday of 10th week are reading period, and 11th week is finals
Demonark, UGA finally passed a rule that there couldn't be exams the last two days of classes, before final exams.
Still some people love to break it.
That's excluding reading period?
There's like a one-day reading period.
I see
01:20
We didn't even have that until I made a fuss in the faculty Senate.
Yeah here we have two days of reading period where you can't have anything due, can't hold obligatory classes, and can't give tests
But some faculty figure they're better than rules and break them? :)
Many
Like, you can technically get around them
I would encourage students to complain to the Deans ...
Homework is most common, though to the benefit of the students, since they say yeah, Wednesday is the official due date (and some professors that normally assign Friday to Friday homework actually shorten it for Wednesday), strict deadline
But we'll accept it without penalty until Friday
Hey Mathein!
01:24
Hi @Daminark
Hi @Ted
Hi, @Mathein ... whoa ... really late night for you.
Oh I mentioned this problem the other day but you guys may like it, this was probably my favorite problem from my rep theory midterm (aside from the bonus but I haven't figured that out yet)
yeah, I should try to sleep probably
So let's say $G$ is a finite group and $V$ is an $n$-dimensional complex $G$-rep with character $\chi$ such that for any $g\in G$, $\dim(V^g) \ge \frac{n}{2}$. Show that $\text{Re}(\chi(g)) \ge 0$ for any $g$ and that $\dim(V^G) > 0$
I guess I don't see how the character is in the hypothesis. Am I being stooopid?
Or did you just write it badly?
01:31
What do you mean?
okay, so the $\text{Re}(\chi(g)) \ge 0$ part is clear
Why does the character $\chi$ get mentioned when you say $\dim(V^g)\ge n/2$?
The first part of the problem is to show something about the character so that phrase just establishes notation
I don't like the way the sentence is written. The character should be mentioned after. But OK.
This is true for any character, then.
@Ted I think the formulation is fine
01:33
It confuses non-experts.
I'm a non-expert.
But I'm about to leave, anyhow. :)
And nice re Mathein
okay so we have $\langle \chi,1\rangle=\frac{1}{|G|}\sum_{g \in G} \chi(g)$ and we want to show that this is non-zero
this is real anyway, so we can instead look at $\langle \chi,1\rangle = \frac{1}{|G|} \sum_{g \in G} \mathrm{Re}(\chi(g))$, this is a sum of positive numbers and $\chi(1)=\mathrm{dim} V > 0$, so this is positive
Exactly
the part about $\mathrm{Re}(\chi(g))$ follows from the fact that any $g$ acts as a diagonalizable matrix with at least $n/2$ $1$s and $n/2$ possibly other roots of unity (which have real part $\geq -1$)
nice problem!
Yeah definitely. The others were more generic
One problem was defining the left regular rep, one problem was stating and proving Schur, one problem was proving with rep theory that finite groups of commuting matrices are simultaneously diagonalizable, one was to use the character table of S_4 to decompose the tensor product of its 2D irrep with itself
One was true-false, whether $U\oplus V \cong U\oplus W$ implies $V\cong W$, and whether the span of the orbit of a vector in a rep is an irrep
And two more I don't recall offhand
01:47
okay yeah that does sound more generic
but really doable, so I assume it went well?
Yeah, I think I got all of them right. Didn't quite the bonus, still thinking about it (so don't spoil just yet)
That the only 2D rep of a non-cyclic simple group is trivial
I won't spoil anything, but I remember going through that once
02:12
Is the intersection of finitely many compact sets necessarily compact?
I can't think of a counter example.
In metric spaces?
I think I see an argument that's true but I'm paranoid
Maybe it needs compact sets to be closed
Take an open cover $\{U_a\}$ then each is covered by a finite subfamily. Union the subfamilies.
@Rithaniel
Ah, I see.
That's for a finite union
So if your space isn't Hausdorff (more importantly the property that Mike said about compact => closed) then this isn't true. I think Alessandro mentioned a counterexample once, you take $\mathbb{N}$ union two points, put the discrete topology on $\mathbb{N}$ and let $\{x_i\} \cup \mathbb{N}$ be the only open set containing $x_i$
Then $\{x_i\} \cup \mathbb{N}$ is compact, the intersection is $\mathbb{N}$ which is not
02:17
Ah, dang, that's clever.
(I am too quick to say "Ah, I see.")
Zee
Zee
02:51
I wonder if this holds for T1 spaces , probably not
I think if you choose the open sets containing $\{x_i\}$ to be those with finite complement, and the discrete topology on $\Bbb N$, it's still a counterexample
Zee
Zee
03:08
Ya , hausdorrf probably nessecery
Can someone explain to me how is the curvature tensor a tensor field? You input a point on the manifold and that gives you a tensor ,then you input three vectors and that gives you a vector but aren’t tensors supposed to go to R ?
Nope
A tensor field takes as input n vectors and spits out (a sum of tensor products of) m vectors
A section of (TM)^{otimes m} otimes (T*M)^{otimes n}
This is an (n,m) tensor field
Riemann is a (3,1)
Zee
Zee
03:59
I see , you take a section of the tensor bundle , input three vector field ls and then spits out a vector field
04:26
Hi, does any one know whether we can obtain the order of a semiregular automorphism alpha, of a vertex transitive graph G, if we know the order of G and sizes of orbits of <alpha>
I mean is there a relationship like the order of subgroups of a group is having with the order of the group
Order of subgroup should be a divisor of the order of the group
Something like that?
Thanks a lot in advance.
 
1 hour later…
Zee
Zee
05:45
Should I give a math book to a math girl on a first date ?
06:38
Nope, bring an old contest papers and discuss the answers of each problem over coffee. Bringing IMO papers means you will have to pause for lunch and dinner, possibly spend the night at another's house.
 
2 hours later…
08:50
hello
@loch hi
hello, if $(x_n,y_n)$ converge to $(x,y)$ then $x_n$ converge to $x$ and $y_n$ converge to $y$
always ?
@LeakyNun
hello
??????
09:13
a little question about linear algebra: why eigenvalue/vector only defined on operator?
I suddenly realized that when talking about eigen-thing, only holds on square matrices...
is that a definition start with eigen- always means it's to solve diagonalize-problem?
09:31
someone have an answer to my question ?
@IsanaYashiro we want to make sense of $T(\vec v) = \lambda \vec v$ right
it wouldn't make sense if the codomain of $T$ is incompatible with the domain thereof
09:52
@LeakyNun hello how are you?
@LeakyNun thanks
10:24
Is this a good book for someone who wants to study much further later on?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Mathematics-Engineers-Dr-Tony-Croft/dp/1292065931/ref=pd_sbs_14_1?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=1292065931&pd_rd_r=934f9efb-de87-11e8-9a86-056d0d37c5cd&pd_rd_w=L9y3K&pd_rd_wg=EkmjN&pf_rd_i=desktop-dp-sims&pf_rd_m=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE&pf_rd_p=18edf98b-139a-41ee-bb40-d725dd59d1d3&pf_rd_r=21AEZJ6EJGNTTGSY8GSN&pf_rd_s=desktop-dp-sims&pf_rd_t=40701&psc=1&refRID=21AEZJ6EJGNTTGSY8GSN
:)
The existence of topology implies the existence of bottomology
@Zee Depends on the book and what areas of math she's interested in, but it could work well
(Disclaimer: I have never dated)
Actually, maybe it's more of a birthday thing
unless you pass it off as "I've finished this book and don't need it any more, do you want it?"
10:40
Finally some weirdness. I thought they all died off since Slereah's intrusion a few weeks ago
@AkivaWeinberger I want some sidewayology
I'm just gonna start listing every book I've ever read, aren't I
Actually... do a given family of topologies can form a tree ordering always?
Say again?
since the largest topology is always the discrete topology and the smallest one is the indiscrete topolpgy
Topologies probably form a lattice
(I need to remind myself the definition of a lattice)
> It consists of a partially ordered set in which every two elements have a unique supremum (also called a least upper bound or join) and a unique infimum (also called a greatest lower bound or meet).
Right so we just have to figure out what the join and meet of two topologies are
10:45
Hmm... let me check if there is an operator that makes topologies finer or coarser...
Did you see First Man, by the way?
People have had mixed feelings about it but I thought it was amazing
It's about Neil Armstrong, highly recommended
I have heard about that, but I never get a chance to see movies, cause phd talks at 13 November as we'll progress interview on 8 nivember
the actor on the poster strongly reminds of The Martian though
@AkivaWeinberger yes they do, it's in Lean
instance {α : Type u} : complete_lattice (topological_space α) :=
(gi_generate_from α).lift_complete_lattice
in particular, they form a galois insertion with the powerset of the base set
which is in itself a complete lattice
10:52
What's a Galois insertion?
11:36
In topology and related areas of mathematics, the set of all possible topologies on a given set forms a partially ordered set. This order relation can be used for comparison of the topologies. == Definition == A topology on a set may be defined as the collection of subsets which are considered to be "open". An alternative definition is that it is the collection of subsets which are considered "closed". These two ways of defining the topology are essentially equivalent because the complement of an open set is closed and vice versa. In the following, it doesn't matter which definition is used. Let...
Akiva: It is a complete lattice, and the join is not quite the union
On a side note, I wish people can give a name to those "not a topology" (collection of sets such that they don't necessary become closed under unions or intersections) because I felt they can tell us more about dicontinuous notions of convergence
Might explore that more in the Star Wars room
@AkivaWeinberger a Galois insertion is some sort of "free construction", i.e. left adjoint
12:15
$$\operatorname{End}_A(A) \cong A^{op}$$
:o
LHS is $P_Mx_0$ where $P_M$ is the projection on M
i showed $||P_M x_0 || \le max \{..\}$
can someone help with the reversed inequality?
($M$ is a closed subspace of a Hilbert space $H$ )
@LeakyNun maybe you got an idea?
($x_0$ is point in $H$ )
12:37
Hey everyone, new to the chat. I posted this question to the site a few days ago and it hasn't gotten much love despite the bounty. Just wanted to give it a shoutout in here in case someone was interested (I hope doing this isn't frowned upon too much, lmk if it is)
13:07
If $\mathbb{A}_{\mathbb{Q},f}$ is the ring of finite rational adeles, is the condition $x^2 \notin \mathbb{Q}_{<0}$ open in $\mathbb{A}_{\mathbb{Q},f}^\times$?
13:23
@LeakyNun hi
I don't get the "by compactness of $[0,M]$" argument for convergence here. Any ideas?

https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1623027/exists-a-uniformly-convex-norm-on-banach-space-satisfying-certain-condition
Can someone give an example of what applied math is?
@CaptainAmerica16 Add trendline in Excel.
@MatsGranvik Why do you say that?
I thought adding a trend line in Excel is pretty much applied math.
To some measurement data.
13:37
Computational stuff. Like approximating solutions to PDEs or routing algorithms and that kind of things
Never mind.
@AlessandroCodenotti Oh, so what @MatsGranvik said kind of makes sense.
Perhaps you could argue that arithmetic is applied math.
@Rithaniel Hm...
14:10
@Fargle thank you for teaching me the devide and conquer algorithm :)
How do we obtain a linear extension of a linear functional $f$ where $f$ is defined on some subspace $Z$ of $X$? I always see something like the following phrase, 'let $E$ be the set of all linear extensions $g$ of $f$'...but how do we construct such a $g$?
Very often you use Hahn-Banach to extend functionals but it's hard to say without more context
14:25
@AlessandroCodenotti I'm asking this question as this statement is used right at the start of the proof of the Hahn-Banach theorem (Kreyszig, p.215). He starts with a functional $f$ and then in the very first step he says let '$E$ be the set of all linear extensions $g$ of $f$...' - I want to know why such $g$ exist - how can they be constructed?
Say for the case of $X = \mathbb{R}^2$ and $Z = \{(x,0) | x \in \mathbb{R}\}$. How do we define an a linear extension $g$ to a linear functional $f$ defined on $Z$?
Pick a basis $(v_i)$ of $Z$, complete it to a basis $(v_i,w_j)$ of $X$, you know $f(v_i)$ for all $i$, define $f(w_j)$ for all $j$ however you like and extend linearly to all of $X$
This shows that there are some extensions of $f$ so you can collect all of them in a set
@AlessandroCodenotti 'extend linearly to all of $X$'. This is the part I am not sure about. How do we extend linearly? If I have a linear functional $f$ on $Z$, how do I show that a linear extension $g$ is linear?
Wolframalpha is not very good with diophantine equations.
After fixing $f$ on $w_j$ you have a function defined on a whole basis. Every vector in $X$ can be written as $\sum\lambda_k z_k$ where $(z_k)=(v_i)\cup(w_j)$ (sorry for the terrible notation) and $\lambda_k$ are scalars. $f$ can be extended linearly to a function on the whole of $X$ by setting $f(\sum\lambda_k z_k)=\sum\lambda_kf(z_k)$
@Rithaniel did you solve your problem about countable space and being lindelöf?
Oh, yeah, that was easier than I was thinking at the time.
Just, for every element in the space, take one cover which contains it.
14:38
Yeah
It's the same proof as "finite spaces are compact", just one cardinal up
I have to prove that polynomial in a ring that has zero divisors doesn't have number of roots equal to degree
is it enough to show a counter example.
I had just got finished writing a page and a half on showing that the Arens-Fort space is not first or second countable. Was in a mindset where everything seemed complicated, I guess.
@PiyushDivyanakar Hint: think about $\Bbb Z/15\Bbb Z$ and recall the chinese remainder theorem
Though, on diophantine equations, $\sqrt{x}=(x-y)^2$ has simple solutions where $x=n^4, y=n^4\pm n, n\in\mathbb{N}$. Had to really coerce wolfram into displaying that answer
@AlessandroCodenotti
I didn't get you
14:47
Then think more about it
@AlessandroCodenotti I have posted a question just now where I explained in detail my issue, and my attempt to show linearity - math.stackexchange.com/questions/2981838/… - do you know where I'm going wrong?
So your $f$ is defined on $Z$ whose basis is (for example) $\{(1,0)\}$, can you complete this to a basis of $\Bbb R^2$?
@AlessandroCodenotti So taking $f(a)$ in $Z/15Z$ is like taking $f(a)$ in $Z/3Z$ and $Z/5Z$ and the isomorphism will give me the value in $Z/15Z$
Pick a specific $f$. A nice one
So picking a really simple one $f(x)=ax$ should have 0 as a root but if the ring has zero divisors then a $a$ can be chosen in such a way that it may have 2 roots.
15:07
Hmm, what's such an $a$ in $\Bbb Z/15\Bbb Z$?
I suppose $f(x)=5x$, but how does it need chinese remainder theorem
It doesn't
I was thinking about $x^2-1$ but your example is easier and works as well
but your example is monic! :P
:d
monic shmonic
I believe the universal polynomial is $x^2-x$
it detects whether how far a ring is from being an integral domain
15:21
? Non-domains needn't have interesting idempotents. Take $\Bbb Z[x]/(x^2)$.
Idempotents detect splittings of your ring
I asked that invariance of domain question from yesterday on main a little ago if you're interested in seeing if good answers come up for it
Too scary
I assume this is a known problem: What is the maximum constant speed such that you don't commit speeding, but pass all traffic lights to green? But I don't know what I should search...
@MikeMiller aha, never mind
In proving that ring has no extra idempotents you'll see you need $2\neq 0$, which makes a fun observation that $(\Bbb Z/2)[x]/(x^2)$ does indeed have a splitting as $(\Bbb Z/2)^2$
In retrospect a better example was just $\Bbb Z/4$, where you have no CRT-given splitting
15:30
interesting
jsc
jsc
15:43
I just posted a question; immediately after posting, it got a downvote. Is this not the appropriate forum? math.stackexchange.com/questions/2981895/…
@jsc maybe use codereview or stackoverflow, BUT I can't judge wether this question fits those sites either
jsc
jsc
Thanks. It's not really a coding question, but I'll check those out.
$\star\star\star$ is spaced well and $\star\star\star\star$ is not, are you drunk LaTeX?
6
@AlessandroCodenotti can't blame him, it's friday
16:00
@AlessandroCodenotti In retrospect invariance of domain for simplicial complexes follows from the version for $\Bbb R^n$ that says there's no injection into a lower dimensional Euclidean space
Even CW complexes of finite dimension
Every neighborhood has a chunk of a top dim cell
Ahh that's not necessarily true
But if you assume that there are no lower-dimensional simplices that are not a face :p
That's interesting
I'm looking more at the other direction though, assuming invariance of domain holds
Yeah, I am skeptical there is much to say
(further investigation reveals that an odd number of stars is well spaced and an even number of stars is not, this typesetting system is literally unusable!)
You're probably right @Mike. Do you happen to have an example of a connected $X$ for which invariance of domain fails?
2 is a counterexample to that assertion
As there is only one gap
Oh sure take a 2-simplex with a whisker sticking out of it
Oh of course
16:15
@AlessandroCodenotti you need something after the last star for even >2, e.g. $\star\star\star\star{}$
@user10354138 nice
@AlessandroCodenotti That was what prompted me to add the "always a face" condition
I don't need to change the example I'm using for stars and bars to only have odd numbers of stars now @user10354138 :P
16:43
How can I find the number of continuous function(s) $f[0,1]\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ such that $$\int_0^1xf(x)dx=\frac13+\frac14\int_0^1(f(x))^2dx$$ ?
is this statement about orthogonal projection matrix correct?: it's always similar to $$\pmatrix{I_r & O\\O & O_{n-r}},$$ assumed $\textrm{rank }A=r$?
that's true for any matrix that satisfies $A^2=A$ with rank r
@MatheinBoulomenos got it, thanks
And another question is: why we draw two vectors which are orthogonal as perpendicular on the plane $\mathbb R^2$
@MikeMiller I don't believe that. $(\Bbb Z/2)^2$ is reduced
I always thought orthogonal means perpendicular but then it seems like it's just for the case of standard inner product for $\mathbb R^n$?
17:01
The two generators are 1 and 1+x
Oh maybe not
Ok I give
I see my failure
@Mike do you have any advice on learning about spectra?
what do you want to know?
I encounter a terminology called perspective projection but is there any book specific about this?
idk, just understanding some basics like what the sphere spectrum and the spectrum associated to K-theories etc. are
and how homotopical algebra relates to homological algebra
it seems like a kind of topology that fits my algebraic/categorical taste
but I'm not sure where to start
it also seems important to follow what Lurie et al. are doing
17:19
@MatheinBoulomenos I relearnt Artin-Wedderburn today
it's good stuff
I told ya it's good stuff
like wtf, End_A(A) = A^op
I should prove this in Lean
after they fix modules
that's not so wtf-ish
also
modules over algebras over fields
there was an algebra course here once where Artin-Wedderburn was an exercise
but that's okay since you can prove it by just Schur's lemma basically
@LeakyNun you can use Artin-Wedderburn and Galois descent to show that tensor products of central simple algebras over a field K are again central simple over K
which means that the multiplication in the Brauer group is well-defined
@LeakyNun I can link you a relevant exercise sheet if you want
17:41
please help me.
0
Q: If $d(x,y)$ is a metric on $X$, then $d'(x,y)=\frac{d(x,y)}{1 + d(x,y)}$ and $d(x,y)$ generates the same topology.

Math geekIf $d(x,y)$ and $d'(x,y)$ are a metrics on $X$, then $d'(x,y)=\frac{d(x,y)}{1 + d(x,y)}$ and $d(x,y)$ generates the same topology. My attempt:- Let $\mathscr T$ be the topology generated by $d$ and $\mathscr T'$ be the topology generated by $d'$. Let $U\in \mathscr T\implies U=\bigcup_{\alpha\...

For a g
Sorry
For a cayley graph G of a group, if we obtain the quotient graph G/H (H is a subgroup of the group), is there a way we can say that G/H is also a cayley graph
?
@MatheinBoulomenos The thing is that you're starting from a very different point than I did
@MatheinBoulomenos Do you already know model categories etc?
@Mike no, should I learn that first?
probably not! i thought you might specifically know that theory and could base my suggestions from that as a beginning point
but i think it's not good to go that way
I only know some basic homology and homotopy theory
17:56
I think historically spectra came motivated by the observation that Alexander duality in homology was actually something that could be observed at the space level as long as you suspended enough times, called Spanier-Whitehead dualiyy
interesting, we covered Alexander duality, but not Spanier-Whitehead duality
Try, appropriately, Spanier
Actually that is probably a good place to learn spectra
Fundamentally they come from the observation that all homology theories have a suspension isomorphism, so only depend on spaces up to stable homotopy equivalence instead of just homotopy equivalence
I guess Brown representability is related to this spectra stuff?
17:59
speaking of model categories, I remember when I was briefly trying to read about it my impression is that we're axiomatising all the things that we can do w/ fibrations and cofibrations in algebraic topology - but i don't have a very good sense of what makes this powerful
Absolutely
@loch that sounds reasonable
ah i intended that to be more of a question! was wondering if you guys might have some perspective that might make someone who just learnt about homotopy theory to think "hey this might actually be very useful if i stick this into algebra"!
@loch maybe one can motivate it (partially) by the Dold-Kan correspondence. If we have a category equivalence of simplicial abelian groups and (positively graded) chain complexes of abelian groups, then it seems natural to ask what fibrations correspond to since we have a notion of fibrations for simplicial sets
though "fibrations" corresponding to Kan fibrations are just surjections in this case
probably the motivation is to give a framework to compare different homotopy theories, like the standard homotopy theory and simplicial homotopy theory
I'm just guessing
18:21
Yeah I've heard of the Dold-Kan stuff - which I guess I think of it as OK now I have this machinery which recovers homological algebra, but now this works for other categories too so I can compute some interesting things there

I guess it's just not obvious how all these lifting properties and fibrant/cofibrant replacements are good - but I guess that's probably a matter of actually looking at examples
Zee
Zee
@MikeMiller does the base point of a pointed connected topological space and the space form a “good pair” in homology theory ?
If the space is a CW complex yes
@loch I meant to answer but started talking to a postdoc here
Fundamentally the ideas are things you've seen in homological algebra - if you want to take a quotient of a G-action on a chain complex in a way that plays well with Homology (is quasi iso invariant) you need to take a projective resolution first
And once you do that q.i.s are actually homotopy equivalences
The general idea is the same. You have some nice operations or functors you'd really like to respect weak equivalences but usually don't. The model category setup says you can just as well work with the homotopy category of sufficiently good objects/maps
In the settlement of of spectra the most obvious important functor is "taking homotopy groups", and the notion of Omega-spectrum comes to be good for that; same thing more generally for making good mapping spectra or a good product of spectra
One can say that one may do all that by defining a symmetric monoidal model category of spectra
There are also good strict models for these things nowadays, eg symmetric spectra or orthogonal spectra
@Mathein Email me and I will give another less public reference
So you're finding a resolution of your chain complex such that this new thing behaves well when you quotient by $G$, and this thing is q.i.s. to your original chain complex

(Perhaps something which is philosophically similar (but possibly irrelevant here) imo is e.g. when I take a $G$- space $X$ and quotient by $G$, I can also consider the Borel construction and then quotient by $G$)

And I guess you're saying that in general there are functors we'd like to behave well (in some sense), so as in homological algebra where we take proj/inj resolution, we take new resolutions (so in homotopy t
Hi @BalarkaSen
18:37
Hmmm, given any three natural numbers in $(0, 1000)$, chosen at random, what is the probability that they will have a greatest common divisor greater than three?
Hi @Balarka!
@loch Yes, the Borel construction is very very familiar to me and essentially the same spirit
Henlo
Borel construction is $(X \times EG)/G$, right?
Your summary is quite accurate
Yes
18:42
Hi @Balarka
Basically if $x \in X$ is a $G$-fixed point then you get a $BG$ sticking out of it in the quotient, which contributes to a group cohomology in $H^*((X \times EG)/G)$. In general for every $G$-orbit you get a contribution of $H^*(BG)$, right?
For a $G$-orbit with stabilizer $H$ you get a $BH$ sticking above that point
Ah yes
You can do a sort of equivariant Morse theory which reduces a $G$-manifold to a finite number of $G$-orbits, and then try to understand how the flowlines go between the various orbits; so you have a complex (spectral sequence) which starts from a bunch of $H^*(BH)$ things and with differentials flying around between them
sp00ky
19:07
Howdy
sup nerdlets
@MikeMiller great - what are some typical examples to keep in mind? I guess theres the usual one for (nice) topological spaces, and i know a tiny bit about andre quillen homology (for rings). I supppse the ‘general examples’ are things like simplicial objects - but i cant say im that familiar with them (although maybe i should try to be)
@TedShifrin I'm going to be coming into some free time within the next few days. I could use some chapter 1 recommendations now.
19:25
@loch I am njot terribly familiar with them
There is a good paper "6 model structures on dgas" that everyone should read
I like the computational stuff later in the paper which is a modern rewriting of a papery by Gugenheim and May from 50 years ago
My impression is that the people really familiar with this stuff tend to just also be familiar with $\infty$-categorical setup and that seems to be "stronger" but I don't know it either
I just try to understand the philosophy and use it in my own work in clear and down-to-earth ways when necessary
I've proved $f$ is bijective given $f : \mathcal P(\mathbb N) \rightarrow \mathcal P(\mathbb N)$ and $f(X) = \mathbb N - X$ but how am I supposed to find an inverse? How could you invert a set difference?
@Li357 What happens if you do the same thing again?
I mean a bijection by definition has an inverse
Exactly
@TobiasKildetoft What do you mean? Apply difference again?
yes, apply the same function once more
19:34
$\mathbb N - (\mathbb N - X) = \mathbb N \cap X$
$X$ is by definition a subset of $\Bbb N$...
Oh so it's just $X$? But what about the inverse? I used that to prove surjection
Wait a sec, how is it guaranteed that X is a subset of N?
it's a mapping into $\mathcal{P}(\mathbb{N})$, isn't it?
(I actually don't remember what the $\mathcal{P}$ is supposed to mean)
ah
then yeah
19:53
@Li357 I think you should start by understanding the objects you're working with... this should be clear if you know what $X \in \mathcal P(\Bbb N)$ means
@Mike I sent you a mail
My email takes a while to refresh so I'll see it in a bit
Thanks for the heads up
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