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02:50
$(A \otimes_R B) \otimes_A (A \otimes_R B) = (A \otimes_R B) \otimes_R B = A \otimes_R (B \otimes_R B)$?
welp it would be quite a thing to prove that those isomorphisms are $A$-linear
Isn't that clear? A acts on the left where none of this tomfoolery happens.
These maps are must multiplication pairings.
I mean, you can't prove it using just the usual universal properties right
Sorry, but these maps are literally $(a \otimes b) \otimes (a' \otimes b') \to (a \otimes ba') \otimes b' \to (a \otimes (ba' \otimes b')$, right?
Whatever about the universal property.
sure, but...
03:12
@LeakyNun Seems like the calculational proof is encoding exactly the same proof the universal properties are. To encode that map, you first swap to $((A \otimes_R B) \otimes_A A) \otimes_R B$, then pair $B \times A \to B$ using the bilinear product. So you use it to collapse $B \otimes_A A \to B$. Similarly with the last term. In every case, the relevant multilinear maps are always A-linear in the first coordinate.
03:31
is anyone familiar with how to make/prove first order logic proofs? I'm having trouble getting the general idea behind it
03:44
@MikeMiller ok I just did it in lean, and it turns out that the adjunction is sufficient to do the isomorphism without much work
"the adjunction" being $$\operatorname{Hom}_{A \downarrow \textbf{CRing}} (A \otimes_R B, C) \cong \operatorname{Hom}_{R \downarrow \textbf{CRing}} (B, C)$$
04:33
If i have a complex function f(z) in terms of z then to check if it is analytic in a domain I just need to see if f'(z) is defined over the dominant right?
To prove it rigorously I need to take the limit definition. But as a check it works if I just differentiate and see if it is defined. Right?
I have to solve the differential equation (x^2+y^2)dy +(2xy)dx=0 where y(0)=1 . Now , I found dy/dx =\frac{-2xy}{x^2+y^2} . This is a homogenous diff eqn. I tried to solve it by substituting y=vx . However, (0,1) certainly does not satisfy y=vx as given in the question. So, is this question missing some details ?
$x^{-1} \cdot x = e$
$(x^{-1})^{-1} \cdot x^{-1} \cdot x \cdot x^{-1} = e$
$x \cdot x^{-1} = e$
 
2 hours later…
06:24
@tatan maybe substitute x=vy instead, and regard v as a function of y?
06:54
@Semiclassical Works but shouldn't something more specific be mentioned in the question ?
Why? The question is to solve the DE, not to use that specific substitution.
being able to adapt the techniques you know to different situations is part of being able to solve DEs
"it's the question's fault for not giving me enough hints"
@Semiclassical Thanks. I will remember that ;-)
07:00
@user525966 what's confusing you?
Is there a general rule for when topological spaces of multiple dimensions are homeomorphic to spaces of strictly fewer dimensions, or is it more of a case-by-case matter?
@Rithaniel With what sort of dimension?
Arbitrarily many dimensions. For just an example $\mathbb{R}$ in standard metric cross $X$ in trivial topology, where $X$ is any nonempty set. $\mathbb{R}$ serves as the first dimension and $X$ serves as a second.
@Rithaniel No, I mean dimension defined in what way?
Ah, I don't have a good definition for that. I suppose a topological space being dimensional would require it to be a metric space, to allow distances to be defined?
I was thinking product spaces, mainly.
07:15
why would distances be related to the dimension?
I was trying to create a quick ad hoc definition from the top of my head and the best thing I could recall was n-dimensional vector fields having a basis of n-many linearly independent vectors.
and I'm not 100% sure that's an accurate recollection.
The whole issue is that you start with asking about topological spaces, but if you use a measure of dimension that only depends on the topology, then clearly no topological space can be homeomorphic to one of smaller dimension
So, let's talk about product spaces specifically, then. Where the dimension of the space is the number of spaces crossed to create the product space.
that is not well-defined.
The product space?
07:19
no, this notion of dimension
Okay, so a given element of a product space is given by $(x_1 ,x_2 ,x_3 ,...,x_n)$ where each $x_i\in U_i$ for $\{U_i |1\leq i\leq n\in\mathbb{N}\}$ a collection of topological spaces used to create the product space. Since we have $n$ sets in that collection, we say the product space is n-dimensional. Is that any better?
No, because we need to choose a way to write the space, and the number depends on this
What is the center of $R[G]$?
where $R$ is a commutative ring and $G$ is a group
I'm not entirely sure I follow. I think there might be some detail about product spaces which you are thinking of which I'm not.
I think it's more than $R[Z(G)]$
07:26
@LeakyNun Hmm, when $R$ is a field it has a basis consisting of class sums. Probably this will work for any ring
oh
oh right it's just artin wedderburn
@Rithaniel So let's say we have the space $Z = X\times Y$, which is both a product of $1$ and of $2$ spaces, so both $1$ and $2$-dimensional
@LeakyNun No, it is not
no need algberaically closed char 0?
this is more basic than Artin-Wedderburn since there is no need for the algebra to be semisimple or the field to be alg. closed
I see
I mean, it's a corollary of Artin-Wedderburn
07:27
Only when that applies
I mean, obviously $G$ needs to be finite
does it?
And even then, you need to know something about the number of irreducibles as well as knowing what the representatives can be chosen as
So Artin-Wedderburn gives practically no information compared to the calculation here
what if I consider $k[M]$ instead where $M$ is a monoid
No idea what happens for infinite $G$, since we can't take class sums for infinite conjugacy classes.
Ah, okay, so allow $A=X\times Y$ and $B=X\times Y\times Z$, you're saying we can write $B=A\times Z$?
07:29
$\times$ \times
times, danke schon
@Rithaniel Sure
@LeakyNun No idea what happens for monoids in general.
I have only studied the semigroup algebra of monoids in order to determine their special representations in the standard basis, and that was just as an example for a paper
is a "paper" a generalization of semigroup algebra of monoids?
Okay, then talking about comparing dimensions in topological spaces is nonsense, because there isn't actually an established definition.
@Rithaniel Sure there is, but once the definition only depends on the topology, your original question stops being meaningful
@LeakyNun that would be very odd
07:33
Oh, then what's the established definition? (maybe google will be able to give me that)
Okay, so dimension in topological spaces is ambiguous, as there are multiple things which it could potentially refer to? Such as Lebesgue covering dimension or inductive dimension?
Alright, well, that gives me an answer to my original question, then.
suppose $\sum a_g g \in Z(R[G])$, so $\sum_h a_{h^{-1}g} b_h = \sum_h a_{gh^{-1}} b_h \forall g \forall b$, so $a_{h^{-1}g} = a_{gh^{-1}} \forall g \forall h$, so indeed
(The answer being "You need to read more")
@Rithaniel $\Bbb Q=\Bbb Q^n$
07:39
@TobiasKildetoft it still works because we still have 1 and 0, I think
and I don't see any problem generalizing to infinite $G$
Some notion of dimension (the small/big inductive dimension) are defined in terms of the topology and preserved by homeo
@LeakyNun How do you define the class sums in that case?
@TobiasKildetoft oh well the result for infinite $G$ would be different
@LeakyNun Right. Certainly any finite conjugacy class will give something in the center
The question is whether there can be more stuff there
Some notions (Hausdorff dimension for metric spaces) look like they should be preserved by homeo while they are not
07:41
I believe in that case, $Z(R[G])$ is spanned by $\left\{ \sum_{h \in \operatorname{cl}(g)} h \mid \text{$\operatorname{cl}(g)$ finite} \right\}$
@TobiasKildetoft I think there is no more stuff there
@LeakyNun Yeah, this is probably easier to see by writing the algebra as the set of functions with finite support
then being in the center implies taking the same value on all elements of any given conjugacy class (same argument as usual), and then it must be $0$ on any infinite conjugacy class to preserve having finite support.
right
@TobiasKildetoft is there any argument against defining $op(x) + op(y) \in R^{op}$ to be $op(y+x)$?
what do you mean by op(x)?
@AlessandroCodenotti Do you know of any more advanced topology books where different notions of dimension is explored more in-depth?
the canonical set-theoretic map $R \to R^{op}$
07:46
@LeakyNun I don't see the point. The addition in the opposite ring is the same as in the original ring
that's one way of defining it
is there anything wrong with defining it to be the opposite addition?
I would guess there's something in Engelking but I would have to check @Rithaniel
they're the same anyway
nothing wrong with it, but it makes it less clear what is going on in my opinion.
well you're oppositing the multiplication anyway
why not opposite the addition
07:49
because it is commutative anyway
but it's more uniform
since I essentially created a file defining opposite groups and opposite monoids and whatnot
What does $\mathsf{Grp}^{op}$ look like? Is it equivalent to something nice?
isn't Fin-Ab self-opposite
Is extension of scalars exact?
@LeakyNun Yes, the map should be given by sending each group to its dual (using the complex number for example)
@user616128 In what context?
08:03
in the context of $R \to S$ inducing R-Mod => S-Mod, I presume
@TobiasKildetoft As in $A,B$ are both commutative rings, $f:A\to B$ is a ring homomorphism, is $B\otimes_A -$ an exact functor?
sniped :P
@user616128 Then no.
aren't those that are exact called flat morphisms?
08:05
sad days
can I get an F in the chat
@LeakyNun Yes
great
(essentially by definition)
proof by existence of name
08:06
It is also not hard to find examples of non-flat morphisms
TIL of flat morphisms
Just take any non-trivial quotient of the integers
what if I take the trivial quotient of the integers
Then I am tensoring with a free module
08:08
are you?
Then it is exact
but I want to do it anyway
I mean if I take the trivial quotient
I do what I want
If $B$ is nice as an $A$-module you have exactness
08:09
I will take the trivial quotient because I can
No you don't
You do what you want based around limitations
@AlessandroCodenotti Yes, where "nice" = "flat"
lmfao
@AlessandroCodenotti sniped by 1000 years
For example you post your redpill math elsewhere
5 mins ago, by Leaky Nun
aren't those that are exact called flat morphisms?
@user616128 determinant of $T : V \to V$ is $T^\ast : \Lambda^n V \to \Lambda^n V$ where $\dim(V) = n$
08:11
Can we say anything about the cokernel of a flat morphism?
cokernels don't exist
I...I'm... I'm sorry?
wait CRing has colimits
ok cokernel does exist
wait but CRing has no zero object
so rip
yeah not even kernels exist lol
Wait I misasked my question
@user616128 then won't you ask your question
08:22
I'm having trouble formulating it
What I want isn't flatness
I only want to preserve injectivity of module homs with projective cokernel
@user616128 co- or contravariant hom?
I mean, I want $S\otimes_R -$ to take $M\to N$ (injective with projective cokernel) to injective $S\otimes_R M\to S\otimes_R N$
Ahh, I see
I can see that the thing in the image also has projective cokernel if thats of any significance (since right exactness preserves cokernel, and S\otimes - has a right adjoint that preserves epimorphisms)
But won't that always happen since projective implies flat
so if $C$ is the cokernel, then $Tor^1(S,C) = 0$ and this was the obstruction to being injective
09:08
@TobiasKildetoft You're right, thanks for your help
 
4 hours later…
13:01
@MatheinBoulomenos Let $\Bbb Z_2 = \langle x \rangle$ act on $\Bbb Z_3 = \langle y \rangle$ nontrivially. Then $H^2(\Bbb Z_2; \Bbb Z_3)$ is $\text{Fix}_{\Bbb Z_2}(\Bbb Z_3)/(1 + x)\Bbb Z_3$, but the numerator is the trivial group (no nontrivial element of $\Bbb Z_3$ is fixed by $\Bbb Z_2$), so $H^2(\Bbb Z_2; \Bbb Z_3) = 0$, no?
I'm confused; there are two extensions of $\Bbb Z_2$ by $\Bbb Z_3$.
Oh, different actions. In the other one the action is trivial.
OK, so this is correct. Says there is a unique extension with that action and it splits.
So the correct, precise, statement here is that given an $H$-module $N$, $H^2(H; N)$ classifies extensions of $H$ by $N$ with that specified monodromy action.
Hello
Can we call the cayley graph of Z2 X Z2, a torus?
But due to the presence of elements which are involutions the structure is different than in other Zp X Zp s right?
that's a vague question
It's a 2x2-lattice on the torus...
13:13
When considering the cayley graph of Zp X Zp where p is odd, they are Hamiltonian connected
That clearly has less symmetries than a pxp lattice on the torus where p > 2
But for p=2, it's not hamiltonian connected
Ok, thank you very much :) :) :)
Can I say the presence of less symmetries is due to the fact that elements are involutions?
$\newcommand{Hom}{\operatorname{Hom}_{G}}\cdots \Bbb Z[G] \xrightarrow{1+x} \Bbb Z[G] \xrightarrow{x-1} \Bbb Z[G] \xrightarrow{\varepsilon} \Bbb Z$ becomes $\Hom(\Bbb Z, \Bbb Z_3) \to \Hom(\Bbb Z[G], \Bbb Z_3) \to \Hom(\Bbb Z[G], \Bbb Z_3) \to \Hom(\Bbb Z[G], \Bbb Z_3)$ which becomes $1 \to \Bbb Z_3 \xrightarrow{y \mapsto y^{-1} \div y = y} \Bbb Z_3 \xrightarrow{y \mapsto y \times y^{-1} = 1} \Bbb Z_3$ so $H^n(\Bbb Z_2; \Bbb Z_3) = 1$ for all $n$?
13:39
That is correct. $H^n(\Bbb Z_n = \langle x \rangle; A)$ in general is $\ker(1 + x + \cdots + x^{n-1})/(x - 1)A$ in odd dimensions and $\text{Fix}_{\Bbb Z_n}(A)/(1 + x + \cdots + x^{n-1})A$ in even dimensions.
Just a straightforward generalization of the resolution you used
'Cuz $(x - 1)(1 + x + \cdots + x^{n-1}) = 0$
Note how that this means $H^1(\Bbb Z_2; \Bbb Z_3) = 1$, which implies all the complements of $\Bbb Z_3 \leq S_3$ are conjugate; they are all the 2-Sylows, so of course they are conjugate!
$H^1$ can track the conjugacy structure of the Sylows, which is a big thing sometimes.
What are the orbits of the action of a group on it's $p$-Sylows, ie
13:55
@BalarkaSen thanks
I mean, there's only one complement of $\Bbb Z_3 \le S_3$? or do you count different embeddings as different complements?
Only one upto conjugacy. $\{1, (12)\}, \{1, (23)\}, \{1, (13)\}$ are all the complements, and all are conjugate
oh nvm I misunderstood
@BalarkaSen where can I learn about all this nonsense?
(no, not Cassels-Froehlich)
Good question. No idea!
then where on earth did you?
@BalarkaSen unfortunate use of variables?
Lol the $n$
Make it $H^*$
@LeakyNun Through talking with people and sitting down and doing the computation I guess
My understanding of group cohomology is not thorough.
14:05
oh
@BalarkaSen I guess it can be more thorough through tough thoughts though
gee, that's a lot of tee eichs
Anyway if you find a good reference let me know as well
I think the standard ref is Brown but I haven't tried it
14:25
@BalarkaSen exactly
@LeakyNun there's a set of notes by Sharifi that's pretty readable
hast du das link?
That's geared to the needs of number theorists
Brown also includes the topological perspective
There are also sections on group cohomology in the books called "introduction to homological algebra" by Weibel and Rotman. Rotman has more details
sections
No pun intended
Brown is standard. There are other books but usually one starts with Brown.
14:39
Hi @Mike!
If I use the extension $\Bbb Z_3 \to S_3 \to \Bbb Z_2$, it seems that the $E^2$ page for $H^*(BS_3)$ consists of $0, \Bbb Z_2, 0, \Bbb Z_2, \cdots$ for rows at multiplies of 3, all $0$'s for 1 mod 3 rows, and $0, \Bbb Z_6, 0, \Bbb Z_6, \cdots$ for 2 mod 3 rows
omg you're doing pages now
was that called spectral sequences
That means $E^2 = E^\infty$, right? All differentials go out to $0$
No, that cannot be right.
I'm not sure I understand your calculation.
I can tell you what I expect about the answer or give you another go.
I'll have another careful go.
Here is a guy who doesn't know what a symplectic form is being very combative in the comments
@BalarkaSen may I say anything, or just leave it?
14:45
No, leave it. And give me infinite time :P
"If $0 \to M' \to M \to M'' \to 0$ is exact and $M'$ and $M''$ are finitely generated then $M$ is finitely generated"
is there a less messy proof of this?
Don't expect me to say anything in hours
I will do this slowly
@LeakyNun Use the Noetherian property
the what?
Ah but that is stronger than finitely generated
@AlessandroCodenotti I have difficulty understanding when I'm allowed to do what, I have trouble understanding the difference between predicates, terms, relations, etc. I have trouble understand how variables and constants are interpreted, etc.
14:46
@LeakyNun I only know one proof of that: take a generating system of $M'$ send it to $M$ and lift a generating system of $M''$ and take the union of that
that's what I mean by messy, because you used choice (I know, it's finite choice, but it's still choice)
you're essentially going out of the category
you suck man
That's a perfectly good proof
thanks
I appreciate your compliments
you flatter me
seriously it's 48 lines of Lean that I used
14:48
lmao @ leaky
I want a less messier proof
imagine you have to write down every step out (you can use theorems, of course)
you can do a lot of things, you just can't say it's obvious
this is probably very basic, but how exactly does a SES of topological groups $1 \to G' \to G \to G'' \to 1$ induce a fibration $BG' \to BG \to BG''$? (and do we need some assumptions?)
$B$ is a functor qed
Think of $BG$ as $EG/G$ and fiddle around with the terms
(EG)/G' -> (EG x EG'')/G -> EG''/G''
@LeakyNun this proves that you have spaces and maps which is not what was asked
'fibration' is important here
14:51
You can alternatively compute by hand the homotopy fiber of $BG \to BG'$
I'm gone for some time. Cya
See you @Balarka
@LeakyNun here's another proof: one can show that $M$ is f.g. iff for every ascending chain of submodules $(M_i)_{i \in I}$ with $M=\bigcup_{i \in I} M_i$, one has $M=M_i$ for some $i$. Using this, if you have an ascending chain of submodules in $M$ where $0 \to M' \to M \to M'' \to 0$ is exact, you can take the image of that chain in $M''$ and the preimage in $M'$ and then for some $i$, you get that the preimage is $M''$ and the image is $M'$, then for that $i$, $M_i=M$
I doubt proving that characterization and using it is any shorter though
well earlier you said you only know one proof! :P
I only knew one proof at that point, then I thought some more
interesting
@user525966 I can help if you have precise questions, I can't explain everything from scratch
15:44
@MatheinBoulomenos You stole my Noetherian idea. Nice!!
16:39
This seems like a stupid doubt but I am going to ask it anyway. If I have an orthonormal basis $X_j$ at a point of a Riemannian manifold $M$ with an affine connection $\nabla$, does it imply that $\nabla_{X_i}X_j = 0$
This comes up because I am trying to prove that if the connection is compatible with the metric iff $\frac{d}{dt}\langle V,W \rangle = \langle \frac{D}{dt}V, W \rangle + \langle V, \frac{D}{dt}W \rangle $ where V,W are vector fields along a differentiable curve $c$ on the manifold
@MikeMiller Can you help me with this?
17:28
@Albas: The answer is NO, of course it doesn't imply that. That can happen only if the connection has zero curvature. How does it come up in the compatibility proof?
17:49
@MikeM: See my lengthy "comment" here.
@TedShifrin In the compatibility proof when they show that given compatibility the equation holds, they take an orthonormal basis $P_i$ at a point $c(t_0)$ and since compatibility implies the angles between parallel vector fields remain the same they extend $P_i$ throughout the differentiable curve. Then given any vector field $V$, $V = \sum_{i} v^{i}P_i$ and $\frac{D}{dt}V = \sum {i}\frac {d}{dt}v^{i}P_i$. I don't get how they conclude the last bit.
Shouldn't that be only possible when $\nabla _{P_j}P_i = 0$ because when you evaluate $\frac{D}{dt}V$ there is a nabla term in there as well. I must be missing something obvious
Well, aren't we trying to prove the angle remains the same? The point is that the $P_i$ are parallel along the curve.
No, no. You're missing the main point. We only know about $\nabla_{c'(t)}P_i = \frac D{dt} P_i$.
We don't know $\nabla_{P_j}P_i$.
@TedShifrin Good comment, though maybe change "your" to "user(numbers)" so it doesn't look like addressing the OP.
Oh, oops, I thought that was the OP.
Thanks.
Sure thing. user(numbers) was very confused but seemed to be trying to express authority on the subject
17:59
I had never thought through a counterexample on this before. I realized the product of 4-manifolds would be the cheapest place.
@Albas: To emphasize. We can do parallel translation along a curve always. To get a frame that's parallel in all directions requires a flat connection.
Ahh I see. Thanks got it
Are all covering maps open?
18:27
hey. what are the stable homotopy groups of an eilenberg-mac lane space K(G,n)? it feels like it should be super simple because, well, the unstable homotopy is simple, but computing the stable homotopy groups involves taking suspensions, and I don't know how those look like!
@user193319 Are local homeomorphisms open?
@user46225 Already very difficult for $\Bbb{RP}^\infty$, and I think it's related to the J-homomorphism in stable homotopy groups.
18:46
Hi. Suppose we're given an Ehresmann connection on a fiber bundle $\pi:X\to Y$. Given a curve $\gamma$ in the base $Y$, consider the pullback of the fiber bundle and its connection along the curve. It seems the horizontal bundle of the pulled-back bundle $\gamma^\ast X\to I$ is a line subbundle of the tangent bundle $\mathrm T\gamma^\ast X\to \gamma ^\ast X$. Thus we locally have integral curves in $\gamma^\ast X$ for the horizontal bundle.
It also seems that flowing along these integral curves should give diffeomorphisms between fibers of $\pi$, but I'm not sure how to prove this. Would appreciate some help!
Hi
I have a question regarding the idele group $\mathbb{I}_\mathbb{Q}$, which is the restricted direct product of all $\mathbb{Q}_p$ for primes $p$. Given some $y \in \mathbb{I}_\mathbb{Q}$, does there exist a neighborhood $U$ of $y$ such that $gU \cap U = \emptyset$ for all $g \neq 1$ with $g_p \in \{1,-1\}$ for all primes $p$?
@abenthy so you're asking whether the set $\{ g \mid \forall p, g_p \in \{1,-1\} \}$ is discrete
Is this equivalent? If so, I think its false because an infinite direct product of discrete sets with more than 1 elements is not discrete.
then I would agree with you :P
I'm asking this because I want the action of the integral idelic square roots of unity to be a covering space action.
So the action of $G := \{ g \in \prod_{p} \mathbb{Z}_p : g^2 = 1\}$ on $\mathbb{I}_\mathbb{Q}$.
But I don't see why that would be equivalent with $G$ being discrete.
19:01
well if it works for some $y$ then it works for $1$ (just translate everything by $y^{-1}$)
so fixing $y=1$ it would mean that for any $g \in G$ with $g \ne 1$, $g \notin U$
so $1$ would be an isolated point of $G$
but $G$ is still a group so every point of $G$ is isolated
so $G$ is discrete
hi @Ted
hi Leaky
@Ted jetlag is a mess
@LeakyNun Thanks, that sounds right, I'll have to think about it.
worse at my age than at yours, Leaky
do you always travel?
19:09
Always?
I mean, a lot
No. Traveling in a week. But with my body's deteriorating, I suspect I'll do less in the future.
what is the point of singular cohomology?
Do you mean contrasted with simplicial or Cech or ... ?
by itself
19:13
It's more powerful than homology, because the ring structure incorporates understanding how cycles intersect.
I see
Poincaré duality is a huge thing.
@TedShifrin would you have any recommendation for group cohomology?
No, I know nothing.
4
19:30
hi chat
Hi chat
hi chat!
hi chat
oh dear
I've created an echo chamber.
19:36
@MatheinBoulomenos what on earth is a morphism of short exact sequences supposed to mean
(I know the definition)
short exact sequences are in particular chain complexes, the notion of a chain map is pretty central to homological algebra
that doesn't really answer the question, but I'd say most of homological algebra seems difficult to motivate unless you see it arise from some other context
ok so what other context?
well, you have the singular chain complex for a topological space, a continuous map induces a morphism of chain complexes, for example
oh
we're considering the complex $0 \to \operatorname{Hom}(\Bbb Z[G],A) \to \operatorname{Hom}(\Bbb Z[G^2],A) \to \cdots$?
what happened to $\operatorname{Hom}(\Bbb Z,A)$?
that's there as well
in the form of $\mathrm{Hom}(\Bbb{Z}[G^0],A)$
19:44
so there is a typo?
in my complex
yeah, you should start with $0 \to \mathrm{Hom}(\Bbb{Z}[G^0],A)$
no wait, maybe I was wrong
19:47
@MikeMiller ah, right. even hard for G=Z and n=1! Ithink the bottom line is that I had misinterpreted the slogan "if you know the homotopy groups, you know the stable ones" as "if you know all the homotopy groups of a space, then you know all its stable ones, whereas it should be "if you know all the homotopy groups on earth (or just the ones of your space and its suspensions), then you know all the stable ones (or just the one of your space and its suspensions)"
@user46225 Ah, yes. I think that's a silly slogan - they ask too much of us mortals!
so all homotopy groups on $S^2$?
@LeakyNun no it's correct as it is
@MatheinBoulomenos ok
19:54
the idea is that you recover $\mathrm{Hom}(\Bbb Z,A)$ as the kernel of $\operatorname{Hom}(\Bbb Z[G],A) \to \operatorname{Hom}(\Bbb Z[G^2],A)$
i.e. as the $0$-th cohomology group
that's what you always do with derived functors in terms of a resolution, you take a resolution $P^\bullet \to X$ of your object $X$, and then you throw $X$ away and consider the cohomology of the complex $F(P^\bullet) \to 0$
yeah I get it
:P
also you mean $0 \to F(P^\bullet)$?
depends on the variance of $F$
is that a word?
19:57
Hi. Suppose we're given an Ehresmann connection on a fiber bundle $\pi:X\to Y$. Given a curve $\gamma$ in the base $Y$, consider the pullback of the fiber bundle and its connection along the curve. It seems the horizontal bundle of the pulled-back bundle $\gamma^\ast X\to I$ is a line subbundle of the tangent bundle $\mathrm T\gamma^\ast X\to \gamma ^\ast X$. Thus we locally have integral curves in $\gamma^\ast X$ for the horizontal bundle. These integral curves are also transverse to the fibers of the bundle $\gamma^\ast X\to I$.
username checks out
@MikeMiller how are you?
@LeakyNun I'm not sure about the wordness of "variance"
great
$A_G \cong \Bbb Z \otimes_{\Bbb Z[G]} A$
interesting
wörtigkeit
19:59
worthaftigkeit
02:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

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