« first day (3073 days earlier)      last day (2245 days later) » 

00:21
hi
is there any Literature/Information on a "theory of equations" for the algebra of sets
A, B, C, D, ..., and so on are fixed subsets of a universal set, U. X is a subset of U and is restrained only by its particular equation. Find the condition(s) under which a certain equation has a solution and obtain all the solutions.

Ex) X union C = D only has a solution if C + D (symmetric difference of C and D) is a subset of X, and X is a subset of D.
@MacroGuy boolean algebra
00:49
Let $X = [0,1]/\sim$ where $0 \sim 1$. I've been asked to show that $X$ is homeomorphic to $S^1$. I figured that $f : X \to S^1$ given by $f([r]) = e^{2 \pi i r}$ would be the homeorphism, but even proving it continuous is hard. How should I proceed. I tried showing that $f^{-1}(S^1 \cap B(e^{2 \pi i x}, \epsilon)$ is open in $X$ for $x \in X$ arbitrary, but it got messy pretty quickly.
@user193319 universal property of quotient
and then (compact -> hausdorff) ~~> (bijection => homeomorphism)
@user193319 Think about continuity in the metric-space sense, and that part of the question starts looking more like a real analysis exercise.
Bob
Bob
I am hoping that somebody who is good in Calculus can look at my post: math.stackexchange.com/questions/3058165/…
I suspect I made a computational error.
01:30
Let's say I'm on a real number line and I want to move to the number 1 and I'm on 0 and the way that I can move is like: if I'm given a sequence {1-1/n} n in N I can move on the sequnce points (so on like 0, 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 4/5, ... and I can also move onto the limit of this sequence so I can get to 1 immediately).
But the game may not be so generous and after one sequence I could only be at 1/2 for example, and after the second sequence only at the 2/3, after the third sequnce on 3/4 etc so after a sequence of such sequences I can get to 1 eventually. But the game may not be so generous an
VTC very unclear
what's vtc?
vote to close
01:44
okay I'll ask that later
02:11
So, I had an idea for a topology, but I'm unsure if it's a particularly useful one. Take any set $X$. The topology on $X\times P(X)$ is defined such that a set $U\subseteq X\times P(X)$ is open iff $U=X\times P(X)$ or if for every $(a,A)\in U, a\in A$.
It's a fairly simple concept, so I imagine that, if it's a "useful" topology, it probably already has a name and has been studied.
Hi chat
I was thining about the terminologies -
Along the curve
and
across the curve
what is the difference?
(I was about to ask about that "square cup" symbol you used, Leaky. I've not seen it before.)
that's disjoint union
If $Y = \{ (a,A) \in X \times P(X) \mid a \in A \}$ then we have a map $Y \to X \times P(X)$; the topology on the latter is the coinduced topology along the map, with the topology on the former being discrete
Ah, so $(A\bigcup B)\setminus (A\bigcap B)$?
no
$A \sqcup B = A \cup B$
with the emphasis that $A \cap B = \varnothing$
02:22
Ah, okay. It's the same, but with an extra emphasis.
Also, yes, I believe your description is accurate, but I need to read a definition of the coinduced topology to be certain.
my point is just that the topology is useless =)
Okay, thought it might be.
So, the discrete topologies tend to be useless?
Or, rather, it's useless because it's just another way of describing a discrete topology?
you don't get much from the topology, is what I'm saying
the discrete topology is basically the "free" topology
you can, however, put a product topology on $P(X) = 2^X$ which makes it compact (by Tychonoff)
or the compact open topology on $P(X) = \{f : X \to 2\}$
(they might be the same topology, I don't know)
02:50
conjecture: cyclic extensions of $\Bbb Q$ of degree $p$ correspond to elements of $K^\times/K^{\times p}$ where $K = \Bbb Q(\zeta_p)$
03:45
$\Bbb C[G]^{op} \cong \Bbb C[G]$
03:59
$\Bbb C[G]$ with conjugation is isomorphic to $\Bbb C[G]$ with left-regular action?
denote by $\Bbb C[G]^c$ and $\Bbb C[G]^l$ I guess
we want $\varphi : \Bbb C[G] \to \Bbb C[G]$ with $\varphi(ghg^{-1}) = g\varphi(h)$
04:28
was it compact <-> discrete again
man Iā€™m so unfamiliar
1. C[G] is semisimple
2. C[G] = V1 + ... + Vn
3. End(C[G]) = sum End(Vi)
4. C[G]^op = sum End(Vi)
this is so confusing
04:46
2 is as C[G]-modules, 3 is as C-algebras?
what role does the conjugation action play here then
 
2 hours later…
06:36
Wish a very Happy New year to all!
 
2 hours later…
08:44
Happy new year everyone
Let $\hat{X} = \left( x^0,x^1,\cdots , x^{N-1}\right)$ be the sequence of $N$ i.i.d realizations of a random variable $X$ with pmf $P_1, P_2, \cdots , P_{d}$, where $P_i$ is the probability of appearance of symbol $i$. Can we show that
\begin{align}
\hat{P}_{i} &= \frac{N_i}{N}\\
&= \frac{1}{N}\sum_{k=0}^{N-1} I\left( x^k = i \right)
\end{align}
is a consistent estimator of $P_i$, where $I\left( x^k = i \right)$ is the indicator function (=1 when $x^k = i$, and 0 otherwise)?
 
2 hours later…
10:28
@BuddhiniAngelika the presentation you gave is a semi-direct product of $\Bbb Z_q$ with $\Bbb Z_{p^2}$ so it has cardinality $qp^2$, while the semi-direct product you wrote down has cardinality $qp$
 
2 hours later…
12:00
So apparently End(C[G]) = C[G]^op as C-algebras
$\newcommand{End}{\operatorname{End}}$$\varphi : \End(\Bbb C[G]) \to \Bbb C[G]^{op} : \psi \mapsto \psi(1)$
$\varphi(\sigma \circ \tau) = \sigma (\tau (1)) = \tau(1) \sigma(1) = \varphi(\tau) \varphi(\sigma)$
but $\End(\Bbb C[G])$ is also a $\Bbb C[G]$ module by $(g \cdot \varphi)(x) = g \varphi(g^{-1} x)$?
wait that's nonsense
hi @MatheinBoulomenos!
maybe I should figure this out on my own
the step $\sigma(\tau(1))=\tau(1)\sigma(1)$ doesn't work
what do you mean by doesn't work?
in which category are you taking the endomorphisms?
C[G]-modules
12:17
no, it's okay nevermind
the idea of group rep is that C[G] and C[G] are isomorphic, right?
@MatheinBoulomenos
every object is isomorphic to itself
yeah no
C[G] with the left-regular action and C[G] with the conjugation action
consider the case G abelian
then conjugation is trivial, but the left-regular action isn't
oh man
12:21
Hey guys, newbie here. I wanna ask why Excel use \y=ax^{b} as power function regression model, instead of \y=ax^{b} +c which I think is more appropicate?
why do you keep crushing my dreams
happy new year btw where have you been
happy new year
as in, you haven't been here for a long time
not asking where you have been
@AlexanderGruber haha, yeap, nice part! :-) Thank you for the feedback.
let $G$ act on itself by conjugation and let $V$ be the associated representation over $\Bbb C$ and $\chi$ its character. Then for $g \in G$, we get that $\chi(g)$ is the number of elements that commute with $g$
not sure how more there is to say
the dimension of $V^G$ is equal to the number of conjugacy classes
12:39
@MatheinBoulomenos when is Hom(A,B) an R-module?
are A and B R-modules?
okay say A and B are left R-modules. Then if B is an (R,S)-bimodule, Hom(A,B) is a right S-module. Similiarly if A is a (R,S)-bimodule, then Hom(A,B) is a left S-module
what about just R-module?
ok replace S by R got it
you can take S=R
12:43
what is Hom(R,M) isomorphic to as left R-module?
yes M
ok great
but if both cases apply, then you have two natural R-module structures
but somehow End[R-Mod](R) = R^op as R-algebras
this is very confusing
if you take Homs in the category of right-modules you get Hom(R,R)=R
12:45
maths is confusing
left-right stuff (I guess chemists would call this chirality) is confusing
what is group rep in one sentence?
I don't think you can summarize it so concisely (at least I can't)
like LCFT in one sentence is $W_{F}^{ab} \cong F^\times$...
for the case $k=\Bbb C$ and $G$ finite everything is basically a consequence of Maschke's theoerem and Schur's lemma
well, at least a lot of basic results
12:49
isn't group rep also about two things being isomorphic
welp group rep is about $\operatorname{Fun}(G,\Bbb C)^G$ having two bases
yes?
isn't $\mathrm{Fun}(G,\Bbb C)^G$ one-dimensional?
$Z(\Bbb C[G])$ has two bases one coming from conjugacy classes, the other from Artin-Wedderburn that gives you that the number of irreps= number of conjugacy classes
13:49
great
@MatheinBoulomenos if $\Bbb C[G] = \bigoplus_i V_i$ then $V_i \ncong V_j$?
@LeakyNun no
each irreducible representation $V_i$ is contained in $\Bbb C[G]$ with multiplicity $\mathrm{dim} V_i$
yeah I know where my notes went wrong now
oh, the only purpose of taking End is to count?
the endomorphisms will just be a $\Bbb C$-vector space so we only care about the dimension, yeah
13:52
hey it's a C-algebra also
and it tells us that C[G] as C-algebra is isomorphic to $\bigoplus_i \End(V_i)$ also
you need to account for multiplicities
$\bigoplus_i \mathrm{End}(V_i^{n_i})$
right
if you use $\mathrm{End}(V_i^{n_i}) \cong M_{n_i}(\Bbb C)$ you've got the Wedderburn decomposition
13:56
and [group rep is] also a bunch of tricks that I cannot remember
you might enjoy this answer that I wrote some time ago:
1
A: Can the averaging of a linear arrow of modules over a group algebra be described functorially?

MatheinBoulomenosHere is a higher-level description of this operation, mostly from the perspective of Hopf algebras. You'll have to decide yourself how "functorial" this is. Let $R$ be commutative ring and $G$ be a group. (Usually we have $R=\Bbb Z$ in group cohomology and $R$ a field in representation theory.) ...

@MatheinBoulomenos I like measure theory / harmonic analysis more :P
harmonic analysts probably think differently about rep theory
it's just taking orthogonal complement
or integration, idk
probably $l^2$ of a locally compact group
idk I would really love to learn that
connecting pontryagin duality and group rep
I only know harmonic analysis for things like ideles or $\mathrm{GL}_2(\Bbb Q_p)$
14:05
@MatheinBoulomenos can you teach me :P
not right now
do you have any reference?
14:33
@LeakyNun Tate's thesis is included in Cassels-Fröhlich. For $\mathrm{GL}_2$ over a local field, there's Bushnell-Henniart. Also Bump "Automorphic Forms and Representations" covers both
great
@MatheinBoulomenos do you know pontryagin duality?
how to prove it?
like briefly
also is there biquadratic reciprocity...
haven't looked at the proof in detail
you use Fourier transforms
yes, there's biquadratic reciprocity
really
I'm trying to show that if p%20=11 then x^4+3x^2+1=0 has no roots mod p
I've reduced it to showing that if d^2=5 then 2d-6 is not a QR
14:53
Okay we have Galois group $\Bbb Z/2\Bbb Z \times \Bbb Z/2 \Bbb Z$, so this the composite of two quadratic extensions. If the polynomials has a root mod p, then it splits completely in the splitting field, hence also in every intermediate subfield
splitting in quadratic fields is well understood
actually we can't have that as Galois group
I don't follow at all
Magma says that this the Galois group
mod p...
no I mean over $\Bbb Q$
are you using Dedekind-something theorem?
I don't follow what you said at all
sorry
15:00
the idea is this: let $f=x^4+3x^2+1$. And $K$ be a splitting field of $f$ over $\Bbb Q$.
then $K$ is the composite of two quadratic extensions.
If for some prime $p$, $f$ has a root mod $p$, then $(p)$ splits completely in $K$
(well actually in $\mathcal O_K$, but that's standard abuse of language)
lol I've reduced that case to this case and now you're reducing this case to that case
but ok
and if $(p)$ spilts completely in $K$, then it also splits completely in those intermediate quadratic extensions which I'm too lazy to determine right now
I know the splitting field
what is it?
Q(i,sqrt(5))
15:02
but that spitting may be described in terms of quadratic residues
I think I got it, thanks
great, so if $p$ splits complety in $K$; then we have $\left( \frac{-1}{p} \right) = \left( \frac{5}{p} \right) =1$
no, I don't got it
I don't understand why splits in K implies splits in quadratic extensions
you know ramification index and intertia degree?
15:04
these are multiplicative in towers and splitting completely is equivalent to both being $1$
ah
I'm an idiot
@MatheinBoulomenos where can I learn about hilbert class field?
btw it was fun determining the integers of that field :P
your favorite book on CFT
what, milne?
for example
15:12
in Neukirch it's chapter VI §7
@MatheinBoulomenos why is Q the only unramified extension of Q?
@MikeMiller Is your anti-involution just antiautomorphic involution?
15:25
hi @AlessandroCodenotti
@AlessandroCodenotti do you want a number theory exercise?
@CaptainBohemian Yes.
16:00
when it comes to number theory, I just read something about it. Particularly I read [Affinely Extended Real Numbers] (mathworld.wolfram.com/…), which tells me some arithmetic operations involving +āˆž and -āˆž and 0 are undefined. I have sometimes encountered that kind of arithmetic operation and wonder how to calculate them. But I don't know why this extension is called affinely extended.
16:17
@LeakyNun you can use Minkowski's bound to derive a lower bound for the discriminant of any proper extension of Q
the absolute value of the discriminant, that is
and then use that primes dividing the discriminant are ramified
note that this implies via CFT that $\Bbb Z$ is a PID :P
16:42
This definition isn't the proper definition is it:

https://imgur.com/a/ItqJrEb
(as it is phrased I mean)
what's wrong with it?
Nvm it's fine actually
I was ignoring the word algebraic in algebraic extension like a dum dum
hi @AkivaWeinberger
 
1 hour later…
19:01
Did you know that a toenail can die, and a new toenail can grow underneath it while the first one is still attached?

Help
19:34
The categories $\mathbf{Mat}$ and $\mathbf{FinVect}$ (each over a field $\mathbb{F}$) are equivalent. There is a contravariant duality functor $(-)^\ast\colon\mathbf{FinVect}\rightarrow\mathbf{FinVect}$ sending vector spaces and linear maps to their duals each and there is a contravariant transpose functor $(-)^t\colon\mathbf{Mat}\rightarrow\mathbf{Mat}$ sending natural numbers to themselves and matrices to their transpose. These two contravariant functors on equivalent categories each are related by the following fact:
20:13
If $X$ is a connected space, why is the suspension $\Sum X$ simply connected? I've only found proofs which assume that $X$ is path connected, and it makes me wonder whether it is false.
@user193319 isn't $\Sigma X$ simply connected no matter what $X$ is?
wait no
20:43
I doubt that's true for arbitrary connected spaces but I don't have a counterexample in mind
When people talk about simple connectedness, 90% of the time they're assuming the space is decent
Locally contractible eg
path-connected, locally path-connected, semi-locally simply connected
sure, for covering spaces. To do algebraic topology more generally you really want more than just that.
21:01
I googled a little bit and did not find a counterexample to the claim "if $X$ is connected, then $\Sigma X$ is simply connected"
I still don't think it's true but it probably means people have not thought very hard about this
21:31
In general $\kappa\leq 2^{<\kappa}$ but there can an equality right? For example it should be equal for $\kappa=\aleph_\omega$ under GCH
let $X$ be the topologists sine curve. This has $\tilde{H}_0(X)=\Bbb Z$, as $X$ has two path components. so by the suspension isomorphism $H_1(\Sigma X)=\tilde{H}_1(\Sigma X)=\tilde{H}_0(X)=\Bbb Z$ which implies that $\Sigma X$ is not simply connected by Hurewicz
note that the suspension isomorphism just follows from Eilenberg-Steenrod, so we don't need any assumptions on the space $X$
and you've also given us a stronger theorem!
@user193319
I've just realized that I know nothing about global fields
GCFT is harder than LCFT
21:42
@MatheinBoulomenos Oh, very nice. Thank you!
@MatheinBoulomenos hast du ted gesehen?
not this year
nein, ich meine her
@MatheinBoulomenos I feel like a fool for not noticing this
Good call...
Is anyone familiar with the concept of "Samuel compactification with respect to a proximity"?
21:59
noooope
Samuel might be
It's mentioned on the second page of this thing I was reading
Let $M$ be a left $R$-module and $T : M \to M$ linear such that $T^2 = T$
then $M \cong \ker T \oplus \operatorname{im} T$
When is $\operatorname{Hom}_R(M,N) \cong M^\ast \otimes_R N$?
22:41
I'm doing an exercise in a textbook and I need to calculate the effective dimension of a possibly non-Euclidean network lattice. I have $r^d=2r^2+2r+1$ where $d$ is the dimension of the network and I need to count the number of nodes up to $r$ connections away from a given node. I'm trying to figure out if $d$ converges as $r$ goes to infinity.
@LeakyNun if $M$ is finitely presented and flat (or equivalently finitely generated projective), then it works
proof sketch: there's always a natural map $M^* \otimes_R N \to \mathrm{Hom}_R(M,N)$ given by $\xi \otimes n \mapsto (m \mapsto \xi(m)n)$. One checks that this is an isomorphism when $M=R^n$. In general, take a finite presentation $R^n \to R^m \to M \to 0$, then apply the two functors $\mathrm{Hom}_R(-,N)$ and $(-)^* \otimes_R N$ and use the result for $R^n$ and the five-lemma
22:57
@MatheinBoulomenos what does class field mean?
the name is due to this theorem I think:
In mathematics, the principal ideal theorem of class field theory, a branch of algebraic number theory says that extending ideals gives a mapping on the class group of an algebraic number field to the class group of its Hilbert class field, which sends all ideal classes to the class of a principal ideal. The phenomenon has also been called principalization, or sometimes capitulation. == Formal statement == For any algebraic number field K and any ideal I of the ring of integers of K, if L is the Hilbert class field of K, then I O ...
Would the down voter care to explain their point of view?
23:22
Principal ideal theorem? More like, principal nerd theorem!
How's everything going?
pretty well, had some nice holidays. and yourself?
Same here, modulo some bumps. But yeah kinda ready to get back into things, classes are gonna start Monday
You know what you're gonna be doing next term?
man when can I learn L/GCFT properly
If we have two polynomials f and g with roots a_i and b_i, we can construct a polynomial who's roots are the union of a_i and b_i with f*g or f+g. Is there any easy way to construct a polynomial whose roots are the intersection of a_i and b_i?
Fun problem I heard a bit back, thought you guys might enjoy although I haven't come up with a solution myself yet
23:49
just take the gcd

« first day (3073 days earlier)      last day (2245 days later) »