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00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

00:02
Neat: this page shows how to draw approximate versions of these tilings on a grid
Next time I have graph paper in front of me I'll try this
This seems easier than guessing 72-degree inclines freehand
and it seems like it doesn't do much beyond the distortion
::have a strong urge to compress the above diagram top and bottom::
Actually, it's not obvious to me that this doesn't mess with the overall structure
How do I know that this version is aperiodic, like the original?
Oh wait I think I see it
the 5 stars in the figure forming two large pentagons side by side, thus it has to be aperiodic
The deflation rules are the same
Hm, wait, each inflation/deflation actually changes the shapes of the pentagons slightly
I don't think that should matter, actually
I'll sleep on it
00:19
Hi guys are people familiar with Runge-Kutta (4th order) for systems of DE's and it's implementation in some programming language?
Can always count on DogAteMy to put up serious pictures !!
53 mins ago, by Akiva Weinberger
user image
It looks so purty
Does it have some particular mathematical construct?
@TedShifrin IIRC: Take $\Bbb Z^{17}$
Take the plane in $\Bbb R^{17}$ spanned by $(\cos(2n\pi/17):0\le n<17\}$ and $(\sin(2n\pi/17):0\le n<17)$
(By this I mean the vector $(\cos(0),\cos(2\pi/17),\cos(2\cdot2\pi/17),\dots)$ etc)
Note that, under the linear map $e_i\mapsto e_{i+17}$, this plane rotates $2\pi/17$ radians
Take every point in $\Bbb Z^{17}$ that's within a certain distance of this plane and project it onto it
and I think the same for line segments between those points
(That distance might be $1$, I'm not sure)
You get this tiling with rhombuses. It's aperiodic
Ah, interesting.
00:34
If you do the same in 5D space you get Penrose
I'm not quite sure what happens in 3-, 4-, or 6D space
but I'm guessing you get something periodic
Maybe even just the usual tilings of triangles, squares, and hexagons
These are things I've never contemplated. Thanks. :)
3 mins ago, by Akiva Weinberger
Note that, under the linear map $e_i\mapsto e_{i+17}$, this plane rotates $2\pi/17$ radians
$e_i\mapsto e_{i+1}$ I meant
where $e_i=(0,0,\dots,1,\dots,0,0)$ in the $i$th place, and addition is mod 17
(Quick puzzle: why are those two vectors perpendicular)
(and I forget what their magnitude is)
(Something involving $\sqrt{17}$ probably)
(Maybe $\sqrt{17/2}$?)
I'm not following quite well enough.
A simpler example would be, why are $(\cos(0),\cos(72^\circ),\cos(144^\circ), \cos(216^\circ),\cos(288^\circ))$ and $(\sin(0),\sin(72^\circ),\sin(144^\circ), \sin(216^\circ),\sin(288^\circ))$ perpendicular
in $\Bbb R^5$
and I'm 99% sure their lengths are $\sqrt5/2$ each
Also: why does the linear map $(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4)\mapsto (x_1,x_2,x_3,x_4,x_0)$ rotate the plane spanned by them by $72^\circ$
That just falls out of identities, doesn't it? e.g. cos 72 = cos 288, sin 72 = -sin 288
00:41
Yeah
Should be a good way to do this with complex vectors.
Simplest is $\sin(x)\cos(x)=\frac12\sin(2x)$, average of sine function is 0
Similarly, average of $\sin^2$ and $\cos^2$ are each $\frac12$
(For the perpendicular and lengths)
Oh, I think it actually rotates the plane by $-72^\circ$, if we orient the plane by the order I gave its basis in
and hi @Fargle
the shadow of a 3D cube lattice at certain angles forms a quasicrystal pattern
Hey @Ted
00:46
If you use a 5D lattice you can get 5-fold symmetry easier @Ultradark
If you use 3D I think you get tilings that look like this
oh okay, is 5 fold symmetry special?
No periodic crystal has it
The only symmetries allowed for periodic tilings are 2, 3, 4, and 6
So if you ignore that and try to make a 5-fold symmetric pattern anyway you're guaranteed to either accidentally end up with the wrong symmetry, or make a quasicrystal
I like that one
1 hour ago, by Akiva Weinberger
user image
^17
I remember someone once saying that quasiperiodic tilings give higher dimensional lattices "something to do"
'cause they seemed kinda abstract, not really predicting any phenomena
but it turns out you can slice and project them and get neat pictures
(Dunno what happens if you try this with, say, the E8 lattice)
Arright, night, I shoulda been asleep three hours ago
See ya
 
5 hours later…
05:54
woo .. some beautiful pics here :)
I have array of characters. I want to balance them in a manner that ever character appears equal number of times. I am allowed to replace any character in the array by any other character. I need to find out minimum number of such replacements required to create such an array.
 
1 hour later…
07:05
hi, may i ask a quick question, what are the primitive root modulo 125?
my computation shows 3,8,13,23,28,33,38,48,53,58,63,73,78,83,88,98,103,108,113,123.
am i right?
07:19
oh these are from 3, from 2 will get another 20 roots.
07:38
> In July 2017 Michaël Rao completed a computer-assisted proof showing that there are no other types of convex pentagons that can tile the plane.
WHA
Why was I not told about this
I remember when the 15th one was discovered
I thought it was an open problem whether the list was complete or not
07:52
> Rao said he felt disappointed not to have discovered any additional families, but tiling experts say that proving a complete list of 15 is more significant than simply finding a new working example.
@AkivaWeinberger Cool.
So when you have 15 rooms in your house, you can tile the floor in each of them differently :-)
user image
2
Wolfram MathWorld's page on them still has the outdated information that the list is not known to be complete
(but this wouldn't be the first time Wolfram MathWorld has incorrect data on it)
The "Einstein" also sounds cool.
I like that type 3 is really just hexagonal tiling.
Zee
Zee
Anybody knows how to glue sheaves ?
08:03
Wait why is type 4 not convex
Oh it's just an error
1. Acquire glue
2. Acquire sheaves
3. ????
Here ya go, 4 is fixed
Actually, in that image type 4 looks for two "stretched" hexagonal tilings overlaid on each other.
It and 8 look like the Cairo tiling
except that they both have a free parameter and the Cairo tiling doesn't
In fact, I bet that the Cairo tiling is a special case of both 4 and 8, with the right parameters
Hi, in a direct product $A \times B$ or a semidirect product $A \rtimes B$, is there a particular name by which we can identify A and B? Can we call them the factors of the product?
08:14
@Rithaniel sinc they are periodic, all of them in a way have to show either 2-,3- or 4-fold rotational symmetry.
In crystallography you call the tiles "asymetric units" and the smallest periodic bits "elementary cell"
or "unit cell"
(or 6-fold)
Fair enough, I can see why that would be true. (Also, I can't immediately discern the unit cell for type 9. What would that look like?)
@Zee do you want to glue sections of a sheaf or do you want to glue schemes? I've never heard of gluing sheaves
@athos $(\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z)^\times$ cyclic (for $p>2$) of order $(p-1)p^{n-1}$ [1] with $(\varphi(p-1)) (p-1) p^{n-2}$ possible generators. Let $q = \lim_{m \to \infty} i^{p^m}$ where $i$ is a primitive root of $p$. Then $q^p=q$. Then, $(q+pr)^{ap+b} = q^{a+b} + bq^{a+b-1} rp + O(p^2)$, so it should work as long as $r \in (\Bbb Z/p^{n-1}\Bbb Z)^\times$ (if it works then it has to be those).

[1]: combinatorial interpretation: p-1 choice of the ones digit.
what that means for $p=5$ and $n=3$ is that you can compute the primitive roots of $5$, that being $2$ and $3$, and then what you want will be numbers of the form $a \times 5^2 + b \times 5 + \omega^{125}$ where $a \in \{0,1,2,3,4\}$, $b \in \{1,2,3,4\}$, and $\omega \in \{2,3\}$
@Buddhini yes, and in the semidirect product you call $A$ the normal factor
tm = pow(2,125,125)
print(tm)
print(*((tm + 5*b + 25*c)%125 for b in range(1,5) for c in range(5)))

tm = pow(3,125,125)
print(tm)
print(*((tm + 5*b + 25*c)%125 for b in range(1,5) for c in range(5)))
@athos ^ corresponding code
08:32
@Rithaniel Here's a GIF of type 9, with its parameters varying
Its unit cell is eight tiles (two groups of four)
@AkivaWeinberger trippy
Note that there are two types of groups of four in that image (different orientations)
Find one of each type that's next to the other
(The GIF pushes it into a nonconvex tiling at parts even though this was from the classification of convex tiles)
@AkivaWeinberger if you know anything about Lie groups, there's this very important exponential local-isomorphism
which turns out to be also present in the p-adic world
You mean the map from the algebra (tangent space) to the group?
$\exp : p^n \Bbb Z_p \to 1+p^n\Bbb Z_p$ ($n=2$ for $p>2$; $n=3$ for $p=2$)
@AkivaWeinberger yes
$\exp(p^n r) = \sum \dfrac{r^k}{k!} p^{nk} = 1 + p^nr + O(p^{2n})$
oh no, $n=1$ for $p>2$ and $n=2$ for $p=2$
$\exp : p\Bbb Z_p \to 1+p\Bbb Z_p$ for $p>2$
$4\Bbb Z_2 \to 1+4\Bbb Z_2$ for $p=2$
08:42
@LeakyNun thx.
no problem
however i don't follow the part that Let $q = \lim_{m \to \infty} i^{p^m}$ where $i$ is a primitive root of $p$
those are the Teichmuller representative
very fun to play with
what is this limit for, as m goes to \infity
somehow it converges!
to a number $q$ where $q^p=q$
08:45
let p=5, what is q?
anyway $\exp$ should descend to a map $p \Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z \cong 1 + p \Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z$
@athos so if $i=1$ then $q=1$; if $i=2$ then $q=57$
if i=3 then q=68, if i=4 then q=124 = -1
and $\exp : p\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z \cong 1 + p\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z$ should be the proof that $(\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z)^\times$ is cyclic for $p>2$
$p$ has order $p^{n-1}$ so $\exp(p)$ has order $p^{n-1}$ also
so I've found an element of order $p-1$ and an element of order $p^{n-1}$
@AkivaWeinberger might you be interested in this?
How much of that was addressed to athos and how much was addressed to me
@AkivaWeinberger some were addressed to athos and some were addressed to you
so $(\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z)^\times$ has order $(p-1) p^{n-1}$ right
those two numbers are coprime
so to prove that it's cyclic we only need to find something with order $p-1$ and something with order $p^{n-1}$
better, the generators correspond (hey this is the proof for the multiplicativity of totient!)
we have this Teichmuller lifting map $\Bbb F_p \to \Bbb Z_p : [i] \mapsto \lim_{m \to \infty} i^{p^k} =: t_i$ which is a monoid homomorphism (respects multiplication) that sends 0 to 0 and 1 to 1
so that's how you lift the roots of $X^p-X$ from $\Bbb F_p$ to $\Bbb Z_p$
restrict back to $\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z$
and you'll have found a subgroup of order $p-1$ by removing $0$
i.e. $\Bbb F_p^\times \to \Bbb Z_p^\times \to (\Bbb Z/p^n\Bbb Z)^\times$
Wait is $i$ just a variable here
09:00
hmm...
Reverse casmir effect
I wonder... what it means to reverse infinity...
another thing that is of interest is the following:
For real functions, it seems when its limiting behaviour tends to $\pm \infty$ is very different when it tends to some real number $r$
The latter does not admit functions that increases at faster and faster rate indefinitely, while the former can
Is it the nature of the reals that causes the slowdown as a function approaches $r$?
Is that has something to do with the nested interval theorem being true in the reals?
@LeakyNun Wait is $\Bbb Z_p$ $\Bbb Z/p\Bbb Z$ here or is it p-adics
Why does that not depend on the choice of $i$
@ÍgjøgnumMeg Thanks a lot!
ah well
this has to do with lifting the exponent
$v_p\left((i+p)^{p^n} - i^{p^n}\right) = v_p(p) + v_p(p^n) = n+1$
so as $n$ goes to infinity, the difference goes to $0$
at a very uniform rate
09:17
However, in the projective line, such does not happen. Is there somethingt topologically distinct between a point at infintiy vs a point at r?
09:30
Thoughts: When we prove the intermediate value theorem, we aren't learning about continuous functions or the real line; we're learning about the definitions and tools we use to study them
We already know that the intermediate value theorem is true. What we don't know is that our definition of "continuous" is the "right" definition (the right way to mathematically model the phenomenon).
So when we show that these tools can prove the intermediate value theorem, we get more confidence that these are the "right" tools.
If we couldn't prove the intermediate value theorem, we would ditch our definitions and get new ones.
(I think they call this Platonism?)
@AkivaWeinberger nice
hmm...
...I need to remind myself again the proof strategy of the intermediate theorem. It has been a long while since I last used ut
hmm ok, so...
we first start with the epsilon delta notion of continuity, and from that using completeness, we can establish the intermediate value theorem, hence our notion of continuity gain confidence as the correct definition
Note that it's false in $\Bbb Q$
($x^2-2$ is a continuous function from $\Bbb Q$ to itself and attains both positive and negative values but never attains $0$)
(Similarly, $1/(x^2-2)$, which—as a function from $\Bbb Q$ to itself—is continuous and defined everywhere)
yup, as in this set, some sup/inf can fall outside the set, and hence the epsilon inequality needed to proceed the proof becomes void
Yeah, this is how you know the proof needs to talk about supremums (or something equivalent to it)
$\sup\{x\in(0,2):x<0\}=\sqrt2$
09:44
Now to figure out how intermediate value theorem can help to show there exists no continuous functions that increases rapidly to some r whereas such function does exists when the limiting behaviour is $\pm \infty$...
Let $f$ be a continuous function in the reals with asymptote $r$
There's also a neat proof involving ordinals
You basically derive a contradiction by showing that you'd be able to embed $\omega_1$ in the reals
(in an order-preserving way)
Zee
Zee
Man, just took a mean dump
Fix any point $x < r$. Consider the interval $[x,r]$. Then since $f$ is continuous, by intermediate value theorem, there is some $c \in [x,r]$ such that $\min (f(x),f(r))<f(c)< \max (f(x),f(r))$
Now as $x$ tends to $r$, the bounds of this inequality shrinks closer to $\max (f(x),f(r))$
@Zee I'm proud of you
and hence $|f(r)-f(c)| < \epsilon$ as $x \to r$
That is thus responsible for the slowdown that must happen as the function approaches $r$
Meanwhile, the same thing cannot happen for $r \to \infty$, because $|f(r)-f(c)| > M$ for any given $x \to r$
Zee
Zee
09:52
I wish my mom would say that to me
and hence for $f$ whose "asymptotes" are at infinity, the function can rise indefinitely rapidly
hmm.. this give me another way to think about infinity: Infinity can be defined as a mathematical object that is roughly invariant when subjected to a relation that is tied to a mathematical notion of size
Or in laymen terms, infinity resists the change in size
That might be a way to unify the different notions of infinity in set theories. For example:
$\omega$ does not change size for any finite element added from the left
Aleph cardinals does not change size when multiplied, added to a cardinal that is smaller than them
Dedekind cardinals, Amorphous cardinals, Russel cardinals can be reduced forever, but will never become finite
Inaccessibles are (... ok I think I get lost...)
ok.... Inaccessibles remains the same no matter how many times they are "subscripted", as long those are not inaccessibly large
And finally, for $x >> y$, |x-y| > M for given $x,y$ (i.e. $\infty$ does not become less infinite)
So that means...
💥(Infinity) =
> Let $S$ be a size relation, let $x$ be a mathematical object of type $\text{Inf}$ and let $y$ be the relation $(S,S)$. Then $x$ is infinite if: $$y(S(x),S(x))$$ has type $\text{Inf}$
So in general, infinity is an object which is preserved under some size relation
Thus for example, given a vector space, a vector $v$ is infinite if there exists at least one linear map $A$ where $\det (A) > 1, \text{Tr}(A)>0$ such that $$Av=v$$
10:25
Messing around with a subgroup of $S_8$ and I'm finding my mind blown. Specifically $\langle (1234),(1537)(2648)\rangle $. I've not previously encountered a group where commutativity comes and goes so freely.
Non abelian groups are actually pretty common and important
Yeah, but this is more on individual elements commuting with each other or not. Like, call the first one n and the second one m. $nm\neq mn $, of course, but $m^2n=nm^2$ while $n^2m\neq mn^2$
ah, now that's more interesting
I wonder do we have a notion of "power commutativity"...?
Also $mnmn=nmnm $ and $mnm^{-1}n=nmnm^{-1} $
10:34
(Should have probabaly gone with h and a for the lols)
In mathematics, more specifically in abstract algebra, the commutator subgroup or derived subgroup of a group is the subgroup generated by all the commutators of the group.The commutator subgroup is important because it is the smallest normal subgroup such that the quotient group of the original group by this subgroup is abelian. In other words, G/N is abelian if and only if N contains the commutator subgroup. So in some sense it provides a measure of how far the group is from being abelian; the larger the commutator subgroup is, the "less abelian" the group is. == Commutators == For elements...
You make me curious about the derived series of this group
But trying to calculate that by hand will be a pain
I was actually working on some more abstract problems involving the commutator subgroup the other day.
Like G/N is abelian if and only if N contains the commutator subgroup, if I recall correctly. Though I feel that might be incorrect, for some reason.
Feb 6 at 11:59, by Rithaniel
Alright, homework question: "If $N$ is a normal subgroup of $G$, show that $G/N$ is abelian if and only if $N$ contains the commutator subgroup of $G$." I'm having some difficulty coming up with a good approach to this. (I think I need to have that if $n\in gN$ then $n^{-1}\in gN$ as well, but I can't figure out how to show that either.)
Yeah, that's the one.
10:41
yeah, the commutator subgroup and derived series in a sense, measures how nonabelian a group is
I think it might be possible to teach 1st year undergraduates about commutator subgroups using the rubik cube rotational group as an intuition
this is because many moves of solving a rubiks cube are actually commutators that do not vanish
Thus a group where its derived series is of length 2 will be like an alien rubiks cube where say the move LRRL (each of these being commutators) is not the same as the identity
11:00
How can I show that a countable union of sigma algebra is an algebra? let A,B in the union then both A and B are in some sigma algebra A_k and A_n , how can I make sure their union is in some sigma algebra?
you can verify that the 3 axioms of sigma algebra is satisfied. The sets in each sigma algebra, in particular, will be preserved by countable unions
It doesn't work
the sequence has to be an increasing sequence
If the union does not work with 2 it'll not work with countably many
11:47
@Rithaniel So you want to figure out when $xy=yx$ in $G/N$, yeah?
When is element of $G/N$ equal to the identity element?
12:12
I want to calculate $$\lim\limits_{x\to 0}\frac{\ln(1+2x)}{x^2}$$

using L'Hospitals rule: $$\lim\limits_{x\to 0}\frac{\ln(1+2x)}{x^2}\overbrace{=}^{L'Hospital}\lim\limits_{x\to 0}\frac{\frac{2}{1+2x}}{2x}=\lim\limits_{x\to 0}\frac{4x}{2x+1}\to \frac{0}{1}=0$$

The solution from my lecture is that $\lim\limits_{x\to 0}\frac{\ln(1+2x)}{x^2}$ doesn't exist. What am I missing?
12:30
$\frac{\frac{a}{b}}{c}=\frac{a}{bc}\ne\frac{ac}{b}$
oh thx
:D
Im dumb xD
don't say that, Akiva is around ...
Oh, sry xD
12:53
Hello!! Could someone of you take a look at my question about LU decomposition with column pivoting?
0
Q: LU decomposition of matrix using column pivoting

Mary StarI want to find the LU decomposition of the following matrix $A$ using Gauss algorithm and column pivoting. $$A=\begin{pmatrix}6 & 4 & 3 & 1\\ 1 & 1 & 0 & 2 \\ 2 & 3 & 1 & 6 \\ 1 & 3 & 7 & 3\end{pmatrix}$$ $6$ is the largest element of the first column, so we don't have to change something and th...

How do you generate those images ?
Connecting all the rosettes (five fat rhombuses surrounded by five skinny rhombuses forming a decagon)
The original I found here preshing.com/images/penrose.jpg
On an iPhone there's a feature that lets you draw on your images
@Astyx Did you see this thing from last night
I did
I described there how it was obtained (to the best of my memory)
In the transcript ?
13:39
Yeah
A plane cuts through 17D space, and then points and squares from the integer lattice that are close to the plane get projected onto it
That's the integer lattice ?
13 hours ago, by Ted Shifrin
Does it have some particular mathematical construct?
From there^
@Astyx Pieces of $\Bbb Z^{17}$ that got projected onto the plane
That's cool
Kinda like that^
Yeah I figured
13:43
This one (preshing.com/images/penrose.jpg) is called the Penrose tiling, and it was discovered from messing around with pentagons. People later discovered you could get it from higher-dimensional lattices
I guess you need a rational slope or something to get something nice
Rational slope would be periodic
Irrational slope would be quasiperiodic, and that's the interesting case
The Penrose tiling is quasiperiodic
It never repeats, but every finite piece of it appears infinitely many times in the tiling
Hmmm
These two tiles actually force aperiodicity
They tile the plane, but they cannot tile the plane periodically
(The shapes of the notches aren't so important, it's just to ensure that the rhombuses only get put together in certain ways)
@Astyx There's also something called the einstein problem
"Einstein" means one stone
The problem is to find a single tile that forces aperiodicity on its own (instead of the set of two that we have)
There's a weird nonconnected tile called the Socolar–Taylor tile that works
but it's still an open problem for connected tiles
It's known it can't be convex
There are some connected single tiles that can tile the plane aperiodically but also periodically as well iirc
13:51
@AlessandroCodenotti Just use a domino
Take a square tiling, cut each square into two dominoes, but randomly choose whether to cut each one horizontally or vertically
I was thinking of the L shaped one, there is a substitution rule producing an aperiodic tiling
Ah right yeah that's a neat one
You can't force it to do that with notches and tabs though I think
or maybe you can but only if you use multiple tiles (each with their own configuration of notches)
14:25
@Ted: I did the proof myself and I understood it. I just don't get motivation, i.e, how did you see the relation between the constraint equations and $\mathbf{C}(A) \subseteq \mathbf{N}(A^T)^\perp$
Hi @Akiva, @Alessandro
You're kinda addicted to tiles, aren't you, @Akiva?
briefly reconsiders life choices
Maybe
Chill, it's ok. We all have something to disappoint our parents... for example, I plan to major mathematics. :P
@AkivaWeinberger: Did you have a look at the paper?
@AkivaWeinberger I would die for it if anyone could explain to me how to get the Fourier-transform of the dots in on the black line ....
The thing is the FT of the 2D lattice is simple. Also in principle its not too difficult to get a strip of finite thickness and arbitrary angle in the FT. But I somehow always failed to do it properly.
And its not clear to me how substantial it is to have the projections, or if it a finitely thick stripe does also the trick (of quasiperiodicity).
15:17
@AkivaWeinberger I mean the idea is that taking a strip of the 2D lattice corresponds to a multiplication with a kind of step-function (one direction step the other just a constant). And then multiplication Fourier-tranforms to a convolution operation.
So actually it should be a piece of cake ...
15:51
Hello gamers
Did you know you could make fractals in MS Paint?
@Rudi_Birnbaum I did but I didn't really get it
@AkivaWeinberger good to hear that I'm in good company
gamers rise up
Let $(A_n)_{n=1}^\infty$ be a sequence of measurable sets. A sanity check, is it correct that , $\liminf A_n \subseteq \limsup A_n$?
16:06
what is limsup
@famesyasd $\operatorname{sup} A_n$ as $n\to \infty$
Nope
What so?
@Eran What do you think?
@LucasHenrique $\bigcap_{n=1}^\infty\bigcup_{k\geq n} A_k$
$\limsup A_n = \lbrace x\in \mathbb{X} : \forall N \in \mathbb{N}, \exists n > N s.t x \in A_n \rbrace $
16:10
That's a new thing to me. Thanks.
Is there a way of rendering tex in the chat?
@AlessandroCodenotti it's a yes for me, just checking with you guys
.
* rendering someone else's TeX
@Eran I mean do you have an argument supporting that feeling or is it a guess?
(It is true indeed)
what does this have to do with measurability?
16:12
Nothing
every x that is in A_n for all n>N for some N is definitely infinitely many times
But usually one encounters such limsups and liminfs in measure theory, for example in the Borel-Cantelli lemmas and stuff like that
just from the definition I said
Yeah I agree it's just a matter of checking the definitions
thank you
16:15
@LucasHenrique The intuition is that to be in the liminf you need to be in all but finitely many $A_n$ while to be in the limsup you need to be in infinitely many $A_n$
@DerekAdams tinyurl.com/cfqcvpc
Many thanks
What's everybody studying on this sunday?
16:31
Partition relations and partition cardinals here
Care to explain?
(in laymen's terms preferably)
Uhm they are some kind of large cardinals but it's hard to tell much about them without going into details
I see. Sounds more interesting than what I'm doing. I'm currently working through Halmos' Finite-Dimensional Vector Spaces
I'm not familiar with it, but if it's written by Halmos I'm willing to bet it's good
16:47
Very. Have you read his text on Set Theory?
I did, it's an extremely readable introduction!
Hi @AlessandroCodenotti
I'm studying
@Lucas: Remember that $N(A)$ tells you what linear combinations of the columns give you the zero vector. Thus, $N(A^\top)$ tells you what linear combinations of the row vectors give you the zero vector. That's what is encoded in the constraint equations: Think about how they arrive algorithmically.
hi italic @Alessandro, @Tobias
Hi @TedShifrin
16:51
So you failed them all, huh? :)
Well, 8 of them in total
Oh, that's not a big percentage.
no, it was fine.
Hi @Ted
Hi @Tobias
For one of them it was more than a fail though, as it was the third attempt, which means the last unless you can get a dispensation from higher up (which requires a good reason)
16:52
Meanwhile, none of my high school kidlets in my AoPS calculus class has done his/her homework. None. I'm sorta tired of teaching.
Well, @Tobias, I stopped several people from graduating during my career.
Ultimately, most of them should probably never have gotten out of first or second year, but too many faculty gave them "generous" grades in calculus and linear algebra, etc., that they definitely did not deserve.
Yeah, I feel fine about this one. They had enrolled in the class again, but did not do any homework this time (the homework is mandatory in order to take the exam, but only first time you do the course)
The resulting exam was not even close to a passing grade
Yes, so of course I won't do exercises to try to learn the material ... because I already know I don't know it.
No sympathy whatsoever.
This is my shortest ragequit yet.
LOL, there was a ragequit?
For about 12-18 hours.
16:55
We still missed you
I don't think I'm to blame for this one :P
Nope, you're safe. Anyway.
Last conversation we had was about circle-valued $1$-forms :P
00:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

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