I was enjoying myself greatly though, I think the book is totally awesome. Until suddenly a chapter of extensions and contractions in rings of fractions appeared...
Kiran Sridhara Kedlaya (; born July 1974) is an Indian American mathematician. He currently is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
At age 16, Kedlaya won a gold medal at the International Mathematics Olympiad, and would later win a silver and another gold medal. While an undergraduate student at Harvard, he was a three-time Putnam Fellow. A 1996 article by The Harvard Crimson described him as "the best college-age student in math in the United States".
Kedlaya was runner-up for the 1996 Morgan Prize, for a paper in which he substantially im...
@DavidWheeler You know what's messed up and really ****** up, our lecturer for the analysis course skimmed through this shit really quickly and then went to inverse and implicit function theorems
@robjohn Tuomas presented a cute generalization of the Carleson theorem (getting the Hunt version for free) for an intermediate space to an UMD space and a Hilbert space.
(Open problem: Is every intermediate space between an UMD space and a Hilbert space an UMD space?)
@robjohn I was getting really ill, so I booked a flight this afternoon to get home (otherwise tomorrow). There was only one seat left today for all flight carriers to Amsterdam apparently! So they charged me an arm and a leg, so to speak 8-)).
one could theoretically write a program to track the public "# of downvotes" stat on a select group of user profile pages and keep timestamps of their changes...
manifolds take this idea, and run with it. we basically turn problems of stuff happening on a surface, to stuff happening in the (euclidean) tangent planes, where everything is much easier.
"The solution is kept thoroughly mixed and drains from the tank at the same rate." does that mean the solution in is the same as solution out? Meaning y' is 0?
Maybe the full context will help "A tank contains 1000L of brine with 15kg of dissolved salt. Pure water enters the tank at a rate of 10L/min. The solution is kept thoroughly mixed and drains from the tank at the same rate. How much salt is in the tank after t minutes and after 20"
But then that means it never leaves? So I don't understand what I am calculating
The solution is being diluted by the adding of the water. They mean that you can disregard the fact that in actual practice, the fresher water would be at the top, and the saltier water at the bottom.