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01:25
helllo
01:38
hello @StanShunpike
01:52
I saw a problem which went as follows. Suppose $v,w \in \mathbb{R}^n$ and $c$ is a scalar. Show $span(v+cw,w)=span(v,w)$.

I don't understand what there is to prove. Both $w$ and $v + cw$ are spanned by $v,w$. So by construction, $span(v+cw,w)=span(v,w)$
02:03
@StanShunpike That proves that span(v+cw,w) is a subset of span(v,w)
What you need to prove it two things: ${\rm span}(v+cw,w)\subseteq{\rm span}(v,w)$ and ${\rm span}(v,w)\subseteq{\rm span}(v+cw,w)$
To prove the first one, you have to show that if something's an element of ${\rm span}(v+cw,w)$ then it's an element of ${\rm span}(v,w)$
To prove the second, you have to show the reverse
So: suppose $x\in{\rm span}(v+cw,w)$…
02:25
@AkivaWeinberger ah ok thanks for clarifying
 
4 hours later…
06:10
In this proof, I can't understand why $q-q(c_j)=(x-c_j)h$ holds.
06:27
plz help!
 
2 hours later…
08:23
I feel like I'm losing my mind. Is it not true that, if $X$ and $Y$ are random variables subject to $0\leq x\leq y \leq 1$, then $F_{X+Y}(k)=\int_0^1\int_x^{k-x}f_{X,Y}(x,y)dydx$?
Okay, I think my issue is that I am messing up when finding $f_{X,Y}$
This is actually $f_{X_{(3)},X_{(4)}}$ when $X_1,X_2,X_3,\ldots X_4$ are four independent random $\text{Unif}(0,1)$ random variables and $X_{(k)}$ is the $k-$th order statistic of these four.
We supposedly have that $f_{X_{(i)},X_{(j)}}(x,y)=\frac{n!f(x)f(y)F(x)^{i-1}(F(y)-F(x))^{j-i-1}(1-F(y))^{n-j}}{(i-1)!(j-i-1)!(n-j)!}$
However, plugging in $i=3$ and $j=4$ with the above random variables, we arrive at $f_{X_{(3)},X_{(4)}}(x,y)=12x^2$
Then taking $\int_0^1\int_x^{1-x}12x^2dydx$ gives me $6-4k$, which says that $P(X_{(3)}+X_{(4)}\leq 1)=-2$
Which is absurd
 
2 hours later…
10:45
Is uncountable product of compact spaces compact ?
11:29
Take the cover of the space which is just each set in the product @Shawn
11:40
@Shawn yes
11:56
@Rithaniel I didn't got , can you elaborate little ?
Also in box topology or in product topology or both ?
Whenever I sit down to read abstract algebra some song starts to play in my head.
Loudly
It might be possible that arbitrary cover i am referring to does not have an element having each set as product ?
@TheTerriblePuddle medicalsciences.stackexchange.com or wait for TedShifrin
@Rithaniel It's not that easy (to prove in one line), Tychonoff theorem there for help
Also Tychonoff theorem proves for product topology
12:21
Well, the thing you have asked (product of compact spaces is compact) is precisely Tychonoff's theorem.
12:46
Afternoon all
13:27
Sanity check: if I have a free $A$-Module $A^r$ with $A$ contained in a field $K$ then $A^r \otimes_A K \cong K^r$
just extension of scalars right?
I can send $(a_1, \dots, a_r) \otimes k \mapsto (ka_1, \dots, ka_r)$ for one direction I guess, where do I send $(k_1, \dots, k_r)$ for the other direction? lol
@ÍgjøgnumMeg tensor product commutes with direct sums, so you may assume wlog $r=1$
and then I just send $k \mapsto 1 \otimes k$?
Cool :) Thanks
@Mathein also I think I got the surjectivity of that homomorphism $\operatorname{SL}_2(\Bbb Z) \to \operatorname{SL}_2(\Bbb Z/N\Bbb Z)$
13:35
which is nice, since it was frustrating me lol
13:54
Hi, I have a small question: Give G=(V,E) and |V|=n, What is the maximum number of edges of path cover [vertex-disjoint path cover] problem? I believe it is n - 1. Is it possible to be n?
Here is a definition for path cover
@ÍgjøgnumMeg $\left( \frac{a_1}{b_1}, \frac{a_2}{b_2}, \cdots, \frac{a_n}{b_n} \right) \mapsto \left( a_1 b_2 \cdots b_n, b_1 a_2 \cdots b_n, \cdots, b_1 b_2 \cdots a_n \right) \otimes \frac{1}{b_1 b_2 \cdots b_n}$
or more simply, don't forget that elements of tensor product don't need to be pure tensors
Given a directed graph G = (V, E), a path cover is a set of directed paths such that every vertex v ∈ V belongs to at least one path. Note that a path cover may include paths of length 0 (a single vertex).A path cover may also refer to a vertex-disjoint path cover, i.e., a set of paths such that every vertex v ∈ V belongs to exactly one path. == Properties == A theorem by Gallai and Milgram shows that the number of paths in a smallest path cover cannot be larger than the number of vertices in the largest independent set. In particular, for any graph G, there is a path cover P and an independent...
@ÍgjøgnumMeg $(k_1, \cdots, k_r) \mapsto (1, 0, 0, \cdots, 0) \otimes k_1 + (0, 1, 0, \cdots, 0) \otimes k_2 + \cdots + (0, 0, 0, \cdots, 1) \otimes k_r$
Ahhh nice
@Mathein where was that room where I could get printed Skripte nochmal? :D
and am I allowed to just walk in and take a skript?
first floor
yes you can just take one
 
1 hour later…
15:20
does anyone know where do profs steal questions from
linear algebra & diff eqns
steal is a strong word
Some questions tend to be standard ones that are asked across the board (they're more common in the more advanced or abstract courses) but the majority of problems are made specifically by the professor themselves
 
1 hour later…
16:27
Can anyone help me with calculating a double integral over a general region
"Just ask; don't ask to ask."
@Semiclassical Sorry, forgot about that.
What I am asking is calculating the double integral when the region of integration is something like this:
This is in contrast to something like this:
In the latter case, we are able to find constant bounds for the outer integral
okay. so it's a region which you can't describe easily as "the area between graphs of two singe-variable functions"
typically, you'd look for some convenient way of parametrizing the region of integration
16:34
@Semiclassical So basically a change of variables so that the region in the new coordinate system is easily described as the "area between graphs of two singe-variable functions"
Pretty much, yes. The tricky thing is that your change of variables will affect the double integral via the Jacobian. (This is just the multivariable version of the substitution rule.)
Okay, so it's kind enough to give you the transformation.
@Semiclassical Yes i read about that.
@Semiclassical I am still having trouble with the outer integral though :(
Can you see what range of u and v would generate that region?
16:37
u obviously goes from 1 to 4
Right. The v part is the problem.
Yes.
Any hints?
I suppose I'd go like so. First, we pick some value of $u$ from 1 to 4.
We now want an expression for the range of $v$.
So we've got $u=x^2-y^2$ and $0\leq y\leq (3/5)x$.
Gross.
Well the answer suggests that the ratio of the upper and lower limit is 2
We've got $x=\sqrt{u+y^2}$, so $0\leq y\leq 3/5 \sqrt{u+y^2}$
Actually, come to think of it:
$u$ is a difference of squares, so $u=x^2-y^2=(x-y)(x+y)=(x-y)v$
So $x+y=u$ and $x-y=u/v$. Hence $x=(u/2)(1+1/v)$ and $y=(u/2)(1-v)$
So therefore $y=(u/2)(1-v)\geq 0\implies v\leq 1$
should have been $y=(u/2)(1-1/v)$, woops
and therefore $v\geq 1$
similarly, $y\leq (3/5)x\implies (u/2)(1-1/v)\leq (3/5)(u/2)(1+v) \implies 1-1/v\leq (3/5)(1+v)\implies 1 \leq 4/v \implies v\leq 4$
so $1\leq v\leq 4$?
that seems too easy
16:48
but this gives the wrong ans
this gives exactly twice the given ans
the ans is ln2*(e^4 -e)*0.5
hmm, interesting
well, the jacobian in this case is 2u, isn't it
regardless, I don't trust my work
oh, yeah, I wrote it wrong
u=x^2-y^2, v=x+y thus u/v = x-y thus x=1/2(v+u/v), y=1/2(v-u/v)
then y>=0 gives v>=u/v
and y <= 3/5 x gives v+u/v <= 3/5(v-u/v) gives v+4u/v <= 0
only way that can work is if v isn't positive, in which case I think one gets $-2\sqrt{u}\leq v \leq -\sqrt{u}$
which looks an awful lot like what you suggested
still not convinced that's right tho
the jacobian is 1/2v
so that makes the final integral e^u/2v
u goes from 1 to 4
the problem is with v
17:04
hmm. I get $\partial (u,v)/\partial (x,y) = (2x)(1)-(-2y)(1)=2(x+y)=2v$
so agreed
as I look at how (u,v) parametrize (x,y), I don't think one can write the range on $v$ as $f(u)\leq v\leq g(u)$ for $1\leq u\leq 4$
so is the question wrong?
let me restate that. you can write the range in that form, but f(u) and g(u) will have to be piecewise functions
so different f(u), g(u) depending on what range of u you're considering
which...yuck
So how do i begin to write those piecewise functions
17:30
Hey lukewarm lizards
2
That is an interesting greeting
Does anyone else have any ideas on this^^?
I am having trouble staying awake, so, unfortunately, nope
@Rithaniel well every other time I use hot cats and no one comments. :(
I've noticed when you greeted with hot cats. But those days I was in lurker mode
Maybe try tepid tapirs?
Muggy mooses?
17:44
I like the tapir one.
Magical liopleurodons?
@Rithaniel I'd ask you what math you are doing lately, but you should probably go to sleep if you are having troubles staying awake.
I am in lecture. It would be very rude to go to sleep. :P
As for math: probability HW and examining groups of order $2^6$
All 267 of them?
17:50
@MatheinBoulomenos did you know that number off the top of your head?
Yes, by hand
(Nah, just a couple)
good luck with that
$Q_8\rtimes Q_8$ and $C_2^3\rtimes D_4$ in particular
I would consider myself quite skilled if I could classify all 267 myself, though
Of course, it seems more tedious than anything
iirc we don't know the number of groups of order $2^{11}$ yet
Hey, open problem for me to lose my mind trying to tackle
I'm assuming it's a huge number, maybe more than $2^{17}$ groups?
Because the number of order $2^6$ is more than $2^8$, so I imagine it grows roughly exponentially
18:01
the number of groups of order $2^{10}$ is $49487365422$. There are probably some heuristics for estimating the number of groups of order $2^n$, but I'm not familiar with it
That's more than $2^{35}$, yeah
Also, potentially worth noting is that the highest power of 2 it is divisible by is 2.
 
1 hour later…
19:05
When, if ever, do the isotopy subgroups of non-isomorphic abelian varieties commute?
 
2 hours later…
20:57
@Ultradark
Anyone here good at free groups?
@ShineOnYouCrazyDiamond i know what a free group is and i know the pingpong lemma, but thats all
Just ask your question
Hi, demonic @Alessandro
@ShineOnYouCrazyDiamond does the fat dot $ z=i \bullet i$ indicate that there is some string $x$ so that $z= ixi$?
Yes
that's precisely what it indicates
THere may be many versions of it inside of $s$ (ways of realizing $i \bullet i$)
the string between them can also be empty?
@s.harp thx for the upvote
Yes
empty is possible as in $ababab$
$i = ab$
thus $i^4 = 1$
every element should indeed be invertible under this construction
$H$ is indeed normal.
That's a trick in free groups. Quotienting by all elements $y Ey^{-1}$ given what you really want to quotient by $E \subset F$.
if $s= abab\, c\, ab$, is then $(ab)^4=1$ one of the relations you are interested in imposing? what about $(ab)^2c(ab)^2$?
21:26
On the other hand, we could just say $H = \{ x \in F : x $ is not possible $\}$ which should simplify things
Remember
that grouping on $s$ you gave
corresponds to $i^4$.
I.e. each element corresponds to many groupings of terminal variables within $s$.
*many possible
hmm so if $i \in I(s)$ (is terminal) with $s= i\bullet i ... \bullet i$ (n times) then you want to have every $i x_1 i x_2... x_n i$ to quotient to the neutral?
@s.harp see edits
I changed $H$ to the simpler version
Because it is true that the set is multiplicatively closed by $xy^{-1}$ since you can't multiply two impossibilities to reach a possibility!
If $i \in I(s)$ then $s \notin F$, only elements of $I(s)$ are allowed in!
yet you wrote $s = i \bullet \cdots \bullet i$.
@s.harp is it making sense yet?
not really, sorry
I'm not sure about $x \in H \implies x^{-1} \in H$ though.
$\bullet$ is also connected to how multiplication is denoted in the Free group $F$?
21:38
Yes it is the free group multiplication
@s.harp how can I make the construction more rigorous / clear?
formal
ok, one more question: for your example $I(s)$ has $11$ elements, is $F$ then a free group with $11$ generators? or do you have relations like $ab\bullet cd = abcd$ (all 3 are in $I(s)$)
Yes
first guess is correct
$F = \text{FreeGroup}(I(s))$.
ok^^
So in essence the string nature of them is not used, the elements of $I(s)$ are just placeholders
Though, it is a string algorithm
yes, that confused me initially, but now i understand that
21:42
What should I say in the post to make it more clear?
There might be a relationship between $\cdot$ and $\bullet$. Not sure
*concatenation = $\cdot$
Let $s = abab$. Then $I(s) = \{ab\}$ and $i \in I(s) \implies i^3 = 1$. Thus $G(s) = C_3$ the cyclic group of order $3$.
yes, I think I am understanding
I may be wrong, it could be $C_2$
You have to determine whether each of $x y^{-1} \notin H$ for $x,y$ powers of $i$.
the subgroup $H$ is the subgroup generated by all elements $i_1\bullet ... \bullet i_n$ ($i_1,..., i_n\in I(s)$ ) so that there is no way to inject strings into the $\bullet$ to get $s$?
Yes
If you label each $\bullet_i, i = 1...k$
then there is a string hom that does the replacement
Not sure how that applies though, but good guess! It's fun
What would be neat is if we could relate the group at this stage $G(s)$ with the group $G(s')$ where $s'$ is $s$ with some compressibles taken. For instance is one a subgroup of the other?
That is to say it would have to survive the construction that way
$s' = IabIabc$ and $I = ab$. Then $I(s') = \{ab, abI \}$.
I think $G(s') \leqslant G(s)$ is a subgroup!
A grammar at the end of this process would have $G(s^{(k)}) = \{1\}$ since $I(s) = \{\}$ and we call $\text{FreeGroup}(\{\}) = \{1\}$.
@s.harp would you like to collaborate with me on this question?
It's fertile research area: smallest grammar problem (SGP)
22:02
I bookmarked your messages, I'll think about it tomorrow, right now I cannot concentrate
@ShineOnYouCrazyDiamond yo
how's the research going?
Yo @Ultradark
See my link:
2
Q: Quotient of a free group on the compressible substrings of a string.

Shine On You Crazy DiamondLet $s$ be a string over an alphabet $\Sigma$, say $s = abcdabcdab$. We write $t\leqslant s$ to mean $t$ is a substring of $s$ or there exist $u, v$ strings over $\Sigma$ such that $utv = s$ where multiplication is string concatenation. Define $C(s) = \{ t \leqslant s : tvt \leqslant s,$ for s...

@Ultradark A function $f:A \subseteq \mathbb{R} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ is uniformly continuous if $\forall \epsilon>0$ $\exists \delta>0$ such that $\forall x \in A and \forall y \in A$ with $|x-y|\leq \delta$ we have $|f(x)-f(y)|\leq \epsilon$.... Is the negation then There exists and $\epsilon>0$ such that $\forall \delta>0$ there exists $x\in A$ or $y\in A$ such that $|x-y|\leq \delta$ and $|f(x)-f(y)|\geq \epsilon$??
22:13
@Ultradark research is going okay :)
Can someone ping me when yall finish answering his question? Thanks :)
@amanuel2 which question?
The one you were working on, I think Ultradark
Im gonna ask my question now, free to answer whenever since im gonna be going to class rn :)
@ShineOnYouCrazyDiamond that's good
For this MATLAB Question Questions 5C) and 5D), we are suppose to comment the answers since in (*), but I really dont seem to understand how to get the answer
So far my code:
v1 = [2; 1; 3; 1];
v2 = [1; 5; 8; -3];
v3 = [-1; 1; 1; 2];
v4 = [0; 3; 5; 5];
v5 = [3; 3; 7; 4];
A = [v1 v2 v3 v4 v5];

rref(A)

BASIS = A(1:4,1:3)
%c
%Polynomial : No Idea HELP
%d
%No idea if W = P3 HELP
22:39
@amanuel2 what do you get for rref(A)?
23:07
1 0 0 1 2
0 1 0 0 0
0 0 1 2 1
0 0 0 0 0
Please, read this.
923
Q: Stack Overflow is doing me ongoing harm; it's time to fix it!

Monica CellioOver the last month, Stack Overflow has violated its own policies and precedents to cause egregious and unnecessary harm to me -- to my reputation (personal and professional), to my health, and to my safety. This harm is significant and ongoing. It is past time for the company to correct its e...

And this.
28
Q: Reinstate Monica

S. Kolassa - Reinstate MonicaMonica Cellio has called for Stack Overflow to address what they did to her: Stack Overflow is doing me ongoing harm; it's time to fix it! A number of users have changed their username to "Reinstate Monica" or some variation thereof and changed their avatar as follows: At CV, it appears that ...

23:49
What is the intuition behind the fact that an isometry is represented by an orthogonal matrix? The proof here is clear (math.stackexchange.com/q/169923).

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