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00:03
@anakhro yes!
I love it :)
I have a question that is awfully upsetting my soul atm. math.stackexchange.com/questions/3642455/…
I need to define a transform but I cannot figure out how to do it. Laplace, fourier, and mellin don't have the correct support.
you've got an answer, pal
@Geocalc can you give me a hint to the answer of this question
@skullpatrol that's a comment
Do I just try to guess the matrix?
What characterizes orthogonal matrices or orthogonal linear transformations?
00:17
@geocalc33 why the precalculus tag?
@skullpatrol it's basic stuff
@TedShifrin they preserve length?
What else?
"pre" doesn't mean "basic"... It means "before" @geocalc33
oh dammit!
00:19
@skull is prehistoric, so he should know.
hmm if the matrix $A$ is orthogonal then $A^{T}A=I_n$?
Yes, so what does that tell you about the column vectors of $A$?
they are orthogonal too
Right, orthonormal vectors — unit vectors that are orthogonal. So now maybe you should think about how to make an orthonormal basis for $\Bbb R^4$ with the first vector $(1/2,1/2,1/2,1/2)$.
okay I figured it out
$$f(s)=\int_0^1 f(t)K(s,t)dt $$
now I gotta solve it lol
00:25
@TedShifrin perhaps I should change my username to "fossilized skull"?
You change your name so often, anyhow ...
or dinosaur
psiteratops
I will change my name to cryogenic barsign joe
don't ask me whyt
what does geocalc mean?
Geometry + Calculus?
\o @StanShunpike
00:40
Did @Stan sneak in?
What kind of stuff is on the Putnam exam?
You can download all the past exams.
Some are basic calculus, analysis, linear algebra, combinatorics, but most of the time there's something tricky to notice or use.
Oh, I guess the problems are just hard
00:44
@TedShifrin im kinda lost on this question
I thought it would be stuff that the average math undergrad wouldn't be familiar with
Nope. You should be able to read most of the questions and know what they're asking.
121
Q: Studying for the Putnam Exam

PotatoThis is a question about studying for the Putnam examination (and, secondarily, other high-difficulty proof-based math competitions like the IMO). It is not about the history of the competition, the advisability of participating, the career trajectories of former participants, or other such thing...

I have tried constructing a matrix but can't create one no matter what
@Mathphile: Start in $\Bbb R^3$. If I give you one unit vector, how to find two other vectors so that the matrix with those columns is orthogonal? You already said you need pairwise orthogonal vectors that all have length 1.
00:45
Can you walk me through this question please
It would also be easier for your question to look for the inverse of that transformation.
@skullpatrol Thanks :) I'm thinking about doing it next school year. I don't want to be too ambitious, but I want to see if I'll get more than 0 points XD
Practice up on earlier exams. The average score is usually 0, so it's no shame to try and not get any. They don't give much partial credit. I think they give 0, 1, 3, 10 points on a problem when they score, or used to anyhow.
alright so the inverse of the transformation is [1/2 1/2 1/2 1/2] which I am taking as one of the column vectors
Ok, it's worth it shot. Practicing should be fun
00:48
shudders
The first column vector, @Mathphile.
Where a linear map sends the first standard basis vector is the first column.
Now the remaining standard basis vectors can go to any three orthonormal vectors all orthogonal to $(1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2)$, so you have to find one possibility.
I'll take the second column vector as [1/2, -1/2 -1/2 1/2] which is orthogonal to the first vector
OK.
Now you need two more orthogonal to both of those.
00:52
I'll take the third column vector as [1/2 1/2 -1/2 -1/2]
and the forth one as [1/2 -1/2 1/2 -1/2]
Does that work?
Sure looks like it does.
You also should know how solving $Ax=0$ tells you vectors orthogonal to the rows of $A$ ... just in case you need that sometime.
@TedShifrin hey Ted!
:') had to do a proof for a change today
@TedShifrin so the only way to solve this question is to guess the entries?
01:27
@skullpatrol geocalc=geo+calc yes
geometry and calculus
I am a rapper as well
my artist name is: J_Z
like Jay-Z but no diss.
@Mathphile no, find orthogonal complement as I said earlier and then use Gram-Schmidt.
 
2 hours later…
03:22
Is orthogonal basis the same as orthogonal complement?
04:08
Why do we use e^(iθ) and not i^((2/π)θ) the latter one seems much more intuitive to me?
 
4 hours later…
07:41
Hello @José Carlos Santos , could you possibly reopen the question here (math.stackexchange.com/questions/3640960/…) I have the answer ready, have edited it, and the OP has confirmed in comments how they wish it to be answered.
 
3 hours later…
11:11
Category theory are monoids on steroids
it's like having indefinitely many monoids each with a different binary operator, fused together so that associativity holds for all of them
and their identities agree
Say for example I have numbers x,y and define a binary operation "multiply the middle by 2". Then I have x2y
Then I can define a category K where the objects are numbers and the morphisms are e.g. 1,2,3,....
thus in this category Hom(x,y) will be all the numbers that can be multiplied to x,y
11:35
0
Q: Bijectio between two set and cardinality

maths student Use an appropriate bijection to prove that each of the following sets has cardinality $\boldsymbol{c}$ (a) $(0, \infty)$ (c) $\mathbb{R}-\{0\}$ I found this question on internet while reading cardinality stuff. What does c stands over here and How to show there is bijection between those two...

continuum
 
2 hours later…
13:10
@MISC {683451,
TITLE = {Prove that $\sup (C) = \sup (A)\sup (B)$.},
AUTHOR = {5xum (https://math.stackexchange.com/users/112884/5xum)},
HOWPUBLISHED = {Mathematics Stack Exchange},
NOTE = {URL:https://math.stackexchange.com/q/683451 (version: 2014-02-20)},
EPRINT = {https://math.stackexchange.com/q/683451},
URL = {https://math.stackexchange.com/q/683451}
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can someone explain to me the last step that 5Xum did in his proof? the one where he says $(\bar a + \bar b)\delta - \delta ^2<\epsilon$ why did the signs change here to minus?
und why is $\epsilon$ bigger than the given number, why its not just equal?
13:35
@Semiclassical Your answer $\frac{F}{8m}$ was correct and the question was meant to be solved by Lagrangian Mechanics. Thanks for your time
13:52
what is the equation $x=x$ from an algebra perspective
a tautology
@BalarkaSen I have found a truly marvelous proof that every subgroup of index 2 is normal
I have an exercise that's asking me to prove $\iota_v\circ\iota_v=0$, where $\iota_v$ denotes interior product of an alternating multilinear form with a vector. I'm not exactly sure how to interpret this composition. Am I just supposed to note that $(\iota_v(\iota_v\omega))(v_3,...,v_k)=(\iota_v\omega)(v,v_3,...,v_k)=\omega(v,v,v_3,...,v_k)$ for an alternating $k$-tensor $\omega$, $k\ge3$?
Yeah that's all
If you have two $v$'s it'll spit out zero
@LeakyNun I dont want to know
lmao
lol
you first prove a lemma that $x^2 \in S$ for every $x$
then $(gn)^2 = gng^{-1} g^2 n$
Ah I see
13:59
$(gn)^2, g^2, n \in S$
so $gng^{-1} \in S$
fermat's last theorem having been proved doesn't mean fermat jokes are over
change my mind
I actually have found a proof of the Riemann hypothesis, it's just going to take 30 more years of work...
thanks
@LeakyNun Only abc memes are accepted now
slash tilde mochi
abc proof is legit
said no one ever except mochi
14:02
also index 2 subgroups being normal is of course an easy consequence of the fact that quadratic extensions in characteristic 0 are Galois
@AlessandroCodenotti you want an abc meme, I'll give you one
mutually alien copies
wasn't there some news recently about the proof being published in a journal
yea^
but not everyone's happy bout it
Pete S. is skeptical about the proof
Uhm I confused myself when trying to remember an honest prove that index 2 implies normal
14:08
there's only one left coset and only one right coset
so left coset = right coset :)
I know, I know
Let me explain my confusion
In general if $p$ is the smallest prime dividing the order of a finite group $G$ then index $p$ subgroups are normal
Ah ok I see now
Perfect I cleared my confusion, nevermind
did someone say functional field elements in hilbert space enriched with co-complete fibered cat-0 spaces?
and I'm talkin' algebraic function fields if you catch my lingo
14:26
no, nobody said that
oh
****
now I look like a fool
14:43
Grüß Gott
@BalarkaSen And if $p^2$ does not divide the order then there is indeed a subgroup of index $p$ (and a unique one at that).
Oh true
And then it's just a semidirect product
15:01
Is it true that there is no extension of $\Bbb{Q}$ over which $\pi$ is algebraic of degree 3?
since $\pi$ is transcendental
(I read this but want to clarify.)
What about $\mathbb{Q}(\pi^3)$?
Ah, the answer also gives that example
I am a bit confused. Does the answer affirms that $\Bbb{Q}(\pi^3)$ is such extension, or does it assert otherwise?
The answer shows that $\pi\not\in \Bbb Q(\pi^3)$, which is enough to conclude that $\pi$ is algebraic of degree $3$ over $\Bbb Q(\pi^3)$ since it is a root of $x^3-\pi^3$
i c. Thx!
 
1 hour later…
16:16
@Thorgott Do you prefer Lagrangian Mechanics over Newton Mechanics for problems which can be solved by both of the methods?
you're pinging the wrong guy
Okay I won’t ping you for random questions. By the way, How are you?
The Riemann hypothesis is a knapsack problem.
16:35
nah, I don't mind being pinged, it's just that I don't know any physics, so pinging me with physics questions is pretty pointless
I'm fine, writing down some analysis homework
16:48
Thats great!
17:03
What kind of analysis?
"Prove that if $c$ is transcendental over $F$, so is $c^2$."

Suppose $c^2$ is not transcendental, so $p(c^2)=0$ for some $p(x)\in F[x]$. Let $\bar{p}(x) = p(x^2)$. Then $\bar{p}(c)=0$, which is impossible.

Is this a reasonable argument?
@Alessandro the lecture is analysis on manifolds, though this first sheet is only vector fields and multilinear algebra
@hchar yup, that's perfectly reasonable
thx!
note that the same argument shows that if $p$ is any polynomial over $F$ and $c$ is transcendental over $F$, then $p(c)$ is also transcendental over $F$
17:21
agree, and it's nice
17:37
@Balarka apparently it is open whether a torsion group can be quasi-isometric to a torsion free one! I find this crazy
Nice you started watching TwoSetViolin
Fun channel
lol
18:26
mathoverflow.net/questions/358073/… I wanted to link this earlier but I had to leave for a while @Balarka
what does the vertical bar notation mean exactly here?
is "y^{+}" implying a limit I guess?
from Keener's applied math text: amazon.com/gp/product/B07S5DM1ZM
It seems to be indicating the jump across $x=y$ (like a Heaviside function).
18:51
okay, that makes sense.
thanks
19:12
Also @Balarka being torsion free is obviously not a quasi isometry invariant, since it's easy to build groups that are not torsion free but have a finite index torsion free subgroup, but more surprisingly being virtually torsion free is also not a quasi isometry invariant!
Howdy, demonic @Alessandro
@Alessandro That's interesting. Having torsion forces infinite cohomological dimension, so that's a little surprising. Not sure how cohomological dimension interacts with quasi-isometries though
I don't know what cohomological dimension is so...
Howdy, a @Balarka.
19:22
You say a group $G$ has $M$-valued cohomological dimension $n$ if its group cohomology $H^*(G; M)$ vanishes above degree degree $n$ for some $G$-module $M$
Hi @Ted!
Torsion free hyperbolic groups should have finite cohomological dimension
Well now the question is what group cohomology is
But I'm afraid that would take a while to explain
Haha. Well, if $G$ is discrete group then group cohomology with trivial $\Bbb Z$-valued coefficients is the singular cohomology group $H^*(K(G, 1); \Bbb Z)$ where $K(G, 1)$ is the unique space upto homotopy equivalence which has fundamental group $G$ and universal cover contractible
Man I have so much to read, my reading list is exploding
What am I doing with my life
@BalarkaSen I feel you
But I have to finish writing a cover letter and a thesis summary to apply for a PhD
And I also need to write said thesis
19:38
I know :/
Oh no cognitive neuroscience
What co8untry you area applying the phds for?
@EnjoysMath suh
@anakhro relating to that neuroscience thing - 14 years ago I came up with an equation relating energy and number of brain cells lol
21:14
$\lim_{z \to \infty} |C_b(z)|^2 = 1.$ where z is a complex variable and $C_b$ is the firing rate of neurons in the anterior occipital. Under certain environmental stressors and assuming the SOR model of course, it's pretty straightforward to show that the limit exists (with enough data), and tends to one. So in summary, the stress in the brain (under "attack") heightens and firing increases rapidly. It's good to be able to model the decay rate of the stress and show that it goes to a constant
21:26
Orientable even dimensional compact manifolds of positive sectional curvature are simply connected
O_O
Where are you using even-dimensional?
RP^3 is an odd dimensional example
Aha.
How is it used in the proof?
You can leave out compact and just say Ricci curvature bounded below, cuz that forces compactness.
There's a theorem of Weinstein which says that oriented isometries of positively curved manifolds have a fixed point
@TedShifrin Yes but that doesn't force positive sectional curvature
It's a little stronger than the hypothesis of Bonnet Myers
OK, and then what?
21:34
I misspoke; Weinstein's theorem says oriented isometries of positively curved even dimensional manifolds have a fixed point. This implies the theorem I quoted, because any nontrivial element in the fundamental group will give a deck transformation of the universal cover, which an oriented isometry and will thus have a fixed point - but deck transformations which have fixed points are identity
Doesn't explain where I am using even dimensional; need to read Weinstein's theorem's proof
Or maybe I can try to cook a proof up if it's not too hard
I'll think
This kind of thing might be in Kobayashi's Transformation Groups in Diff Geo book, which — once again — I no longer have.
This is at the end of do Carmo after the variations of energy chapter
he calls it the Synge-Weinstein theorem
such a random theorem
Well, as you know, I know almost zero Riemannian stuff ... unless it's basic symmetric/homogeneous space stuff.
That makes my knowledge of Riemannian geometry nonpositive (pun intended), haha
Well, no, it could be hyperreal.
21:40
Haha
a @Balarka, knowst thou about this stuff?
21:51
@TedShifrin Yeah, let me see.
Can anyone offer any help with Bayesian estimation?
The basic idea should be if $p \in M$ is a point, $(U, \varphi)$ is a chart around $p$ on $M$, then let $B$ be a neighborhood of $p$ in $\Bbb R^{k+n} = \Bbb R^k \times \Bbb R^n$ such that $B \cap M = U$, and consider $B \to \Bbb R^{k+n}$, $(x, y) \mapsto (x, y + \varphi(x))$. Then image of $B \cap M$ under this is the graph of $\varphi$... graph of functions are locally flat submanifolds, right?
@PortMadeleineCrumpet just ask :)
22:12
Need to be a little more careful and precise I think.
22:24
@EnjoysMath do you know how exactly to embed an algebraic variety in hadamard space?
@Balarka: But where did you fundamentally use the $y$ in that construction? With smoothness, I would say that you're slicing a diffeomorphism, but I guess I don't get it.
Yeah what I said strictly speaking doesn't work because $\varphi$ isn't defined on all of $\Bbb R^k$; I can't seem to extend it in a way that gives me a homeomorphism $B \to \Bbb R^{k+n}$ either.
Trying to fix
@TedShifrin My idea is the following picture; take a wild arc in $\Bbb R^3$, and embed it in $\Bbb R^3 \times \Bbb R^1$. Then you should be able to find an ambient homeomorphism of $\Bbb R^3 \times \Bbb R^1$ which shifts the wild arc vertically along the $\Bbb R^1$ direction as you traverse it, making it a graph
Yeah, I've seen this idea before.
But you put in $y$ only to set it equal to $0$, so it disappeared.
You're right. Good point.
@geocalc33 I'm not that great in AG yet :)
22:40
@EnjoysMath good to see you again
And you as well :)
@geocalc33 learning some topos theory at the moment
nice what are topoi
It's a category $E$ with some additonal axioms such as finitely complete and cofinitely complete such that the category acts abstractly like $\textbf{Set}$.
how does that relate to an enriched category
Finitely complete means it has all limits of finite diagrams (they exist up to isomorphism as an object)
22:43
oh so it's co-complete or no
With a universal property
I'm not sure how it relates to enriched category theory
ah okay
finitely cocomplete means that it has all (dual of limit) colimits of finite diagrams
So for instance a pullback of two arrows with shared codomain is a finite limit
so it has all pullbacks for one
So pick any two arrows with shared codomain, and a pullback square exists for them
@TedShifrin I think this is actually OK. $\varphi : U \subset M \subset \Bbb R^k \to \Bbb R^n$ be my chart homeo around $p \in U$. Extend this to a map $\tilde{\varphi} : V \to \Bbb R^n$ where $V$ is a neighborhood of $p$ in $\Bbb R^k$ such that $V \cap M = U$; of course, this is no longer a homeomorphism or anything, but $\tilde{\varphi}|_U = \varphi$.
Now re-embed $M \subset \Bbb R^k \subset \Bbb R^{k+n}$ and consider a ball $B$ around $p$ in $\Bbb R^{k+n}$, define $F : B \to \Bbb R^{k+n}$, $F(x, y) = (x, y + \tilde{\varphi}(x))$. This is a homeomorphism (to an open subset of $\Bbb R^{k+n}$), as it is obviously injective and the inverse is given by $G(a, b) = (a, b - \tilde{\varphi}(b))$.
We're studying out of Golblatt's Topoi
22:46
nice!
But we want to slice with a plane like $x=0$ to recover our manifold. I'm confused.
@geocalc33 enriched categories are probably still an advanced topic even for topos theorists
Yeah, let me get to that
Which is to say we haven't covered them yet, in the book
In $F(B) \subset \Bbb R^{k+n}$, $F(B \cap M)$ is graph over the $\Bbb R^n$ factor, of the map $\varphi^{-1} : \Bbb R^n \to U \subset \Bbb R^k$.
22:48
@EnjoysMath ah.
@JosephDasenbrock I like your avatar. It's a wild animal like mine
@enjoys My ultimate research question is: How to classify certain algebraic function fields in Hadamard spaces that are enriched with co-complete fibered CAT(0) spaces. So right now I don't know the answer but I think I can figure it out
What's a Hadamard space?
nonlinear hilbert space
basically, hadamard space is a generalisation of hilbert space
Nice, it would be nice to know how to work with those spaces. To know quantum physics more
Right now I'm in arrow land
22:53
So my claim is if I have a function $f : \Bbb R^n \to \Bbb R^k$ and $\Gamma_f = \{(f(x), x) : x \in \Bbb R^n\} \subset \Bbb R^{k + n}$ is the graph, then there is a homeomorphism $\Bbb R^{k+n} \to \Bbb R^{k+n}$ taking $\Gamma_f$ to $\Bbb \{0\} \times \Bbb R^n$. Just consider $(a, b) \mapsto (f(b) - a, b)$
but I have a big problem. I don't know how to fiber CAT(0) spaces in the proper way. Also I don't know how to "place" the function fields in Hadamard space. And finally, I don't know how to enrich the co-complete things.
@geocalc33 break each definition into its subproblems
and research each
@Balarka, right ... I had typed something to you with that negative sign earlier and then didn't post it.
Cutting off a path whenever it goes out of scope
okay yeah that's what I was thinking :)
22:53
Check nLab
yeah Imma quarantine this problem
Yeah this is very confusing haha but this should work out. I should just write down the final map given by composing these.
Cool, a @Balarka. Still puzzled by why this stuff is in that book, but since I don't know the book, I can't puzzle too much.
Fun question
22:54
Well, fix up your answer and post it :)
@TedShifrin The book's in my school library, I borrowed it for a brief amount of time. It has characteristic classes from the Chern-Weil viewpoint
Yes, that much I know about it.
My former roommate read it more than me though
Enjoys, geocalc: How do you both get the energy for this much troll
22:58
hahahah
Ignoring trolldom is bliss.
I mostly enjoy it, though I had to ignore them for a brief period to work out the problem with you
I just get sucked into the void sometimes
I feel you man
23:13
@TedShifrin My answer
the guy must be life wtf by looking at the homeo
Maybe I should put an explanatory point or two
but then again it's their exercise :P
@Alessandro Oh, this might be of relevance to you as well.

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