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22:00
No, you want this universally for all $g,g'$ that are close.
Right so, for each $g$, we find a neighbourhood $U_g\ni g$, such that when $g'\in U_g$, we have $\vert h(g)-h(g')\vert<\epsilon$. We can find a finite cover of the diagonal of these $U_g$'s. And now somehow I have to formulare that there exists a "tube".
Group action? You mean a functor from the groupoid of one object to the category of sets?
I guess I would have to formulate/prove the tube lemma for this more general case?
@BalarkaSen i open chat to see this shit
smh
Serves you right for repeatedly pinging me, @Erico.
22:09
about GH!
Yes, but I've heard vacant promises before.
that’s true but i also read more now than i used to
@BalarkaSen You laugh but there's people out there who think like that. We showed orbit stabilizer as a consequence of some nonsense about presheaves being a colimit of representable presheaves in the HoTT course
oh geez
@Alessandro I am not laughing. I am serious
I don't see an issue with this
22:11
hides in the crypt
I tried to find out if there's a notion of projective limit of metric spaces or of coarse spaces earlier today
I will be very surprised if there is a coarse inverse limit
Looks unlikely even in the easy case of a countable chain
@Alessandro Consider $S^1 \to S^1$, $z \mapsto z^p$. Look at the inverse system of circles given by these
It's already messed up even for metric spaces so
@BalarkaSen Uhm what does it look like? I have no intuition here
22:16
@Ted could you give one more hint ;( ~
It has a natural map from $\Bbb R$ to it, given by the universal cover map to each factor
@Balarka: If you want a good laugh, look at this. Or am I being obtuse?
It also has a natural copy of $\mathbf{Z}_p$, the $p$-adics, sitting in it
(think of the $p$-th roots of unity inside $S^1$)
The space happens to be $(\Bbb R \times \mathbf{Z}_p)/\Bbb Z$ where $\Bbb Z$ acts diagonally
22:17
But I mean, it's not even clear what metric to put on the inverse limit
Countable inverse limit of metric spaces naturally has a metric, it sits inside the product space
You know that $\tilde h$ is $0$ on the diagonal of $G\times G$, @Sha. Can you show that there's such a neighborhood $\tilde U$ so that $(g,g')\in\tilde U\iff gg'^{-1}\in U$?
Taking products is already messy in the coarse category
@TedShifrin Hahah it took me a while to see $N$ is the normal bundle and the manifold both at the same time
I was staring at the first line for a solid minute
@BalarkaSen Right, but when working with coarse spaces you really shouldn't change the metric of the factors, which you need to do to metrize the product usually
22:21
I don't know coarse I am just giving an example
This space is a natural geometric space called the $p$-adic solenoid on which $\mathbf{Z}_p$ acts
I know, but I want to work in a category of metric spaces, not of metrizable spaces
It should be the replacement for "Cayley graph of $\mathbf{Z}_p$"
What is a natural geometric space on which $\text{Gal}(\overline{\Bbb Q}/\Bbb Q)$-acts?
@Balarka: Seems the person is reading nLab and totally getting things wrong, too.
Look at the crazy short exact sequence.
Hahahaha
@BalarkaSen You can still do a "cayley" graph thingy by picking a generating set, can't you?
22:22
Swear to god I did not notice
@TedShifrin I don't see it rn, but it might do me good to go to bed. I will think about it again tomorrow.
@Alessandro I think that will be completely horrible and irrelevant
Very noncanonical I guess
OK, sleep well, @Sha.
Thanks, bya
22:23
Also infinite degree is bad for graphs for some reason
Hmmm local compactness gets messed up I guess
@BalarkaSen Is this to me or to Demonic?
To you
The short exact sequence is gold
I totally gave up at that point and posted my bitchy comment.
You know your notation is bad when even differential geometers complain about it (sorry Ted)
@Alessandro Essentially the correct notion of Cayley graphs of pro-groups should be taking Cayley graphs of each guy in the inverse system, and then taking an inverse limit - but doing this in the category of graphs cannot possibly be right, you should do it in the flexible category CHaus
Only then you get interestingly weird spaces on which these pro-groups act
What is the coarse geometry of these spaces? I have no idea
I thought about this once.
Many moons ago
22:26
Inverse system of graphs sounds weird
That's essentially the $S^1 \to S^1$, $z \mapsto z^p$ example. $S^1$ is, topologically, the Cayley graph of $\Bbb Z_p$ with standard generator :P
@BalarkaSen All limits exist in graphs though so why not?
This is bad
@Alessandro: In my own defense, if you look at my papers and books, I think you'll find that I think about exposition :P
2
Q: Is the inverse limit of simplicial maps between finite directed graphs also a graph?

Dan RustI think I have an intuitive understanding of why the following statement might be true, but I am not sure how to go about proving it. It's also possible my intuitive understanding is wrong and the statement is not true. Let $G$ be a finite connected directed graph. Let $G_1, G_2, \ldots$ be a se...

It is not a very interesting space
22:29
@TedShifrin I looked at your books before, but I don't know if I want to look at your papers, diffgeo is too scary for me!
@BalarkaSen Hm
Most of my papers are more algebro-geometric in flavor, actually.
I'm afraid that's even worse if you ask me
My thesis has a few technical pages that would make you cringe, but otherwise it too was mostly readable.
Yeah, but I don't do abstract algebraic geometry crap.
Paul Garrett has some notes where he talks about p-adic solenoids you can look into those if you want
But I do use exact sequences of bundles and sheaves and adjunction formulas.
22:30
Actually algebraic geometry and differential geometry are the lowest grades I ever got counting both my bachelor and masters
I think pro-spaces are interesting and some people already know the story (Sullivan, if I had to guess).
I dunno the coarse side of things
@BalarkaSen I already have way too many things to read
I found a very nice book about coarse geometry of Polish groups the other day which is very tempting
Same
We combine the Galois phenomena of the previous Chapter with the phenomenon of geometric periodicity that occurs in the theory of manifolds. We find that the Abelianized Galois group actscompatibly on the completions of Grassmannians of k-dimensional piecewise linear subspaces of R∞
From Sullivan, "Localization, Periodicty, Galois Symmetry"
That seems like a great geometric space on which Gal(Q) acts to me
22:58
@Balarka There was a slight error in my uniqueness assertion earlier, but I realized that, once we have existence, uniqueness follows from regular Picard-Lindelöf after fixing the first variable. By translating the differential equations back and forth through the chart, the functions $\Phi^i\colon U_i\times(-\varepsilon,\varepsilon)\rightarrow M$ are each uniquely characterized by $\Phi^i(x,0)=x$ and $d\Phi(x,-)\vert_t=X(\Phi(x,t))$ for all $x,t$. These agree on their respective overlaps also by fixing $x$ and then regular Picard-Lindelöf, so they glue together to $\Phi$.
23:09
Well another wierd question. I mean stupid question.
It is telling me use Euler pentagonal number theorem and expand it to 3 factor and ask me verify if it is pentagonal number or not lol.
And it doesn't even tell me what actually is Euler pentagonal number theorem
23:26
And for God's sake after some testing I found the formula for pentagonal number itself is wrong lol $\frac {n(3n-1)}{2}$.
for n =0,-1,-2,...
it doesn't give you 1,5,12,.... instead it gives 0,2,7,... lmao
I think it should be positive natural number instead

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