« first day (3747 days earlier)      last day (1570 days later) » 
00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 22:00

00:00
@LukasHeger have you heard of the new series Barbaren?
@MikeMiller could it maybe be done kind of "piece-wise linear"? Maybe only for simple things that behave nice enough like knots.
@LeakyNun no
Barbaren (Arbeitstitel: The Barbarians, internationaler Titel: Barbarians) ist eine sechsteilige deutsche Fernsehserie mit Jeanne Goursaud, Laurence Rupp und David Schütter. Als Showrunner fungierten Jan Martin Scharf und Arne Nolting, die zusammen mit Andreas Heckmann das Drehbuch schrieben. Regie führen Barbara Eder (Folge 1 bis 4) und Steve St. Leger. Die Serie wurde am 23. Oktober 2020 auf Netflix veröffentlicht. == Handlung == Die Serie behandelt die Schlacht im Teutoburger Wald in der zweiten Hälfte des Jahres 9 nach Christus. Im Zentrum der Handlung stehen drei Figuren, die sich au...
es ist uber Germania 2000 Jahre vor nun
But, if I must decide, I want to learn about topology more deeply, differential topology, category theory, number theory (still haven't had a proper course of that), some interesting geometry course or another, complex analysis, some non-standard algebra (non-commutative or non-identity-having rings), and maybe even a set and model theory course
why not all @Rithaniel
00:02
That was my initial answer, yes
Maybe not OR or statistics. Those areas have shown up as being fairly dry
@anakhro @AlessandroCodenotti can you think of any absurd space from logic like club sets or a spaces of formulas?
@anakhro I think if you do PL embeddings of simplicial complexes it's true. I don't want to try to write down an argument.
@MikeMiller yeah I was thinking simplicial is probably an easy class. Is every simplicial complex a CW complex, too?
I like these trees.
The nice thing about them is that they give reason for actually being skeptical of Konig's lemma
Or at least, maybe not being as comfortable.
@anakhro They are very nice
"The stronger proper forcing axiom implies the stronger statement that for any two Aronszajn trees there is a club set of levels such that the restrictions of the trees to this set of levels are isomorphic, which says that in some sense any two Aronszajn trees are essentially isomorphic "
Now that's something that would excite high schoolers
00:09
Oh was this supposed to be for high school students?
Don't know whether an isomorphism of trees is a homeomorphism under a sensible topology though
@anakhro Well ZFC proces that there is an $\aleph_1$-Aronszajn tree, so the next step in cardinality after Koenig's lemma is just false
Above that it's all independent and it gets very complicated
Hahaha no I was just kidding about presenting some weird ass homeomorphic spaces as an example of "spaces that are homeomorphic but not obviously so"
And not horned-sphere-weird but logic-weird, which makes it completely detached from anything one would want to present to high-schoolers
Getting the tree property at many consecutive cardinals is an active area of research and those things tend to grow very fast in consistency strength
@AlessandroCodenotti what have you been working on these days?
@user2103480 yeah I feel like logic is not the way to introduce math to high school students. :P
00:14
Some stuff at the intersection of topological dynamics, descriptive set theory and Ramsey theory
More precisely I'm interested in extreme amenability and universal minimal flows of Polish groups
I am not familiar with any of these terms to the point where I know how they work together. Could you give me insight on perhaps one potent connection?
that sure is a mouthful
extreme amenability sounds dope
So for a topological group $G$ extremely amenable means that whenever acts continuously on a compact space $X$, there is a fixed point for the action (an $x\in X$ with $gx=x$ for all $g\in G$)
That's less dope than it sounds
00:17
It's also called the "fixed point on compacta property" for obvious reasons
There is an important theorem by Veech saying that every locally compact group admits a free action on a compact space (its so called greatest ambit for example), so extreme amenability is in some sense an "infinite-dimensional" phenomenon
now that sounds dope again
Where do these things arise?
One of the first examples of such groups was discovered by Pestov and is $\mathrm{Aut}(\Bbb Q,\leq)$
order-preserving bijections of Q?
yeah
Pestov's proof relied on the infinite Ramsey theorem (and logic people actually tell us that it is equivalent to it over some weak theory but who cares)
00:22
Pestov...first name?
Oh I know him.
Would have thought there were more math Pestovs.
In any case, so this reliance on the infinite Ramsey theorem is less than ideal?
Later Pestov, Kechris and Todorcevic expanded that and classified all the extremely amenable closed subgroups of $S_\infty$, they turn out to be the automorphism groups of countable structures in some language that are Fraisse limits of a Fraisse class of rigid structures with the Ramsey property, which basically says that this class of structures satisfies a Ramsey-like theorem
@user2103480 So they tend to arise as automorphisms groups of structures
@anakhro Well it can't be avoided, so it's fine
00:26
starts sweating profusely
There's also a bunch more extremely amenable groups known, orientation preserving self homeomorphisms of $\Bbb R$ (or of $[0,1]$, they are the same group) as well as the unitary group of $\ell^2$ apparently
When you say "Ramsey-like", what in particular is like Ramsey?
I don't understand the latter very well
Ok so, the classical infinite Ramsey theorem says that $\omega\to(\omega)^n_m$ which I now need a moment to unpack into a readable sentence
@anakhro Yes, but not the other way around.
For a simplicial complex the n-simplices are your n-discs.
@AlessandroCodenotti heh.
@MikeMiller is there a classic counterexample?
00:29
So whenever you pick a colouring $c\colon[\Bbb N]^n\to m$ there is an infinite $A\subseteq\Bbb N$ such that $c$ restricted to $[A]^n$ is monochromatic
I don't know one but I'm sure it's easy to construct.
Like the intuitive way is when $n=2$ and $m=2$, then you are building a graph on $\Bbb N$ (you colour pairs of integers depending on whether there is an edge between them) and the theorem tells you that your graph will have either an infinite complete subgraph or an infinite independent family
$n=1$ is pidgeonhole, if you colour $\Bbb N$ with finitely many colours, then there is an infinite monochromatic set
As a fancy counterexample topological handle decompositions exist in every dimension at least 5, and give CW decompositions. But there are nontriangulable manifolds.
For two structures $A,B$ in some language let $\binom{A}{B}$ denote the set of all substructures of $A$ isomorphic to $B$
Then the arrow notation $C\to(B)^A_k$ means that whenever we pick a colouring $c\colon\binom{C}{A}\to k$, then there is a $B'\in\binom{C}{B}$ such that $c$ restricted to $\binom{B'}{A}$ is constant
Okay, I think I see.
00:40
And a class of structures $F$ has the Ramsey property iff for all $A,B\in F$ and $k\in\Bbb N$, there is $C\in F$ with $C\to(B)^A_k$
So the infinite Ramsey theorem says that when $F=\{$finite linear orders$\}$, then $F$ has the Ramsey property
Anyway I should go to sleep now, it's 1:40am over here
@anakhro I saw on math overflow in an answer by tom goodwillie that you can take the mapping cylinder of a really bad self map of the interval.
You can picture that as a crumpled curtain, where the stuff at the bottom gets pasted to other stuff at the bottom.
@AlessandroCodenotti I will maybe bug you later, goodnight!
@MikeMiller very peculiar.
So if you crumple it a lot it shouldn't have the local structure of a simplicial 2-complex. Not much in the way of local structure there.
Can you say much else about this space?
Yes, ok. So imagine pinching the bottom of the curtain together once. (Corresponding to, say, the self map |x-1/2|+1/2). This looks like a trough with the front end open.
Perfectly good simplicial complex. But you could also imagine folding together the bottom of the curtain multiple times (say your map of the interval goes up and down and up again).
Then, near points which are in the image thrice, the space locally looks like (<-) x I, where <- means the cone on three points.
Still all good. So keep folding. If you fold finitely many times you will get something homeomorphic to a simplicial complex. But if you fold infinitely many times... and do it in a neat enough way... you should get a local model that looks like (infinite cone) x I.
This infinite cone nonsense can't be done in a simplicial complex.
Certainly not a finite one, which it would have to be, since our space is compact
00:58
@MikeMiller one exercise is proving that chain homology defines a functor from chain complexes to the category of Z-graded abelian groups. Now I don't really know what's expected here, since we haven't officially covered chain homology, and my first reflex was "uhh isn't it a functor from chain complexes to chain complexes?" (correct me if I'm wrong)

And now my first guess would be to just take the sum of the homology groups and check whether a chain map translates to a homomorphism between such sums
Infinite cone being like the hourglass shape, or just one side?
I mean the cone on an infinite set. A wheel with infinitely many spokes.
@user2103480 You can think of a graded Abelian group as a chain complex with 0 differential but I don't see the point
Oh I see!
@MikeMiller You mean one single group, everything else 0, and all d_n = 0?
... 0 -> 0 - > G -> 0 -> ...
I'd assume the group with grading $k$ at the $k$-th place and all maps $0$
01:10
Yes
01:21
Hello!
Anyone know any "real world" examples of non-associative quasigroups?
does something like positive reals under exponentiation work
Well, yeah, but I'm thinking like "scrambles on a Rubiks Cube" is a "real world" example of a group
Something concrete, a little bit outside the clarity of purely symbolic descriptions
I think of the Rubiks cube thing as more of an action than a group.
Yeah, the Rubiks Group acts on the Rubiks Cube. So, perhaps I should say "Anyone know of any real world things which a non-associative quasigroup acts on?"
01:34
I always liked the magma of rock paper scissors.
Hmmm, is that closed? I'm thinking of something that returns "victory/loss/draw" instead of "rock/paper/scissors"
Hello I am trying to solve a diff eq system, puu.sh/GKx5U/590d0eac47.png of these 2 sums in wolfram mathematica. Well and basically I cant figure out how to do it, any help appreciated. Here is my attempt puu.sh/GKx7D/b16f6ab0fe.png
And forget the u(x,t)
@Rithaniel xy = winner
So rp = pr = p, rs = sr = r, sp = ps = s
It's non-associative, and commutative, with no identity.
Ah, I see. What about ss? Just s because tie?
sadly it's not a quasigroup
01:45
Yeah, I don't know if I've ever seen a quasigroup action on something
Yes. And yeah, sorry it's not a quasigroup. But it's an algebraic rephrasing of a children's game.
Yeah, I like applying algebraic structures to games. I'd like to make a video game that relies on a ring structure full of zero divisors as part of its core mechanics, actually
02:14
@LukasHeger Thanks for the pointer! But how does Joe mathematician see that the Henselianization isn't all of the completion?
@Rithaniel "Quasigroups are precisely groupoids whose multiplication tables are Latin squares." <-- maybe can conceive of one from Sudoku, Kamisado, or something that exploits Latin squares.
Also, the averaging operation (on R) is a quasigroup.
Could stretch that to be a real world example. :P
Ah, operation is the average of two elements. That I can see as something you could see in real life, yeah
At least, the non-associativity of it is a common mistake made by students in my experience.
It's a good place to mine for thoughts, at the very least
Are you just looking for such an example out of curiosity, or did you have something in mind for what you wanted to do with it?
02:21
Curiosity, right now, but, honestly, all things I learn I store away with the intention of somehow using them at some point
you can probably get an example out of discrete heat flow or something
Good evening!
Can someone explain what a coxeter group is?
02:41
@mathguy what about the definition on wikipedia doesn't make sense to you?
Haha I didn't search the definition
Wanted someone to explain
03:16
Hello. I would like to know if you guys think Rudin is pedagogical. I'm studying it and I'm still at chapter 2. When he's going to prove Heine-Borel he strongly makes use of past theorems, such as in "Theorem X and Theorem Y shows that (a) => (b)."
From a pedagogical point of view, isn't it more difficult to understand what exactly is going on? Or on the contrary, this is indeed the intended effect, as it's more interest to prove general theorems and then use them afterwards?
There's no way around the fact that math builds upon itself.
I don't think Rudin is pedagogical at all, but for other reasons
I don't recall Rudin's proof of Heine-Borel in detail, so maybe he's not making the invocation of previous theorems lucid enough for the reader to understand (this certainly is an issue in the book from time to time), but, at least in principle, proving theorems by making use of previously proven theorems is how most mathematics works
Maybe the previous theorems are not very clear for me, so that's why I felt a confusion when he summoned them. Thanks for your answers.
Are you studying independently?
03:32
I'm having classes, but the professor is not using Rudin
Have you discussed your choice with him.
I'm a little shy but I will try to ask him what he thinks.
I would recommend against Rudin if you're learning analysis for the first time
Anyway, this course goes till 18 December and we are beginning continuous functions now. I'm not sure how quick things will going to be
@Thorgott Yes it's my first time
Yeah only a few beginners can understand Rudin
03:38
Is it worth the extra effort?
Sep 21 at 22:47, by Ted Shifrin
I didn't say need, but Rudin is about the hardest text there is for real analysis.
"Somehow math students have this macho idea that one must do Rudin to be a real math student."
LOL
I was indeed thinking that if I study through Rudin I would become better at intro analysis
About three months ago I was a beginner in real analysis and was gonna buy Rudin. Thank god I bought some other book
It's hard
I think I'll go back to the book that professor is using, which is kind of standard here in Brazil
Wise plan.
03:43
I found out that my laptop was corrupted with a virus
It deleted my important files
Even the files which I paid for
Rudin won't help you with understanding analysis on a conceptual level, it would only present you with more results and more ways of applying your knowledge in various ways in the exercises
it can be rewarding to work through Rudin when you're reviewing analysis/for a second course, but it's not good to learn from for the first time
Give yourself a medal if you understand Rudin.
Hahahaha
I was going to reconsider another book after finishing chapter 2, maybe Pugh or going back to Elon Lages, but I'm staying much more time than I was before (with Elon) in each theorem's proof.
Maybe because when he says "neighborhood" I can't help but think of an interval in the real line, and I was trying to get rid of this, as I would like to understand better the metric space generalization
04:04
I like the Red Book of Chairman Tao.
He starts with Peano's axioms sand constructs real numbers. Very few books on real analysis actually care to define what 'real numbers' actually are.
@LukasHeger oh wait, does cardinal iff alone allow you to say it’s proper? Looks like the henselianization would be countable, if it is a subset of algebraic elements over integers
04:40
Norman Wildberger goes through a list of the most popular real analysis textbooks complaining about that @feynhat
@feynhat Ya I also learned real analysis from that book.
Hey can I say a joke
@feynhat lol
Why are math books often sad?
@epic_math They're always looking for their x?
04:52
Ya but the answer in my mind was because they have a lot of problems
Who was the roundest knight at King Arthur's round table?
Problems with their x
Sir Cumference
the real answer is...
Sir Cumference.
I found the shortest proof of RH. Do you want to read its abstract?
04:58
"The proof is trivial and left as an exercise for the reader"
"We can similarly prove the Hodge conjecture, which is also trivial"
"The other millennium prize problems are corollaries of these"
05:15
That analysis book "Red Book" of Chairman Tao remembered me of these
Marx's Mathematical Manuscripts: Two Manuscripts on Differential Calculus
 
2 hours later…
06:48
6
Q: Will we have a winter bash 2020 this year?

BelovedFool(or some other end of year fun?) At the end of last year, there was discussion suggesting that "winter bash 2019" (with the hat thing) was the last one (see here to learn more). Now that December is near, I would like to know if the 2019 winter bash (with the hat thing) was indeed the last one? A...

Sal
Sal
07:20
Dumb question: is this true? $$\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}f(n) = \lim_{N\to\infty}\sum_{n=1}^{N}f(n)$$
yes, that's the definition
Sal
Sal
Thanks!
Hello @Sal!
Hi @EdwardEvans!
Hi @epic_math
07:27
Mathvengers: Endgame
Newton vs Leibniz
Hey does anyone wants to see the personality of different set theory symbols?
Take a look at this :)
Yeahhh
What is a number system?
And what does it mean to create a new number system?
just a system of representing numbers
Hum... that might be interesting to me.
07:38
to create a new number system is to create a different system for representing numbers
it's not that interesting, the history in that video is the interesting thing
Thanks for the link.
What are some examples of conjectures that were widely thought to be true but it turned out that they were false?
Oh man what a coincidence I was going to ask this on MSE
I will give the link to you
Will that question be closed?
Squaring the circle is a problem proposed by ancient geometers. It is the challenge of constructing a square with the same area as a given circle by using only a finite number of steps with compass and straightedge. The difficulty of the problem raised the question of whether specified axioms of Euclidean geometry concerning the existence of lines and circles implied the existence of such a square. In 1882, the task was proven to be impossible, as a consequence of the Lindemann–Weierstrass theorem which proves that pi (π) is a transcendental, rather than an algebraic irrational number; that is...
Please also answer it there :)
07:44
oh, sorry
There is a duplicate, and I have mentioned it. It is almost a year old and doesn't have enough answers, so please don't vote to close the question as duplicate.
answered!
Thanks @zacts
08:05
@EdwardEvans. I don't know. I kind of find the idea of number systems to be intriguing, or an idea like that. I haven't studied abstract algebra yet tho.
I'm just saying, it's a number system with very restricted uses (can only represent up to 4 digit numbers, for example)
ah, I see. :-).
Are there any conjectures in abstract algebra that an intermediate level reader can understand?
I am really interested in conjectures.
08:32
What is the primary difference between MO and MSE?
08:52
@mathguy This is a list of open problems on WP, but you'll also find various conjectures there: List of unsolved problems in mathematics.
@zacts Several questions about this are linked in the mathoverflow tag-info on our meta and in math-stackexchange tag-info on MO meta.
09:47
@zacts research level and not necessarily research level
el trompo is ouuuut
georgia was flipped
Was it?
I still see 460 votes in favor for Trump
09:50
917 for biden now
Yus
460 is old news
When did they start counting again? Is it no 4AM there?
idk
its not unusual to count the night through
They didn't yesterday
AFAIK
09:54
I want terence tao as the president.
@mathguy maybe the most scientifically qualified person isnt always the best politician
I doubt Terence Tao wants to be president
The reason is that he will integrate the people so they will unite.
He can integrate quite skillfully
So you're talking about mushing all people to jelly and throwing all the blobs together?
Haha haha
He will not differentiate
Benoit B. Mandelbrot = Benoit Benoit B. Mandelbrot Mandelbrot
10:01
p-adic Hodge Theory just went from 0-100 in 1/c seconds
wait what
really slow
hahaha
man that was insane
We all say "man," but what if a woman is here?
Just joking
First theorem: $(\Bbb C_K)^H = \widehat{(\overline{K}^H)}$, second theorem

$$\Bbb C_K \otimes_{\Bbb Q_p} H_{ét}^n(X_{\overline{K}}, \Bbb Q_p) \cong \bigoplus_{q}\lbrace \Bbb C_K(-q) \otimes_K H^{n-q}(X, \Omega^q_{X/K})\rbrace$$
Bless you
starting to think this might have been a bad idea
10:20
Too late to turn back
"'cause I'm in too deep"
@EdwardEvans me, 6 weeks into every semester
this is the second lecture
hahahaha
@MikeMiller turns out that taking the sum of all homology groups was actually the solution
Nice. My lecturer just said "I'm not interested in algebra, I'm interested in topology"
angry Thorgott noises
10:33
It was the most beautiful sentence I've heard today
@user2103480 Depends what a graded Abelian group is. I'm not going to argue with him because I share that opinion
@MikeMiller The context were long exact sequences and how we use their properties
for the algebra comment
Sure I agree with him
I don't like to do the algebra junk til after it shows up topologically
10:56
Now the lecturer is trying to convey to a student that pictures suffice as proofs lmao
His answer ought to be "You can write the proof from this"
This is what I do in a point set class
I train people to extract proofs from pictures
That way they don't whine about this in algtop :p
@MikeMiller yeah that was the answer, learning to translate from picture to proof and back is a necessary skill
Good
This is exactly the reason people say Hatcher's book is nonrigorous. They haven't developed that skill
11:23
What's new
prof nuked us today
so that's new
@EdwardEvans tac nuke?
Strategic hydrogen fusion missile launched from space
nucular
11:32
hi
Some days ago you asked me why should one care about extremely amenable groups, I think I have a decent answer now if you're not busy with other stuff
Tell me later today? I'm trying to finish an assignment due later tonight :P
Sure, good luck with the assignment, what's the subject?
Physics lol
11:34
@BalarkaSen :what type of
Hello @BalarkaSen! I didn't see you in this room for a day. Where were you?
Getting work done
Oh
I think you are busy today
11:52
Once you get busy you remain that way til the day you die
Hahaha
@user2103480 what does taking sum have to do with functoriality
He was talking about understanding what the graded group of homology is
graded homology group is kind of pointless
unless you talk about the coalgebra structure
Put a PTSD warning or something before writing those things, thanks
12:04
ah, so it was just a definition issue
@Alessandro -<
@BalarkaSen does that exist in general?
how does it work
here we go again
$H_n(X; F) \stackrel{\Delta}{\to} H_n(X \times X; F) \cong \bigoplus_{p + q = n} H_p(X; F) \otimes_F H_q(X; F)$
12:09
hello homology my old friend, ive come to describe a coalgebra structure on you once again
$F$ is a field or $\Bbb Z$, so the last isomorphism is Kunneth. Actually there's still an arrow for a general $F$ I suppose, but I am not thinking too hard.
lol "general $F$". "let $F$ be a commutative unital ring"
Nah the Kunneth arrow goes backwards for homology
ah ok, but that's only for singular homology, right
lol, oh, by "does that exist in general?" you mean "homology of a chain complex"?
then of course not
yeah, the original context was arbitrary chain complexes
which is why I had to ask
gotcha
12:12
@BalarkaSen No, you need F a field. The last map requires Kunneth iso which fails usually over any non-field
You have Tor terms at least
There's no arrow for a general F
because (simplex) x (simplex) -> (simplex)
No but Kunneth short exact sequence is split, so you can project.
There's no canonical splitting though
Right so no coalgebra structure :P
If it's not a canonical splitting you will fail when trying to prove associativity
I am aware
Got it
12:27
@BalarkaSen thats what a robot would say
great so now I have to translate physicists unrigorous definitions to measure theory
Semigroups? Transition kernels? We don't do that here
Every function is a Schwartz function
That's the fundamental theorem of physics
@Thorgott If you have a chain map, that induces a homomorphism from the sum of of the homology groups of one chain complex to the other
@LeakyNun Haha
@Astyx Yeah and we can mix up distributions with measures anytime we want
12:32
yeah ^
Insert "they're the same picture" meme
@Thorgott you can define homology groups but they need not satisfy the eilenberg-steenrod axioms
e.g. excision
Eliezer Yudkowsky, minutes after his mind has been uploaded in a quantum computer: "I am aware"
haha yeah he probably knows
almost surely
12:38
I should just join MIRI
because why not
its a scam but everything is
its not a worse scam than academia
nothing is
12:50
doomer hours
It's a boring scam @BalarkaSen
what's MIRI
That's the difference
@MikeMiller what's an interesting scam
The kind of scam that lets me tell people for an hour about orientability of topological surfaces
12:52
LOL
@BalarkaSen TDA
Or convincing business people into letting a neural network control a plane
fun prank
TDA is a good scam ngl
most of stat is a scam imo
I finally figured out the missing piece in my understanding of orientation of surfaces
It's what you need to define w_1 and to prove that orientable => no embedded Mobius
You really have no choice but to define local orientations
yeah i got trapped by that once
i tried to extract out all RP^2 summands by finite generation of $\pi_1$
Yeah I don't think I can present that proof sadly
12:59
and then argue $H_1$ would have torsion or something
00:00 - 13:0013:00 - 22:00

« first day (3747 days earlier)      last day (1570 days later) »