« first day (3758 days earlier)      last day (1559 days later) » 
03:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

03:27
I don't know who is upvoting all of my answers and questions. Please don't upvote all of them blindly. Yes, if one of them is good, it can be upvoted, but not all of my questions and answers are good.
Please tell who is doing it.
Recently 60 rep was deducted from my current reputation because of that.
03:48
2
Q: Why is computer science hard?

Daniel R. CollinsData pretty regularly shows that computer science programs have among the highest failure and dropout rates of any college program. A number of sources all echo the finding that roughly one-third of incoming CS majors do not progress to a second year, higher than most other majors. Computer scie...

04:05
Would it be possible to find some values $\theta$ and $\phi$ such that $\cos(\theta + \phi) = \cos(\theta)+\cos(\phi)$? In other words, do there exist values in which any of the trig functions are additive?
Well, the best thing is to try out some values
I'm trying. Can't seem to find any
Fist, fix $\theta=\pi$ and then see if you can find $\phi$ such that $\cos(\pi+\phi)\leq \cos(\pi)+\cos(\phi)$. Then see if you can find a different $\phi$, this time such that $\cos(\pi+\phi)\geq \cos(\pi)+\cos(\phi)$.
Hm, well $\cos(a+b)=\cos(a)\cos(b)-\sin(a)\sin(b)$
Since $\cos$ is continuous, you would have to have a $\phi$ such that they are equal between those two other values you found
04:11
Ahh, intermediate value theorem.
I was wondering if there was a way to explicitly solve for these values. Or find like a closed form of them as opposed to proving existence of such
Hmmmm, probably
Yeah, maybe by messing with the sum/difference identites. Anyways, thanks!
Yeah, you'd have to fool around with it and attack it with algebra, but I'm fairly certain you'll find a few points
 
4 hours later…
08:23
Hella
The MSE question I gave here has been moved to MO. Here it is:
0
Q: A generalization of partition function to the sums of squares

epic_mathThe well known partition function $p(n)$ is defined as the number of ways to represent $n$ as the sum of natural numbers. An asymptotic formula for $p(n)$ is $$p(n)\sim\frac{1}{4n\sqrt{3}}\exp\left(\pi\sqrt{\frac{2n}{3}}\right)$$ which was obtained by Ramanujan. Recently an interesting idea came ...

 
1 hour later…
09:45
I need help in understanding the meaning of this question :
If $Q(v)=\left(D^{2} f(a) v, v\right)$ is indefinite form, then prove that $f$ has a saddle point at $a$.
What does $D^{2} f(a) v$ represent? and is the bracket for inner product
 
1 hour later…
11:02
Could someone please explain this to me? What difference would it make if 2^n is prime?
The regular operations would make this set isomorphic to Z/2^nZ, which is not a field since it has nonzero elements whose product is 0 (for example 2 and 2^(n-1))
 
3 hours later…
14:00
What is the difference between simplicial complex and delta complex?
Definitions are all same as wiki
14:17
@love_sodam No they're not
Wiki doesn't even have a page defining delta complex
I mean my definition of those two are same as two definitions in wiki
The crucial combinatorial criterion which fails for delta-complexes but is demanded for simplicial complexes is that the vertices determine a face/edge
Not two definitions are the same
Think of the usual delta-complex of the torus
You start with a decomposition of the square with 4 0-simplices, 5 1-simplices, and 2 2-simplices
When you do the edge-identifications you end up with a single 0-simplex (!), 2 1-simpllices (!), and the same 2 2-simplices
Now it's no longer true that the vertices of a given edge or simplex are all distinct (like is the case in a simplicial complex), nor that the edge is determined by its set of vertices
Isn't it 3 1-simplices?
14:26
Yeah my bad
But the point is that they all have the same set of vertices
Any triangulation of the torus requires many more faces, perhaps 8 is the minimum
So the example you gave is delta complex not simplicial complex
and simplicial complex of torus has more simplicies
When we compute the homology group of a torus, we give delta complex structure and compute its simplicial homology group right?
That's one way to do it yeah
14:50
My confusion is that if we want to compute the simplicial homology, don't we need to give simplical complex structure on that space?
no
the reason Hatcher talks about delta-complexes is because this rule that simplices need to be determined by their vertices is an important condition in the combinatorial study of simplicial complexes
But it's completely irrelevant to calculating homology
Much better to work with this complex with (v, e, f) = (1, 3, 2), then with the smallest triangulation of the torus, where (v, e, f) = (7, 21, 14) :)
15:27
One more question, like the case of torus, we usually gives orientation for 1-simplex by just following the identification (following the arrow of the identification). Is this necessary?
In 2-simplex case, does the homology group depend on the choice of orientation?
16:20
is the zero set of a degree 2 homogeneous polynomial discrete in P^1
working over C
why would you think that
(I actually don't know if its true btw)
@love_sodam I am not certain I understand the question. I think there are ways to interpret this where I could say "no" and ways to interpret this where I could say "yes".
@Thorgott Is the zero set of a degree 2 polynomial discrete working in A^1?
you mean A^2?
No, I mean A^1.
@MikeMiller Never mind. I think I can handle this. But thanks anyway
16:29
P^1 = A^1 cup infty
if p(z,w) is a homogeneous polynomial, its non-infinite zeroes are in bijection with the zeroes of the one-variable polynomial p(z/w, 1)
ah, thanks
16:43
Hi. So, I was wondering why we need to extend the definition of trigonometric ratios to all angles? A friend of mine told me that it has some useful applications in physics but AFAIK, the unit circle definition came a long time ago, back when physics was not so developed.
So, why exactly did we need to define trigonometric functions for all angles? What motive did the mathematician(s) who did this have in mind? Thanks!
"extend" from what exactly?
The definitions in terms of sides of a right triangle. Like $\sin\theta = \dfrac{\mathrm{perpendicular}}{\mathrm{hypotenuse}}$
but that definition already works for all angles
Not for obtuse angles, does it? It only works for $\theta\in(0^\circ,90^\circ)$...
A right triangle doesn't have obtuse angles
16:51
Right, that's why the definition doesn't work for them...
The coordinates of the points of a unit circle centered at the origin are given by $(\cos\theta, \sin\theta)$
17:15
Does this metric imply zero curvature? $ds^2=\frac{dxdy}{xy}$
17:59
@love_sodam: You'll be amused to know that I emailed the author of your diff geo text, and he didn't even recognize/remember that the exercise was in his book :D Turns out I know his Ph.D. adviser and we have a lot of friends in common. :D
18:26
@user2103480 I seek intuition and I summon thee, master of probability
using intuition and probability in the same sentence, daring
I prefer optimistic
Sal
Sal
Another one of my dumb questions.

Is the expression $\lim_{x\to+\infty} \dfrac{1}{x} = 0$ just a postulate, or is there a proof for it?
18:32
if you find that master of probability you're talking about, call me
what do you seek intuition for?
So in a seminar today I was introduced to the concept of Brownian motion
@Thorgott LOL
But I'm not sure what some parts of the definition are telling me intuitively
Which exactly? There are 4, and one of those is that it starts at 0, and the other one is that the paths are continuous, so I guess these aren't the trouble makers
@Sal it's a consequence of the Archimedean principle .... it is the statement that the positive integers are not bounded above. This is a consequences for , I suppose, of these least upper bound property.
18:36
Right, there's an independence condition and a "jumps are Gaussians condition
normal distribution of increments should be ok as well, in principle. You can imagine it as diffusing outwards with paths on average landing in a certain distance away
The latter makes sense, it's telling me the distribution of "where will the point be after time $s$ starting from time $t$" and I guess you can play around with weird stuff here but Gaussian is the easiest thing
@AlessandroCodenotti The independence condition means that using events that are measurable with respect to the preceding path, we cannot say anything about the future behaviour of the brownian motion
Note that the independence condition is "normalized"
I.e. From the path up to time s
So it's like where I'm going to jump depends from where I am, not how I got there?
we cannot say how W_t-W_s will behave
18:38
@TedShifrin Erico and I are confused about something
BTW, howdy, demonic @Alessandro et al.
Oh oh. OK, @MikeM.
@AlessandroCodenotti Exactly, it's a kind of markov condition (and, not surprisingly, the brownian motion satisfies several markov properties)
Let M be a Riemannian manifold. Pick a function f which vanishes on the boundary and pick normal coordinate charts on the boundary.
Ok that makes sense
Thanks
18:39
Oh, I thought this was going to be something from my book. Silly me.
I've never thought about normal coordinates on the boundary. Hmm.
You can imagine it as saying: If I paste two brownian motions at their ends, these are together one brownian motion
and the decomposition works the other way around as well
Uh here all Brownian motions were assumed to be defined for all positive times
uhh at one start and one end. you know what I mean. Although their ends would be fine too if I reflect one of them properly
Erico claims that if 0 < i < n, f_ii = - lambda_i f_n, where lambda_i is principal curvature.
In particular the second derivative of f ALONG the boundary can be nonzero 0 when the boundary is not totally geodesic.
@AlessandroCodenotti Then crunch together one brownian motion to a finite one (you can do that) and paste the other one after that, hah!
18:42
Ok fair enough
He has derived the formula via moving frames and also it's in Yau's papers.
can you interpret this gluing sheaf-theoretically
Can you not do that
OK, so I'm going to just assume it's an arbitrary hypersurface you're asking about, because I don't know about normal coordinates on the boundary. All I know is that $f$ vanishes on the hypersurface.
@Thorgott ???
18:43
But it's also absolutely preposterous. f_ii can be computed internal to the boundary (iterated partials with one coordinate can be computed along lines).
Yes, seems fine.
Oh
So the problem is normal coordinates aren't adapted to the hypersurface.
@AlessandroCodenotti Yes I will not do that
Well, you're choosing adapted frames here to make the statement, but, yeah, if the hypersurface isn't totally geodesic, you don't stay adapted.
Thanks. Your rephrasing solved the problem.
But you're asking about the derivatives just at the point.
I guess nothing stops you from considering sheaves with values in Brownian motions, but why
18:44
LOL, it did? I'm still figuring out the question.
@AlessandroCodenotti The why stops me
Right ... the second derivative isn't really along the boundary.
I see why you were confuzled.
lol im just playing
Hi @Thor
hi Ted
18:46
Yes, @TedShifrin, when someone takes a coordinate chart, if they care about a submanifold, I tend to assume their coordinates are adapted.
The boundary thew me off ... whereas with a hypersurface you realize normal coordinates do what they want to do
Gotcha. Yeah, normal coordinates won't be very adapted.
Glad I could help doing nothing. :) Let me know if anything fun happens with the kidlet. :)
is there anything I have to consider when working with sums in hillbert spaces. I always just shuffle everything around freely when I know that what I start with is well-defined
@Sha !!
:000 TED
:D
(joke)
(source: Michael Kinyon)
18:53
Are there any number theorists here, actually?
@AkivaWeinberger POTUTT
We have only logician, algebraists, probabilists, and topologists (and me).
@ShaVuklia @EdwardEvans
Hmm, I'm always afraid I'm missing out because I don't have an inherent interest in number thy, but I guess here is not the place to be convinced otherwise.
18:54
so he says, but Lukas self-identifies as number theorist in a starred message
@Sha: I never did, either. I survived. But I did come to believe that elementary number theory is important as a tool in teaching abstract algebra concretely.
Lukas is a moving target, and he's been MIA for a long time. So perhaps so, @Thor.
He didn't used to be ;P
I have a NT course for what it's worth
@TedShifrin Yea I can imagine that
@TedShifrin but that scares off students that don't like number theory
Anyhow, I was mostly joking. No insults intended.
18:55
I guess I'll just take the course algebraic number theory at some point, and that will (most likely) be it then for me.
@user2103480: Not in my experience.
Sadly, algebraic topology and diff geo are harder to introduce quickly
I wouldn't call myself a logician tbh
I'm likely gonna do ANT next semester
starting the descent
Diff geo is fine to introduce quickly ... People feel like they have to do abstract crap instead.
18:56
is ANT algebraic or analytic ?
After all this, @Alessandro? What do we call you, then?
@TedShifrin Okay, fair, you are probably right. I was extrapolating from myself who couldn't have cared less for any number theory examples
@Astyx lmao fair question
@TedShifrin Ah, that explains your somewhat dislike(?) of Lee's book.
@TedShifrin Oh I mean the algebra applications in diff geo
@user2103480: I never really did, either. But I developed an appreciation writing my algebra book. Algebra books tend to be too much formality and symbol-pushing. Of course, I also did a bunch of geometric stuff, too :D
18:57
@Astyx do I look like a mutant to you
I must say, after a year of reading Lee, I've fully embraced it:D
What algebra applications are you referring to?
Cohomology, algebraic invariants
People misuse the term differential geometry, @Sha. I'm NOT talking about a standard differentiable manifolds course.
@Thorgott I'm not sure which way that's meant to point towards, but I'm guessing you meant algebraic :p
18:58
I guess a (descriptive) set theorist based on the subjects I'm thinking about for my PhD
indeed
Oh:0 Then my confusion remains about your statement on Lee's book some time ago (which is fine).
I don't see differential geometry in what you said, @user2103480.
@Sha yeah do ANT
Lee and I are longtime friends, but his pedantic style doesn't mesh with me.
18:59
@EdwardEvans check discord
03:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

« first day (3758 days earlier)      last day (1559 days later) »