« first day (3839 days earlier)      last day (1477 days later) » 

00:17
So I did have a question about looking at things from a different perspective @TedShifrin. In the example of looking at the hyperboloid (let's take 2-sheet), you observe what the shape/ value that $x$ and $y$ terms are going to give. So can I look at this as you are decomposing things as "functions inside of functions"?

specifically: $x^{2} + y^{2} - z^{2} = -1 \to x^{2} + y^{2} + 1 = z^{2}$

then: $g(x,y) + 1 = z^{2}$. so you are going to see what happens with $g(x,y)$ and then build on top of that what happens to the $z$.
00:34
Well, you see $|z|\ge 1$,
and you get a union of two graphs. But I'm not sure what your point is.
I'm just curious in terms of an approach, so expanding on that example say I had some object of the form $x^{2} + y^{2} + z^{2} - w^{2} = 1$. I could rewrite it as: $x^{2} + y^{2} + z^{2} + 1 = w^{2}$, so I could look at what the sphere does in $\mathbb{R}^{4}$ and use that behaviour to get a feel for what is happening in $\mathbb{R}^{5}$.
00:51
Is there an error here: $$\frac{\cot{\pi (-z-ia)}}{2i} - \frac{\cot{\pi (-z+i a)}}{2i}= \Im\left(\cot{\pi(-z-i a)}\right)?$$
They seem to be forgetting the conjugate on the z when they are doing the imaginary part?
hi chat
Like, wouldn't it be $$\frac{1}{2i}(\cot \pi(-z-ia) - \cot\pi(-\bar z + ia))?$$
Instead of the LHS above.
Hi, Astyx.
Oh, I see. Yes, reasoning by analogy with 2-D and 3-D can be useful. You can let a circle in $\Bbb R^2$ represent a sphere in $\Bbb R^k$.
the general way of reasoning with R^k is pretending that k=3
01:05
@TedShifrin, so take what I read in Flatland and put it on steroids for the higher dimensions...............
Yeah, basically.
01:22
most certainly hellish
EM4
EM4
01:55
For a friend, is panicking like crazy. In all of his math classes he got A's and one C-. He thinks at Real Analysis he will get C/D will that hurt him for grad school.
Not everyone belongs in math grad school.
Blunt, but truth.
EM4
EM4
true true.
will that hurt him to apply.
he got A- (Abstract Algebra 1) and A (Abstract Algebra II)
got A on PDEs, A on Complex Analysis etc.
02:11
Depends on level of school, GRE scores, letters of rec ....
EM4
EM4
do you know good website of level of school.
In the US the AMS has rankings of Group 1, Group 2, Group 3. I assume it will show up on Google.
There's also a big dependence on quality/rigor of undergraduate school.
This is why students should talk to faculty advisers. They should give sound advice based on experience and knowledge of the individual student.
EM4
EM4
this is what i told him.
You may quote me.
36 years of advising students.
 
1 hour later…
03:38
@TedShifrin "me"
@robjohn you may be able to answer this as much as @TedShifrin. How is quality/rigor of the schools measured? I was looking at the site Ted suggested and the information is about number of PhDs in the dept, employment, number of PhDs granted, etc.

so how do you measure "quality" and "rigor"?.............I looked at the groupings and you see the usual "big name" schools, but what is the metric?
Assessment by other mathematicians on gut feel, mostly
@robjohn If we have something like $\sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{2z}{n^2 - z^2}$, then can we still apply the same residue calculations somehow (navigating the fact it is not a Laurent series)?
Considering that's also the metric used by mathematicians to choose grad students or new hires it's not a bad choice
That's also how Mike chooses to grade final exams.
"gut feel"
On occasion, he even tries a RNG.
03:52
Gut feel?........hmmmm interesting......so are you saying there are "cliques" in the world of higher math @MikeMiller?
Of course there are. They are called fields.
Lol.
They also look at research reputation of faculty, how many PhDs are granted, etc, but Mike's right — a lot is peer rating.
04:08
I guess ratings from peers will depend on if a certain faculty is able to do research in an "interesting" field that may not be possible at their own institution.
Okay, Conway seems to think it follows that: $$\frac{1}{a} + \sum_{n=1}^\infty \frac{2a}{a^2 - n^2} = \pi\cot\pi a.$$
This might be handy for the alternating case.
But I don't see how to handle the non-Laurent series.
He says to use similar methods to the calculation of Laurent series via residues.
Is it just because it is symmetric?
I guess that's really all. The n=0 case is the 1/a
Wow I am i d i o t
04:52
I had a question about part c) of this question....I've done all three parts no problem, but I was trying to understand what they were getting at with regards to part c).

So i established that the matrix is not diagonalizable because it has only one vector in its null space.
I'm wondering if it is implying that just because it is a square matrix that could be a converted to a scalar matrix, that it is not necessarily diagonalizable.
If that is the case I was trying to figure out what would be the invertible matrix $Q$ that would allow me to turn the given matrix into a scalar matrix.
05:07
6
Q: How can orbital resonance sometimes have a stabilising effect, whilst other times, it has a destabilising effect?

MatthewI have just started learning about orbital resonance. I understand how bodies in orbital resonance will line up according to the orbital ratio number, and there will be increased gravitational effects upon alignment. However, I do not understand how resonance can often have a stabilising effect, ...

Asked in Astronomy SE
05:23
@dc3rd it is not diagonalisable because it has only one eigenvalue (1) and if it was diagonalisable then (b) & (a) would imply that it is the identity which is it not.
@copper.hat, what is the catch about this matrix chosen then?
123
123
Hello World.. Of Mathematics
Not sure there is one, just showing the Jordan form cannot be diagonalised, I supppose?
123
123
Hi @copper.hat @TedShifrin
Or maybe that tha geometric & algebraic multiplicities are different?
@123 Hi
05:30
Well I haven't learned about the Jordan form yet, don't even know what a geometric multiplicity would be in comparison to an algebraic one..........
I'll just circle around back to this when I get more knowledge.
The algebraic multiplicity of $A$ is 2 (the characteristic poly, is $p(x) = (x-1)^2$)( and the geometric multiplicity is 1 ($\dim \ker (A -\lambda I))$.
Oh....that's what the terms mean.....nice
The Jordan form is a useful theoretical tool, it is sort of a canonical (modulo ordering) representation.
the thing about multiplicities definitely has the smell that it is going to be determining when it comes to evaluating if a transformation is diagonalizable.
as in if the geometric and algebraic multiplicities are not equal then something is going to break
05:46
@anakhro That sum is $\frac1z-\pi\cot(\pi z)$
it has residue $-1$ at all integers except $0$
@anakhro I see that Conway agrees ;-)
06:03
@dc3rd That's all in chapter 9 of my book.
@TedShifrin, wew!......as you know from my progress in your book right now I got a fair bit of work to do before I get there. Going to be very fun to merge them together.
 
3 hours later…
09:30
perhaps, the pandemic will create such a generation
 
1 hour later…
10:49
@User873110 No. Take two parallel geodesics in $\Bbb H^2$, let $A$ be the region bounded by them, and then paste them by a translation.
 
2 hours later…
12:20
What should be the thinking process for such questions.
?
13:09
Do you know about series expansions ?
13:33
Slightly.
Do you see why there is a unique a for which this works?
13:59
Yes I do otherwise things would tend to infinity...
You need to have the coefficient of x to be 0
That's not a very concise argument, but ok
14:21
Now you could find that the only value that works by asking that $\sin 2x - a\sin x\over x$ goes to zero
Assuming you know how to compute that
This doesn't show that this specific $a$ works, it just shows that if there is one that works, it has to be this one
@user586228
And following on this idea, you can realise that this is asking for successive derivatives (up to order 3)
You want $(\sin 2x)' = (a\sin x)'$
@Astyx ok
15:00
Hola
hi
16:02
👋
16:47
Let $G=\Bbb Z^2$, what does $[G,G]$ look like? Some AT notes claim it's generated by $4$ elements, but that seems very wrong to me
The commutator subgroup?
yeah
I think it's not even finitely generated
Isn't $\Bbb Z^2$ commutative ? Shouldn't that be zero?
Oh I can't write, sorry, I wanted $G=\Bbb Z^2\ast\Bbb Z^2$
Ok, that expalins my confusion :p
16:50
yeah my bad
I agree with you it seems unlikely
I mean the commutator subgroup of $F_2$ is not finitely generated, and this thing surely contains it
Is that sufficient?
No, after all $[F_2,F_2]$ (just like any countable group) is contained a 2-generated group
17:04
There's a surjective map to $[F_2,F_2]$, which is not finetly generated however
By projecting $\Bbb Z^2*\Bbb Z^2\to F_2$, $(n,m)_1\mapsto s_1^n$ and $(n,m)_2\mapsto s_2^n$
true
Nice
So what's the proper way of telling apart the fundamental groups of the wedge of two torus vs that of their connected sum?
I would suspect there's no surjection from $G$ to $\Sigma_2$
are there non-trivial homomorphisms $\mathbb{Z}^2\rightarrow\Sigma_2$ at all?
I mean, yeah, of course
are there any such non-trivial maps where both basis elements get mapped non-trivially?
ah no, there aren't
It would have to come from two elements in $\Sigma_2$ that commute. These come from two words in $F_2$ whose commutator is in $\langle[a,b][c,d]\rangle$, but that doesn't exist.
i.e. $[a,b][c,d]$ is not itself a commutator
so the image of a homomorphism $\mathbb{Z}^2\rightarrow\Sigma_2$ is cyclic, whence the image of a homomorphism $G\rightarrow\Sigma_2$ is $2$-generated, but $\Sigma_2$ isn't $2$-generated, because that would imply $\mathbb{Z}^2$ surjects onto $\mathbb{Z}^4$ after abelianizing
17:40
There is a very important step involved where they are taking logarithm outside and limit inside.A slight mentorship to the above technique will be highly welocme.
welcome.*
logarithm is a continuous function
ok
@Thorgott But how do you know that?
it's the inverse of the exponential function, which is continuous, and the inverse of a continuous function between intervals is continuous
@Thorgott I am getting e as the answer however the solution manual reads 1..
Where did I go wrong..It might also be the situation that the given asnwer is wrong.I so please help.
If*
1 is the correct answer
I can tell you where you went wrong if you tell me what you have done
17:55
ok
you forgot to differentiate the denominator when apply L'Hopital's rule
18:25
@AlessandroCodenotti They're both K(G, 1) spaces, so if they had isomorphic fundamental groups they would be homotopy equivalent. Contradiction in H_2.
I was hoping for an approach that makes sense to a student who only knows $\pi_1$
Can't help you sorry
my argument makes sense to someone who only knows $\pi_1$, no?
unrelated but Cult of Luna released a new album yesterday
or are you not convinced by it?
18:28
One has Z^2 subgroup the other doesn't.
oh right, that's even shorter
You need hyperbolic geometry to argue that.
More than knowledge of pi_1
what's wrong with my argument?
Didn't read
Maybe consider homomorphisms to 4x4 Heisenberg group.
It's a group theory problem find a group theory answer
18:36
No two non-trivial elements of $\Sigma_2$ commute, because two such commuting elements would come from two words in $F_4$ whose commutator lies in the subgroup generated by $[a,b][c,d]$, but that doesn't contain any commutators.
a and a^2 commute
@Thorgott Prove this.
Also you mean F_4.
The centralizers are cyclic. I don't know how to prove that without hyperbolic geometry
that's a convincing point Balarka
You can @BSen, this was known to Nielsen I believe. But I don't like to think about words.
18:38
but I don't see the error in t he argument
"You can" No, I cannot.
Someone can maybe
is some power of $[a,b][c,d]$ magically a commutator? surely not
@Balarka if we go the GGT route how many ends does $\Sigma_2$ have?
Infinitely many.
ok, I see why my argument was stupid
18:39
It's quasi isometric to H^2
I mean one end lol
@user586228 That shouldn't be a problem since $\log$ is continuous at $1$.
Yeah so maybe that's a good argument
Your argument is not wrong but it has a giant gap.
One has one end the other has infinitely many
you have to alter it: two elements of $\Sigma_2$ that commute come from two words in $F_4$ whose commutator is contained in the subgroup generated by $[a,b][c,d]$. the only commutator in this subgroup is the identity, so the words must already commute in $F_4$. this only happens if they're in the same cyclic subgroup, so the same must hold in $\Sigma_2$.
18:40
Since you have to explain why that product of commutators is not a commutator.
Stallings's theorem now tells us that $\Sigma_2$ is not a free product, done
@MikeMiller I'm not gonna do it, but that can be done by just looking at words
That's an argument using way too much machinery though, but a nice one nontheless
You have yet to do this
@Thorgott That's the kind of thing someone who can't produce a proof says
"Sure I can calculate number of generators in an index k subgroup of F_m. Just look at words"
@Thorgott These kinds of things are usually not clear. It's not clear for example why you cannot produce a word which is 0 in every finite group.
(This is residual finiteness of free groups)
18:45
@BalarkaSen Wait can taking a quotient ever increase the number of ends of a group?
Z+Z to Z?
One to two
Why doesn't Z+Z have four?
:)
because it looks like $\Bbb R^2$
No matter how large a ball you take in the integer lattice the boundary is connected in the subspace metric
I was yolking.
18:48
So one end, all the way to infinity
19:13
Hi @TedShifrin
Heya @Michael
@TedShifrin such a hard boiled attitude
Nah, @robjohn, I'm a softie.
No, @Michael. I don't know this stuff, anyhow. :)
@MichaelAlbanese what is the topological generalization of conformality?
19:18
Sorry, I keep thinking you did Riemannian geometry. My mistake.
evening
LOL, silly mistake, @Michael :P
@robjohn: I'm not sure what that would mean. If you're referring to the question I linked, I'm not sure the OP is asking the question they intend to ask.
Morning here, @Simone :P
Sometimes I conflate differential geometry and Riemannian geometry.
19:20
@TedShifrin good saturday morning Ted.
@MichaelAlbanese That might be. I was asking about the question
You'll find zero Riemannian stuff in my publications, I'm relieved to say. More algebraic geometry and projective differential geometry.
@TedShifrin just barely
Thank you, @Simone :) Did you ever finish that compactness argument?
@MichaelAlbanese Weird question. Maybe they mean to ask about conformally flat metrics. In which case it is true.
19:22
I did, but I had to abandon my idea... I was going nowhere. And even if I could continue it would have been a bit redundant.
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/4011170/do-you-find-this-proof-convincing
In fact, compact simply connected conformally flat manifolds are conformal to spheres.
@TedShifrin The proof comes after the EDIT part
You do understand my complaint. Any such proof must use the nature of $f$ in an essential and transparent way, @Simone.
@BalarkaSen: Their working seems to indicate they are starting with a metric induced from $\mathbb{R}^4$, so maybe they are only interested in knowing whether such metrics are conformal to the round metric.
Indeed, but I had a plan for that ;)
Anyway I think I successfully proved the proposition
19:24
My standard proof, @Simone, is to take a ball of radius $R$ (centered at the origin, say) containing all the $\mathbf a_j$ and then it's an easy estimate to see what happens on the boundary and outside a ball of radius $2R$.
I did it with a ball of radius $f(\mathbf a_1)$ centered at $\mathbf a_1$
@MichaelAlbanese Of course not, right? Conformal automorphisms of R^n for n >= 3 are so restrictive!
sorry radius $\sqrt{f(\mathbf a_1)}$
A generic smoothly embedded sphere in R^4 should have Weyl tensor nonzero.
@BalarkaSen: Why must the conformal factor come from a conformal automorphism of Euclidean space? I was thinking that $g$ is a metric on $S^n$ obtained by restricting the Euclidean metric on $\mathbb{R}^{n+1}$ to some embedded $S^n$.
19:29
Interesting idea, @Simone. I was trying to worry about distance to all the points, and you're showing that you only need to do that once.
You're back to conformal and the Weyl tensor yet again, a @Balarka :D
To check for conformal flatness one just needs to check vanishing of Weyl tensor. So one should try to compute Weyl tensor of a hypersurface in R4, this is now a problem in exterior geometry much to the happiness of @Ted
@TedShifrin :thumbs up:
I've never computed a Weyl tensor in my life :D
@Simone: Sometimes the estimates on the "right" compact sets gets pretty tricky. I made sure all my exercises were doable, but some are challenging.
The last exercises of every sections of your book tend to be the hardest; I like the way you increase the difficulty gradually.
Your textbook is very good Ted. I'm really enjoying it
I'm glad you are. Most of my students did, too, but they liked to suffer :) Some took even more classes from me :D
19:35
What do you teach apart from Multivariable calculus/linear algebra?
Many people teach most things
You just usually don't write books on them
Nothing now. I retired almost 6 years ago. I taught lots of things. Undergraduate and graduate differential geometry. Undergraduate algebra. Topology, differential topology. Graduate complex analysis. Even some applied stuff years ago (which I loved teaching).
@MikeMiller not one person in existence teaches most things ;)
@MikeM: It's interesting, though. I had several algebraist colleagues who basically would teach nothing but calculus and various algebra courses. And some topologist colleagues who (out of laziness?) taught only calculus and undergraduate and graduate topology.
Well, @Simone, one can aspire to teach most every course at the undergraduate level, but some choose to stay very narrow.
Most [lower-division classes in the math department].
Sometimes even many [upper-division courses that the department does not have a specialist in].
19:39
Yeah, one of my friends in San Diego is a combinatorist who teaches the upper-division topology class because the [few] topologists have no interest in doing it.
Just reporting the fact.
Sure, I'm not a point set guy. But you can make it fun.
Well, he does a lot of what you did at the end in the second quarter ... fundamental group, covering spaces, etc.
I was beeing facetious :)
19:41
Anyhow, @Simone, when I came to UGA essentially no one was teaching the undergraduate curves and surfaces course, so I started teaching it a lot and then wrote a book on it because I was unhappy with the five or six books I tried using.
Which other books were you using? SPivak 2?
No, no. Undergraduate.
ah ok
@Ted @MichaelAlbanese I looked it up, apparently a conformally flat hypersurface in a conformally flat manifold has either 2nd fundamental form a multiple of the identity or 2nd fundamental form has two distinct eigenvalues, one of multiplicity 1 and the other n-1.
Seems like an exercise for me. But surely you can make embeddings of S^3 in R^4 which do not satisfy these. Make it curve in all three directions differently, at a point.
DoCarmo, Millman/Parker, Oprea, McCleary, and at least one other.
19:44
I'll try to prove that fact later.
DoCarmo is a cheapo
I though about buying that instead of yours but then you sold me on yours XD
To carry it out at a point consider graph of $w = \lambda_1 x^2 + \lambda_2 y^2 + \lambda_3 z^2$ in $\Bbb R^4$
$\lambda_i$ all different.
Throw away everything outside a large ball containing the origin, and cap it off by a whatever disk
This is an embedding of S^3 in R^4 which has $\Bbb{II}$ with three distinct eigenvalues at the origin.
That seems like an interesting exercise, a @Balarka. Sort of a conformal version of the famous exercise/theorem I've mentioned before. Schur's lemma.
@TedShifrin Oh, I have no problem with him doing it. I'm glad. I just feel sad the topologists abandon it.
There seems to be a lack of enthusiasm, in general, for undergraduate teaching at UCSD.
19:51
I think a closed hypersurface will have to have a point of positive scalar curvature (or maybe that's only for surfaces). So just choose a metric with scalar curvature non-positive. Such metrics exist on all closed manifolds of dimension three or more.
That seems much harder than my explicit construction :)
But I didn't know of this scalar curvature fact.
Actually, there are always metrics of negative Ricci curvature.
@TedShifrin Yeah, I'll work it out later. It's interesting, because the larger eigenspace seems to be giving a natural distribution on the manifold. Is it integrable? Is it a foliation by S^(n-1)'s, dare I say?
Dragging round S^2's along loops in R^4 might be ways to create conformally flat hypersurfaces (with the same topology, S^2 x S^1...)
Seems interesting, @Balarka, but I have no intuition.
Actually by topology if those were integrable all the conformally flat (compact) hypersurfaces in R^4 would have been S^3, S^2 x S^1
Topologically
19:59
I was going to say that Cartan classified isoparametric hypersurfaces (constant eigenvalues of II). You can have only certain combinatorial situations in terms of the multiplicities.
@MichaelAlbanese Is this Lokhamp's h-principle
@TedShifrin Oh, ok
20:13
a @Balarka: I have no idea how the Gauss equations play with the Weyl tensor (and whatever replaces it in dimension 3).
Yeah, I meant the Cotton tensor. Sorry about that.
I don't know Mme Cotton.
It feels like a Schur's Lemma type of computation (with or without moving frames). I would do it with flat ambient space first and then figure out how to deal with conformal flatness later.
@BalarkaSen: Yes, this is Lohkamp's result.
@TedShifrin Yah, I'll try that.
@MichaelAlbanese Cool.
20:31
@MaryStar Here is the shape with a constant of $24$. With a constant of $25$ or greater, there is no surface.
Does $\Bbb R^2$ retract on an embedded Cayley graph (the usual embedding with segments parallel to the axis getting shorter and shorter) of $\Bbb F_2$? I guess not but I don't see an argument
Ok, I claim $([a,b][c,d])^k$ is a commutator iff $k=0$. Assume $k\ge1$ WLOG and say $([a,b][c,d])^k=[v,w]$ for two reduced words $v,w$. If $w$ is one letter, we obtain an immediate contradiction, since then $[v,w]=vwv^{-1}w^{-1}$ ends with $a^{-1}w^{-1}$. Thus, $w^{-1}$ has to end with $c^{-1}d^{-1}$, i.e. $w$ has to start with $dc$, say $w=dcw^{\prime}$. Then $[v,w]=vdcw^{\prime}v^{-1}(w^{\prime})^{-1}c^{-1}d^{-1}$. Now $dc$ doesn't appear anywhere in $([a,b][c,d])^k$, so part of this has to cancel. There are two possibilities: 1. $w^{\prime}$ is the empty word and $c$ cancels with $v^{-1}
Lol
@AlessandroCodenotti Are you sure? R^2 retracts to four teardrops wedged at a common point. Iterate?
pure algebra Balarka
@BalarkaSen what's a teardrop
20:40
That is, R^2 retracts to closed unit disk D. Consider union of x and y axis in D. D retracts to D/(union of x and y axis) which is 4 teardrops wedged at a point. Iterate the same construction on each teardrop.
In the limit, you'd have retracted D to the Cayley graph of F_2. Am I wrong?
You see it right? It's the natural candidate for the retract disk -> F_2
Hm that seems believable
Yeah I got the picture
I bet you can write a (quasi-)geodesic retract as well
In the hyperbolic disk
Think of collapsing these boxes bounded by the grey lines to the crosses they contain
By an almost-geodesic retract. You just push the four corners to the center of the cross, and the four chambers given by the diagonals joining opposite corners to the respective edges they contain
I think this is continuous, but one should check carefully.
These quasi-stuff are in general not continuous so that must be the subtle point
fun fact: every countable group can be embedded in a six-generator simple group
Yeah, not continuous.
@Thorgott Is this Higman-Thomson
20:59
I don't think so
it's by Hall, apparently
mmk
Ah no so the result I am thinking supersedes your quoted thing
In 1949 Graham Higman, Bernhard Neumann and Hanna Neumann proved that every countable group can be embedded in a two-generator group
(note the initials: HNN... the group is actually an HNN extension iirc)
yeah, right
but that construction doesn't yield something simple necessarily
got it
apparently Goryushkin and Schupp showed that in fact you can embed every countable group in a 2-generator simple group
@BalarkaSen yes I think the construction was introduced in that paper
21:14
Can I do an exponential shift if my linear operator has variable coefficients, i.e., $(xD^2 + (1 - x)D - 1)[ln|x| e^x] \implies e^x (x(D + 1)^2 + (1 - x)(D + 1) - 1)[ln|x|]$, or is that only for constant coefficient problems?
Did you work out both sides to see if they agree, @user10478? The point is that $D(e^x f(x)) = e^x(D+1)f(x)$ and a coefficient in front of $D$ is irrelevant. However, what is the case is that $cD(f(x)) = D(cf(x))$, but $xD(f(x)) \ne D(xf(x))$.
Okay, that makes sense. I'm doing Frobenius on ODEs with variable coefficients so my powers of $x$ are already outside of the powers of $D$.
21:35
$[D,x]=1$
22:27
how does one spot repeated linear factors in a multivariate polynomial?
One doesn't. Or one computes the resultant, I suppose.
0
Q: Functional differential equation for the Fabius function

user76284Is the Fabius function the unique solution (up to scaling) of the following functional differential equation? $$ f'(x) = 2 f(2 x) $$ If so, how can this be proven? As I understand it, the Picard–Lindelöf theorem cannot be applied here, since the equation is not of the correct form. If not, what m...

Anyone have an idea?

« first day (3839 days earlier)      last day (1477 days later) »