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00:00
there's so much music out there
how the guy in the beginning quickly turns around in shock is so great
there's so much music out there
I aspire to be able to yodel as well as Franzl Lang
@geocalc33 got it
I love how much fun the crowd is having
especially when Franzl does his signature butt wiggle
00:02
in the end, the greatest german music creation was still done by an unspecifiable nationality
what the f
yes
nobody knows where that came from
Half sure this is a glitch in the matrix
I really enjoy that!
@geocalc33 rightly so, it is the greatest german music creation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzjSXbimzSk

Music from the home country
@Thorgott how they just creepily follow the woman after she blows a kiss
damn world haven't we learned that austrians and japanese shouldn't team up
@EdwardEvans oh no the hillbillies again
@user2103480 this is better than my song :(
i will never not link that song
00:11
@geocalc33 it's hard when one realizes this is actually hard to make
the entire video is so bizarre
now I'm getting similar recommended videos
@EdwardEvans these lyric fades are so badly timed
The Cornish aren't very advanced
there isn't yet a keyboard for people with 6 fingers on each hand
@EdwardEvans how ableist
00:16
are there any open problems in the field of analytic continuation?
I'm pretty sure 70% of music is having a professional sound
which amounts to getting a good DAW and plugins
because if you don't have a certain quality sound nobody will listen to you
 
1 hour later…
01:31
Luckily Reaper is a good DAW and is dirt cheap.
I don't understand a word in here.
that's how I usually feel
02:00
Hardly.
02:43
In how many ways 10 different balls can be put in 2 difference boxes ?
Can I say in one box , there are 10 balls that can be put
So 10* 10 is answer
02:54
It is definitely not 10 * 10.

Think about this for a sec: consider the first box. How many ways can you put a ball in it?

Now, once that ball is in the first box, how many ways can you put the remaining balls in the second box?
@user15072279 Think of how many ways you can assign a box to the 10 balls
Ball 1 can be put in one of two boxes... Ball 2 can be put in one of two boxes... etc
03:20
If $a\subset A$ is an ideal of a commutative ring $A$, and denote $r(a)$ be a radical of $a$, then $r(\bigcup_{i\in I}a_i) = \bigcup_{i\in I}r(a_i)$?
Ok. That should be 2^10 @robjohn
Book only state for finite case
1 ball can be put by two ways 2 boxes
for for 10ways,Ams
@Clarinetist
Oh, only $\subset$ holds
Thanks yall
This one more , I am not even getting how to solve it .
Why did we use t-1 factorial here
04:05
If $x$ equals .... did you read that?
123
123
04:22
Hi All..
04:49
@TedShifrin you are a patient fellow.
05:07
@copper.hat What did I do,this time?
Just an observation :-). More what you do not do.
Are you back days ago?
No, just accumulating perspectives :-).
Oh oh ...
Is it because it is asking Greatest integer function
so , for sin x . It is always 1
05:17
Hey guys!
Hi Demonark
Always 1?
Highest value for sin theta = 1@TedShifrin
Ted I finally referenced simultaneous diagonalizability in a pset problem lol
So take the standard representation of $GL(n,\mathbb{F})$ on $\mathbb{F}^n$
Here $\mathbb{F}$ is $\mathbb{R}$ or $\mathbb{C}$. This guy is irreducible, in fact it's irreducible if we restrict to $SL(n)$ or $O(n)$ ($U(n)$ for $\mathbb{C}$)
But we wanna show it's not irreducible, or even completely reducible, for the group of upper triangular matrices $B$
I basically split into cases, the $n=2$ case is "upper triangular matrices aren't all simultaneously diagonalizable"
05:36
Greatest integer is floor, not ceiling.
The $n > 2$ case is a cute trick
I only know unfancy proofs.
Oh it's not really fancy tbh, more sneaky
I don't know enough rep thy
Maybe I give myself too much credit. Basically you have the first standard basis vector $e_1$ as an invariant subspace. Let $W$ be a complementary subspace. Okay if $n=2$ that's a common eigenvector but nope. If $n > 2$ it contains two linearly independent vectors $v,w$.
Choose some linear combination $\lambda v + \mu w$ which kills the first slot. Then you choose a very specific matrix which basically amounts to adding $e_1$ to that guy.
But that's no bueno
05:55
So do we know stuff about common eigenspaces of commuting operators?
I'm not quite sure what you're hinting at here. Beyond the standard fact that commuting operators preserve each other's eigenspaces, so they share a common eigenvector over C
06:45
was trump a commuting operator?
he certainly wasn't stable
densely defined, i would say...
pardon me, as he might say.
 
3 hours later…
09:48
Hello!! Could you give me a hint how we calculate the series $\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{3n^2+2n+5}{n!}$ ?
10:30
@MaryStar use the taylor series of e^x
10:42
@LeakyNun Thank you!!
I am trying to understand what an affine polynomial is. Could anyone give a simple example please
in what context?
it says "A simple example of a variety is a (complex) affine subspace, that corresponds to the vanishing of a
finite collection of affine polynomials."
I think they mean polynomial of order $\le 1$
So $aX + b$
oh!
I had no idea
11:54
For 2nd Q
cant we say that every multiple choice Q , there are 5 choices. 5*5*5*5
@Thorgott it was supposed to be: the first one is the divergence of everything that follows, and the second is the gradient
12:22
Pls check my Q
If multiple choices are ABCD , then for option A , there are 5 Q as options
@user15072279 That's wrong : actually you have five questions and each has four choices , so the answer should be 4*4*4*4*4.
That is right. But why is mine wrong ?
@TeresaLisbon
Take an example. Imagine you have five questions : each one has options $A,B,C,D$. Then for an example, we can say $1:A,2:B, 3:A,4:D, 5:C$. Your situation is different :it's like four questions, each having five options. You will have to play around a little bit to see the difference. Don't worry if you take some time, lot of people get stuck here.
Five questions, each having four choices. First one four choices, second one four choices, .... fifth one four choices. So 4 multiplied with itself 5 times.
Ok.@TeresaLisbon
@user15072279 Practice makes perfect. Take your time. One more thing : CURED has a different purpose, so if you post your query there people will not respond. Ideally, if you just post a query here there are enough people to help you out. So don't post these on CURED. But you can come to CURED and read the discussions and participate on that basis.
12:33
Ok.@TeresaLisbon sure
@user15072279 You still have a year. I give it five days : in five days you will get the above question in under 2 seconds.
 
1 hour later…
13:52
Let $F$ be a free group and $\alpha,\beta\in F$ be two primitive elements of $F$ then $\langle \alpha\rangle =\langle \beta\rangle$ or $\langle \alpha\rangle \cap\langle \beta\rangle=\varnothing$.

In a group $G$ an element $x$ is said to be primitive if $x$ can $\textbf{not}$ be written as $x=y^n$ for some $y\in G$ and $|n|>1$.
Any help?
Here, $\varnothing$ means intersection has the trivial element.
Hello
Is there a way to represent cosec^2(x) as a linear combination of functions which are defined on at least 0?
14:19
@User873110 Can you describe what $\langle \alpha \rangle $ is?
@FitzWatson No, otherwise cosec would be defined on 0?
Does cot^2 also follow the same rule?
what do you think?
I think so
why?
Because it's undefined at 0
Actually, our teacher has given us a challenge to find an answer
We'll get extra credit for it
15:27
@Astyx cyclic group generated by $\alpha$
$\{\alpha^k:k\in\Bbb Z\}$
16:20
@User873110 Ok, so what does it mean that $\langle \alpha\rangle = \langle \beta\rangle$ ?
In particular, can you deduce something about $\beta$ ?
16:43
okay got some idea. thanks
17:11
"Because it's undefined at 0"
Am I correct?
17:23
@FitzWatson Please explain why you believe it's undefined at 0?
hint: cosec(x) = 1/sin(x)
17:44
if $G$ is a group, and $N$ is the normal subgroup of $G$ generated by some subset $R$ of $G$, and $\{x_{\alpha} \} \subset G$, then if $\pi : G \rightarrow G / N$ is the quotient map, is it true that $(G/N) / K$ where $K $ is the normal subgroup in $G/N$ generated by $\{\pi(x_{\alpha}) \}$, is isomorphic to $G / <R \cup \{x_{\alpha} \}>$ where $<...>$ is the normal subgroup generated by ...?
@Balarka the new album by God is an Astronaut came out today
18:10
Do yo think I can just use \frac for natural deduction in Gentzen's style?
18:28
@FitzWatson Are they allowing infinite linear combinations of functions defined at $0$?
19:09
@porridgemathematics yes, third isomorphism theorem
19:37
0
Q: vector bundle question elaboration required

MoeTheorem: Let $\pi:E\rightarrow M$ be a vector bundle. Suppose for each $p\in M$ there exists a linear subspace $F_p\subseteq \pi^{-1}(p)$. $F=\coprod_{p\in M}F_p$ is a subbundle of $E$ if and only if for each $p\in M$ there exists a neighborhood $U$ on which there are local sections $s_1,..........

why do you care whether it's an embedded submanifold
local sections give local trivializations and vice versa
definition of subundle requires the embedded submanifold property
19:53
meh
that should be automatic, shouldn't it
could you elaborate? @Thorgott
$\Phi: \pi^{-1}(W)\rightarrow W\times \mathbb{R}^k$ is a local trivialisation satisfying $\Phi(F\cap \pi^{-1}(W))= W\cap (\mathbb{R}^m \times \{0\})$
does a local trivialisation of $\pi:E\rightarrow M$ induce a chart $(U,\phi)$ for $E$?
that allows us to deduce that $U \cap F$ is defined by the vanishing of coordinates?
Here $\pi^{-1}(W)\subseteq E$
20:21
Doing a measure theory course right now, and the proofs for additivity of the measures of disjoint sets are kind of throwing me for a loop. There are some kind of nuances I'm not picking up.
Like, the step where you go from $\mu(\bigcup_{n=1}^kA_n)=\sum_{n=1}^k\mu(A_n)$ to $\mu(\bigcup_{n=1}^\infty A_n)=\sum_{n=1}^\infty\mu(A_n)$
I want to just say "Yeah, $d(1_{\bigcup_{n=1}^kA_n},1_{\bigcup_{n=1}^\infty A_n})\leq\varepsilon$ and so $\vert\mu(\bigcup_{n=1}^kA_n)-\mu(\bigcup_{n=1}^\infty A_n)\vert\leq\varepsilon$ and our result immediately follows."
ok, I've considered and came to the conclusion that requiring it to be an embedded submanifold is in fact the right definition
@mathsresearcher yes, that's the point
@Rithaniel context?
$A_n$ are pairwise disjoint and $\mu$ is a measure?
@Thorgott okay, but how do I construct such a chart $(U,\phi)$?
I'm just inquiring about how you prove additivity of the measures of disjoint sets (for countable unions)
20:38
@mathsresearcher try it
@Rithaniel huh? what's your definition of a measure?
cause that's usually one of the defining properties
. . . then I may have confused myself
A moment
@Thorgott If you start with an outer measure and restrict it to measurable sets additivity is something you need to prove, maybe that's what's happening here
perhaps, yeah
Yeah, I think that's feels about right
We've been talking a lot about outer measure, and I keep confusing it
Because $m$ and $\mu$ and $m^\ast$ look very similar to my eyes
21:05
im still stuck @Thorgott
what have you tried
@AlessandroCodenotti This gave me a thing to google. Danke schön
I tried playing around with the fiber map $(\psi \times 1)\circ \phi$ where $\phi$ is a local trivialization
and $(U,\psi)$ is a chart on $M$
for $\pi:E\rightarrow M$
yes, good
this should work, right?
21:23
So I've been looking at more alg. geo. things and I was wondering about a definition I can't seem to find so consistently- Is an algebraic set $Z$ Zariski dense whenever $V(I(Z)) = Z$?
@mathsresearcher yes
21:48
@BigSocks no, it's when V(I(Z)) is the whole space
oh can I take that as the definition of Zariski dense then?
Z is dense in Spec A iff the closure of Z is Spec A. And closed sets in Spec A are of the form V(I)
ok come to think of it I think this was a kind of early fact in Hartshorne- there was an example where nonempty open subsets of an irreducible space are irreducible and dense
@Astyx I am going to have to learn schemes probably so this should make sense soon
Yes, this is because there is a dense point called the generic point
In Spec A, it's just the nilradical of A
hmm I just know of the generic point as [(0)], but I am not sure if that's true
22:00
That's exactly that
I'm not sure what it really means
just kind of a fact in my head, unknown known
what does anything mean
tfw all you do is push symbols and nod at the right times
so I know this question is pretty dumb, but where would you guys suggest I learn about schemes? I don't know french btw
Hartshorne or Vakil
right, forgot about Vakil. thanks
22:11
Richard Borcherds' lectures on youtube are also quite nice
I suggest you don't learn schemes
nice, watching Intro now
@Thorgott this is probably the real answer, but do you have a nonmeme reason
ofc not
my entire existence is but a meme
lmao, I can relate
@BigSocks I think an enlightening example is Spec Z
If you look at a the stalk at a prime (p), then the space of functions is rationals a/b where p does not divide b
If you look at the stalk at (0), the space of functions is Q
22:19
Can someone help me understand something
so a stalk is like a localization?
You're somehow looking at functions without caring about wether they're invertible or not, because you're not studying them in a specific neighbohood
yes
huh... neat
So a scheme is like a place where you can localize at places you are interested in?
eh, kinda broad
That's actually how you define functions on Spec A (by gluing them on open sets so that this works)
A scheme is made to do like 7 different things at once
22:23
@Astyx gluing reminds me of sheaves
well "stalk" is already sheaf-talk
So gluing would be like making sure functions in different localizations agree on some intersection?
Gluing is making sure functions locally look like an element of A_p in a neighborhood of p
it's not really the same gluing as with sheaves unless I'm mistaken
oh ok, then I'll have to look more closely
$\varphi(s)=\sum_{n\ge1} e^{-n^s}.$ I don't understand: "what are the function values for s<0 that you would like to extend? The series, as written, certainly diverges there, so you surely meant something different from what you wrote"
If you look at the affine plane, Spec k[x,y], then we've already discussed that you get more "types" of points (ie dim 0 points (x-a, y-b), dim 1 points (f) and the dim 0 point, the generic point, (0))
When you localize at a dim 0 point (x-a, y-b), you get the space of rational functions that have no pole at (a,b)
When you localize at (f), you get rational functions where the denominator is not a multiple of f. However the denominator can still cancel at points in the zero set of f
Right... so when you localize at a dim 1 "point" (f) you get... $C_f$, the coordinate ring of $f$, Which I know by Hartshorne is $\mathcal{O}_{(f)}$ or something
22:29
If you localize at 0, you allow the denominator to cancel anywhere and you get all rational functions f(x,y)
1
Q: Analytic continuation of $\varphi(s)=\sum_{n\ge1} e^{-n^s}$ for $s<0$?

geocalc33About 6 months ago I asked for an analytic continuation of $\varphi(s)=\sum_{n\ge1} e^{-n^s}.$ From the answers and feedback I got, we know that an analytic continuation exists for $0<s<1$ and there is no analytic continuation for $s>1.$ I'd like to understand whether or not there is an analytic...

I thought I understood, but I'm still confused what the commenter means. Thanks for the insight :)
@Astyx right this makes sense too
So in some sense you're looking at functions "globally" without caring whether they cancel at points since you're not working locally
for the last one you mean?
localizing at 0?
Yes
Just as when you're localizing at f, you're allowing poles on the curve, just not everywhere
22:34
and then for $(x-a, y-b)$ you just allow that one pole
No, on the contrary
You allow everything but that pole
that comment is very literal
whats confusing about it
right everything but ugh
It's a bit confusing
(everything about scheme theory is)
for functions you allow poles on it, for a point, you don't... kind of weird yeah
22:36
Well for functions, you don't allow functions that cancel everywhere on the curve
right so just... countably many? finitely many?
probably finitely many
Just like for points you don't allow functions that cancel everywhere on the point
@Thorgott I want to extend the domain of the function maximally
should I state that instead
I think if they agree on some open set they are equal. I remember that being kind of impressive
but that could be more than countable idk
that at least makes sense as a question
22:41
I will figure out later why my question doesn't make sense
"do two rational functions agreeing on countably (not finite) many points ensure they are equal?"?
I still have no idea what's wrong with it
oh you mean the other guy
@BigSocks No, take X and XY
The point is that functions on V(f) are Spec k[x,y]/(f) (assuming you're working with reduced schemes), and you don't want to "invert 0" so when localizing at (f) you don't have an inverse for f
And this leads to the fact that (f) is the generic point of Spec k[x,y]/(f) (trivially because (f) = (0) in that ring) but it brings some insight as to what quotienting does
1
Q: Maximal analytic continuation of $\varphi(s)=\sum_{n\ge1} e^{-n^s}$

geocalc33About 6 months ago I asked for an analytic continuation of $\varphi(s)=\sum_{n\ge1} e^{-n^s}.$ From the answers and feedback I got, we know that an analytic continuation exists for $0<s<1$ and there is no analytic continuation for $s>1.$ What's the maximal analytic continuation of $\varphi(s)?$ ...

hopefully this is better
22:45
@Astyx brain might be kinda leaky today, but don't these guys only agree at the origin?
I ask the worst questions..
They agree on the whole Y axis
So quotienting at p is making p the biggest ideal
lol, I, for no good reason, was thinking about $f(x) = x$ instead of $f(x,y) = x$
While localizing is making p the smallest ideal
@Astyx it makes your ideal the "generic point"?
22:48
yes
ok now that was some perspective... that and "quotienting at p makes p the biggest ideal vs localizing at p makes p the smallest ideal"
this may be a dumb categorypilled question but is there some sense in which these two guys are adjoint?
Wait I've said nonsense
it's the other way around: being the generic point means you're a small ideal (in the intersection of all ideals)
So quotienting is making p minimal, while localizing is making p maximal
yeah now that I am thinking about it it's definitely backwards
Sorry about the confusion
I think they're not adjoint in any category meaningful way
quotienting is like making the "denominator" go to $0$, and localizing usually leaves you with a local thing, like you get $A_M$ and $M A_M$ is a (the) maximal ideal
yeah this is all I found about it
22:58
yuck
hahaha you don't like categories?
why not?
dunno, not a fan
that's alright, you shouldn't need a reason I guess
categoriés
his inner analyst is coming through
23:08
Probably very true
You can't compare arrows to epsilons
lol that's true, algebra is just a game you're playing atm
That's too much for me
there are no open questions in sociology
infinitesimal topoi would like to have a word
23:11
mathematics is oftentimes difficult, but simplicity and beauty are oftentimes apparent toto
23:41
12022021 for you folks who put the day first. palindrome & ambigram.
And happy birthday to me thereupon!

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