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00:00 - 18:0018:00 - 00:00

00:03
I don't think we're changing the $J$ for $\overline{E}$. We're using the isomorphism of complex bundles $\Psi : \overline{E} \to E^*$ then using this identification to put a holomorphic structure on $\overline{E}$ because we have one on $E^*$.
Yes, but you changed the complex structure to get $\Psi$ to be complex linear, didn't you?
... so yeah I thought I could get around the degree computation in the MV proof. So the hard part is computing the map $H_{n-1}(S^{n-1}) \overset{(-i)}{\rightarrow} H_{n-1}(V) \overset{h}{\rightarrow} H_{n-1}(\Bbb RP^{n-1})$, where $h$ is a deformation retract. For odd $n$ this map is 0, and for even $n$ we compute the degree
I don't think so. The fact that $\overline{E}$ has the opposite complex structure is what makes $\Psi$ linear. If $e \in \overline{E}$ then $i\cdot e = -i\ast e$ where $\cdot$ is multiplication for $\overline{E}$ and $\ast$ is multiplication for $E$.
Hrmph I hope we wont have any degree computations where I actually have to calculate much
@Astyx OK, try the following. (I : a), the denominator ideal (all things in A, when multiplied by a, goes in I) is also bigger than I, so is principal. I claim if for all a, I + (a) and (I : a) are principal so is I.
00:08
Oh, I see.
Yeah, that seems right because the hermitian form is sesquilinear.
Thanks for helping, @Michael.
Proof: If I + (a) = (b) then for every i in I, i in I + (a) = (b) as well, so i = br. But so r is in (I : b) = (c), so r = ck. So i = bck. I is contained in (bc).
I feel somewhat embarrassed that I neither knew this nor got it right. :P
@user2103480 what be V
Conversely, bc is contained in I because (I : b) = (c), in particular c is in (I : b)
So I = (bc)
No worries. I am glad I could answer your questions this time. Usually it is the other way around.
00:11
Not in quite a while :)
I didn't know it either, and I ran away from the question when I first saw it.
Right I buy this
@Thorgott basically $I \times \Bbb RP^{n-1}$. Using a decomposition of $\Bbb RP^{n}$ as (larger Disk) union (RP without smaller disk)
Call me Nakayama
My name is Balarka Nayakama from today
And the second one deformation retracts to the lower-dim reall projective space
00:12
@Balarka: Talk about mixed heritage.
I'm sure you know this
mixed motives
Nayakama's Lamme
Maybe Balarka will do lamé next.
00:13
Lmoa
00:28
@MikeMiller okay, it really is. Also boils down to the degree computation. I assume you meant the LES $$...\rightarrow \tilde{H}_k(\Bbb R P^{n-1}) \rightarrow \tilde{H}_k(\Bbb R P^n) \rightarrow H_k(S^n) \rightarrow ...$$
so you wanna calculate what the quotient map S^n->RP^n induces in homology
forgot a tilde there
a fairly efficient way is to use naturality and compare with an MV-decomposition of S^n
@Thorgott nah I want to avoid that but its impossible. I get the local calculation intuitively since it's one identity and one reflection, but the actual proof was brushed away as tedious calculation in local coordinates (in our lecture)
@Thorgott naturality of the LES?
I don't know what kind of local argument they have in mind, this works globally
00:33
smh we're always saying naturality although its functoriality
true
conventions smh
we also call paths nullhomotopic even tho we call the identity element in the fundamental group 1
Is anyone here an expert in Dedekind domains
lol
Don't tell me you're back to algebra after 4 years, a @Balarka :D
I have to get my homework done
00:40
All my electives this semester are algebra because I didn't want to take a bad Riemannian geometry course and more probability courses
It's a tradeoff
funnily, re: earlier, I have "prove $E\otimes_{\mathbb{R}}\mathbb{C}\cong E\oplus\overline{E}$" on my topology homework for this week
Define bad Riemannian geometry.
ROFL @Thor Seriously?
it probably won't even be Riemannian geometry at the pace it's going
not an expert but I've looked at them a bit this semester
they'll just
like
define what a manifold is
00:42
That's not Riemannian!
it's supposed to be Ted
yes
then I shall derive how the chern classes determine the pontryagin classes
incredible
Well, @Thor, for continuous/smooth things, it's just a linear algebra question. :)
Ah, that's exactly what I mentioned earlier to Michael.
@BalarkaSen Do you have a specific question?
before I fall asleep
yes, writing
00:44
If anyone wants a giggle, note the "Please check" instruction before pages of scribble here.
hands Astyx an espresso
lol
yikes
that's quite the calculation
Was the yikes to the espresso or to the scribble?
I've been through a lot of those calculations in that book, but hell if I'm going to proofread for someone.
@Astyx Ok, so I want to prove that if $A$ is a Dedekind domain, for any nonzero ideal $I$, $A/I$ is a principal ideal ring. I can boil it down to $I$ a prime power $I = \mathfrak{p}^n$. Then by Balarkayama, we further boil it down to proving $\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^n$ is principal.
the scribble
00:46
But dimension of $(\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^n)/(\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^n)^2$ as a $(A/\mathfrak{p}^n)/(\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^n)$-module is the same as $\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^2$ as a $A/\mathfrak{p}$-module is the same as dimension of tangent space of $A$ at $\mathfrak{p}$ because $A$ is regular (1dim+integrally closed) is the same as dimension of $A$ is $1$.
That needs a paid editor
By Nakayama $\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}^n$ is then $1$-generated as an ideal of $A/\mathfrak{p}^n$.
Done right?
I am throwing everything at it but I don't give a fuck
Instructor probably wants a concrete proof but screw number theorists
Yeah, there's probably a much more down to earth proof
Yeah but screw
Thanks for checking
TA will get screwed by AG lol
@BalarkaSen A/p^n = Ap / p^nAp right
01:01
Yeah but I did not want to localize
@user2103480 Yeah I meant that, though I usually think of it in terms of open sets: $U = \Bbb{RP}^n \setminus \{[0 : \cdots : 0 : 1]\}$ and $V = \Bbb{RP}^n \setminus \Bbb{RP}^{n-1}$. The first projects to $\Bbb{RP}^{n-1}$ in such a way that it gets the structure of a line bundle isomorphic to the tautological line bundle.
We haven't done DVRs
I assume there's an argument using DVRs
Tell me how to do it like that?
Yeah, the usual argument uses DVRs I believe
I wonder if you could use that all ideals in a Dedekind domain are generated by 2 elements.
@BigSocks It's a corollary of this haha
01:02
Then $U \simeq \Bbb{RP}^n$ and $V \simeq \text{pt}$ and $U \cap V \simeq S^{n-1}$
loooooL
@BalarkaSen take a uniformizer
@LeakyNun Oh yeah fine
then somehow you could use CRT for rings
Got it
Curves
01:02
also smells like overkill
And while running your LES you need to know the top degree homology map of $S^n \to \Bbb{RP}^{n-1}$
It's all the same computation
Central Rimit Theorem?
lmao, Chinese Remainder Theorem
Dedekind domains are just nonsingular curves
Change my mind
Number theorists would not understand
I think that is actually the idea
01:03
@BalarkaSen I mean ... yeah
@BalarkaSen they would, actually
but I am also learning this so idk, not an expert
number theorist understand that perfectly
because they're curves over F1
you can't change my mind
F1 lol
01:03
that's their job
Of course number theorists do not understand
they only understand prime factorization
That's just fiber bro
There is no such thing as numbers and division
Division is a scam
number theorists only understand 1 thing and it's disgusting
Non-cancellative monoid time
What is the number theory interpretation of $K_*(\Bbb F_1) = \pi_*^S$
some shit they'll say right
completely outrageous garbage like
01:08
primes are knots or something
Terrible equation
I have no clue what those symbols mean
stable homotopy classes are just vector bundles over F_1 bro
thats the clutching construction for vector bundles over F_1
Do you mean $F_{un}$ ?
??!!??!!?!?!!?!?!?!
01:09
yes
Alain Connes is nuts see his weird approach to Riemannian geometry using F_1 and quantum mechanics
its fucking crazy
not riemannian geometry lol i mean riemann hypothesis
mathematicians are out of their mind
redpill me on $\Bbb F_1$. why is it not just a hoax by BigField to sell more finite fields?
Fun
BigFun
Say I have a compact connected smooth manifold. It is known that there is a CW structure on it with a single cell in top dimension. By cellular homology, I then obtain that it is orientable iff this top cell attaches with degree 0 to every cell one dimension lower. Is there some direct geometric interpretation of this?
01:25
don't have a good answer, but what does it mean to "attach with degree 0"?
@MikeMiller yeh
It means the codimension 1 skeleton is 2-sided, which you should expect in orientable manifolds. Compare with $\Bbb{RP}^2$, where the 1-skeleton $\Bbb{RP}^1$ is 1-sided. Sure enough, the disk attaches with degree 2.
@BalarkaSen such low effort, literally reading off a meme thats not even his OC... sad world...
the WEEOEOW was a nice touch
thats the only reason i like it
@BalarkaSen yeah actually made me laugh that part
01:33
@BigSocks just sloppy rephrasing of the cellular boundary formula
@BalarkaSen looked up a bunch of these terms. sounds kind of like a triangulation that is orientable.
@Thorgott gunna look this up too
@BalarkaSen Ok, codimension 1 skeleton being 2-sided I buy. So this translates to the attaching by saying that for every time you attach along one side of a cell in the codimension 1 skeleton, you also have to attach along the other side so that these cancel out in degree or something like that?
02:23
@Thorgott Something like this. You can probably investigate what it is explicitly; cellular boundary of the top cell gives you some cycle of codimension $1$, namely just pushforward the fundamental class of the boundary sphere $S^{n-1} = \partial D^n$ by the attaching map of the top cell. This is some class in $H_{n-1}(X)$ where $X$ is the codimension $1$ skeleton. What is it? I don't know.
The 2-sided thing you should also be careful to trust me with. $\Bbb{RP}^2$ in $\Bbb{RP}^3$ is 1-sided, but $\Bbb{RP}^3$ is orientable.
This is a famously confusing fact, the covering map $S^2 \to \Bbb{RP}^2$ is $2$-sheeted but if you compose with the collapse $\Bbb{RP}^2 \to \Bbb{RP}^2/\Bbb{RP}^1 = S^2$ then the map $S^2 \to S^2$ is degree $0$ in reality.
02:38
hmm, right, so this is subtler
@LeakyNun np
for surfaces, the picture works and the condition corresponds to the characterization of having no embedded Möbius strips. what's the right higher-dimensional analogue for this latter characterization?
There is a simple one but this is not relevant to what you want. An $n$-manifold is orientable iff it does not contain embedded $S^1 \times_{\Bbb Z_2} D^{n-1}$'s.
The twisted product is mapping torus of a reflection $D^{n-1} \to D^{n-1}$.
What you describe is something dual, which is also possible to state: A codimension 1 oriented submanifold of an oriented manifold is 2-sided
In my opinion you should understand, for a CW-decomposed $n$-manifold $M$, the space $M/M^{(n-2)}$, and neighborhoods of $M^{(n-1)}$ thereof. $\Bbb{RP}^3/\Bbb{RP}^1$ is already a hard space.
My picture goes something like this. *Locally* the codimension 1 skeleton is two-sided, so while you're attaching, you have to traverse it twice to "attach both sides". If you always traverse in opposite directions, you get the 0 map in homology and have orientability.
In the other case, you traverse it twice in the same direction (so in homology you get a multiple of two, which is consistent with cellular homology), but have "flipped sides". In a surface, this corresponds to an embedded Möbius strip, but in higher dimensions I have no imagination.
I understand your picture
I just think it could be a nice curiosity to make it precise
02:49
I mean, evidently something breaks down in higher dimensions
I guess the core issue really is that the 2-skeleton is not itself orientable in the case of RP^3
The skeleton will not be a manifold in general so it is not a natural notion to consider oriented codimension 1 skeleta
I disagree that it is a core issue. It explains the problem, but doesn't explain your picture.
I have no clue how RP^3/RP^1 looks like lol
Amazing
it's got a CW structure with one 0-, one 2- and one 3-cell
so we attach a disc by a map $S^3\rightarrow S^2$, which map is this?
Sorry.
Boundary of a 3-cell is $S^2$, so not sorry. It is $S^2 \to S^2$.
I guess the map is $S^2 \to \Bbb{RP}^2 \to \Bbb{RP}^2/\Bbb{RP}^1 = S^2$ lol, which is degree 0. So nullhomotopic.
$\Bbb{RP}^3/\Bbb{RP}^1 \simeq S^3 \vee S^2$.
03:05
bizarre
That's what $S^3/S^1$ is so maybe not unexpected.
oh, that's a good point
it's the third isomorphism theorem lmao
Think of pinching a circle in space. The disk it bounds protrudes out of the ambient
And becomes a $S^2$ factor
So $\Bbb R^3 \vee S^2$
ah, and then add point at infinity
@Thorgott $\Bbb{RP}^n/\Bbb{RP}^m$ is not simply $S^n/S^m$ though so I am a little skeptical.
These guys have a name, they're called truncated projective spaces.
03:09
so why do we look at RP^3/RP^1
The 2-skeleton here is a "2-sided S^2"
isn't it 1-sided now after quotienting?
I mean, S^3 wedge S^2 isn't a manifold either, but what would the 2 "sides" be here?
The space is S3 wedge S2 upto homotopy equivalence not upto homeomorphism
But RP3/RP1 is not a manifold either :)
It's just some wild idea. The problem in your interpretation was coming from the fact that the 2-sidedness is only captured in the (n-1)-simplices, not further below
So why not try and quotient all simplices below dimension n - 1?
So M/M^(n-2)
Who knows what that looks like
it's going to be D^n with the boundary attached to a wedge of (n-1)-spheres
It's the n-dimensional analogue of a 2-complex really
yeah, and restricting D^n to S^{n-1} and projecting onto the wedge summands of course returns the maps whose degree we're interested in, but I'm not sure where orientability lurks in this picture anymore
But all points on the (n-1)-spheres away from the collapsed wedge point are manifold points
So projecting to the wedge summands will give you 2-sheeted maps
2-sheeted everywhere except the wedge point
Where junk collapses
Lol I guess if M is nonorientable, then $D^n \cup_{\times 2} S^{n-1}$ is a cellular quotient of M. Proof: There is some (n-1)-sphere where the 2-sheeted map is degree 2 and not 0. Collapse the rest of the spheres
It'd be awesome if you could say RP^n is a cellular quotient of M
Yeah I dunno what else to say. I hope it makes sense that there is a cellular quotient M -> D^n U_2 S^(n-1)
Lmao this is dual to there exists an embedding D^(n-1) x_2 S^1 -> M
@thorgott
03:30
damn, it is
this is wild
abandon geometry, embrace duality
the dual Mobius strip, D^n U_2 S^(n-1)
Theorem: (Mobius strip)^* = Mobius strip in dimension 2
but it's the projective plane
oh yeah sorry my bad
almost
03:34
my picture wasn't woke enough for the dual
so now that we've fixed the statement, we need a geometric picture for why orientability = no dual Möbius quotient
lmfao
i hope no one sees these messages
i have created a monster
there's a fine line between genius and insanity
this clearly crossed it
03:37
I'm not specifying in which direction it was crossed for it's a Möbius strip
the fine line is 1-sided
what's the quotient by the fine line
the coarse plane
Z^2?
there are stupidity and sanity away from the coarse plane
it is clearly in this
03:51
@Thorgott If $W = D^n \cup_2 S^{n-1}$, then $H^{n-1}(W) = \Bbb Z_2$. If there is a cellular quotient $M \to W$, then I assume this gives an injection $H^{n-1}(W) \to H^{n-1}(M)$, which forces nonorientability of $M$; one of the equivalent ways to state nonorientability is to say $H^{n-1}(M)$ has no torsion.
wait, the dual Möbius strips are actually Moore spaces, right
Yeah
$M(\Bbb Z_2, n-1)$.
it gives an injection, because M->W has a section, no?
Yeah, I guess that's what being cellular quotient means. Good call.
but tbf if we only care about detecting torsion in H^{n-1}, then this is immediate directly from the the cellular boundary formula even without passing to the quotient
03:58
yes of course this is all a very stupid way to write the cellular boundary formula
lol
i wasnt going to suggest you should take this seriously
cellular boundary with single top cell gives the direct bridge between "top homology Z" and "codimension 1 homology torsion-free", this is a point Hatcher makes at some point
I can give a geometric interpretation of "top homology Z" by drawing a picture of a triangulation as generator of the top homology, is there a direct geometric interpretation of "codimension 1 homology torsion-free"? probably more complicated
its the same picture, the point is none of the codimension 1 spheres in X^(n-1)/X^(n-2) are killed
because the top cell attaches trivially
there is no section W -> M btw
aight i gotta run and get my homework done and then sleep
aight gl
04:05
cya
04:26
cover your ?
(t)rump
primes
unpeached
no surprise
my respect for kinzinger has gone up
04:34
it's always gonna be who you know; not, what you know
i grew up in ireland in the 60's and it was all about who you know. i thought the us would be different mainly because of the vastly larger population.
i guess people are the same everywhere...
yup, human nature
@Thorgott Codimension 1 homology classes are hypersurfaces (literally). The connected ones are either 1-sided or 2-sided. If it is 2-sided it either splits M or it doesn't. In the first case the homology class is zero. In the second case it's non-torsion: there is the natural pairing of H_1 on H_{n-1} by intersection numbers. If the complement of a 2-sided hypersurface is connected it represents a non torsion class because you can construct a loop which has intersection number 1 with it.
The 1-sided ones have double covers which are a boundary; the complement wants to have boundary the orientation double cover of the 1-sided submanifold.
Homology classes are always represented by oriented submanifolds. If you're in an oriented manifold you only have 2-sided oriented submanifolds and unoriented 1-sided submanifolds.
But only the oriented ones show up in homology; so H_{n-1} contains no torsion.
In the unoriented case you have both oriented 2-sided and 1-sided submanifolds. So you get some Z in some Z/2 in your top homology.
I believe only a single copy of Z/2 but that seems more complicated to explain.
 
2 hours later…
06:32
How can I show a nonzero vector space is faithfully flat? I already know all vector spaces are flat and my definition of faithfully flat module M is flat and $M\otimes N = 0\Rightarrow N=0$.
 
1 hour later…
07:33
What is the knot that Christopher Zeeman tried 7 years to untie?
a knot on a 4-sphere
yeah im asking what knot
Yea im asking what not
Hehe sorry
07:57
@LeakyNun @1:30^
thanks!
@BalarkaSen ^
08:43
Very nice!
This seems like something I can try to prove.
@BalarkaSen hi
09:36
If $N'\to N\to N''$ is an exact sequence of $B$-module and if there is a ring homom $f:A\to B$, then $N'\to N\to N''$ is an exact sequence of $A$-module?
Yes, restriction $f_*$ has a left and right adjoint, namely $f^!$ and $f^*$
So it is exact
I don't know the terminology adjoint
I was being facetious. You can probably prove it by hand
thanks anyway
10:31
as opposed to by foot
@love_sodam yes, because the kernel and image don't depend on what ring the module is over
11:09
In this Q
No of ways to select one boy and one girl is 15 and 10
Then total no of ways of selecting one girl and one boy is 15+10 right
11:40
no, it's 150, as stated in the photo
12:34
@MikeMiller The intersection pairing requires orientability to work though, right? Otherwise they'd have to be mod 2, but then this only gives non-triviality of the homology class, but not non-torsion.
@Thorgott Yeah that part is no good
But it does still justify that in an oriented guy you ought not have torsionn
But in an unoriented guy you ought to
12:51
so it's still true that codimension 1 homology classes can be represented by oriented submanifolds even if the ambient manifold is non-orientable?
13:11
@Astyx I got it
13:39
@Ted: good morning
I am toying with the idea of posting the Valentines Day image I showed you a while ago.
14:10
@Thorgott Yes, but the proof I know factors through nonorientable Poincare duality
So cohomology with local coefficients
Please tell if the difference I wrote between $^n P_r$ and $^n C_r$.
Right or wrong
ah ok, guess I should eventually learn that
I am here for any confusion in my answer
there should also be an intersection pairing with local coefficients in terms of which this can be recast then, I wager
14:25
Something like this, but the details escape me without working it out again
There's a notion of twisted orientation, because for any line bundle L, Aut(L) still has two path components whether or not L is trivial
A twisted orientation ought to be something like a preferred representative L of the line bundle coming from the oriented double cover and an isomorphism det(TM) ~ L; you then ought to define twisted orientations on submanifolds (naturally you might guess an orientation of their normal bundle but you want to come up with a notion that will work fine even when your maps aren't immersions)
what notion of submanifold are you using that isn't even immersed?
or do you just think about representing homology classes as pushforwards of fundamental classes via maps
Yeah I start by understanding triangulations of submanifolds and then generalize to pushforward classes
14:52
@Sarabsrimt Yes. When we want only to select things we use Cr and when we want to select +arrange we use Pr. In your example as you reasoned , we don't need to arrange.
15:41
@Rover thanks .
 
1 hour later…
16:50
how many diffeomorphism types of smooth manifolds are there?
clearly $\le 2^{\mathfrak{c}}$, but I feel like it should be $\le\mathfrak{c}$
also clearly $\ge\mathfrak{c}$ fwiw
@robjohn Since you did all that work, post it (and ping AmWhy).
\o @AkivaWeinberger
Consider the subset of $F_2$ of elements containing an even number of $a$s and an even number of $b$s
Hi!
What $F_n$ is that isomorphic to
I think $F_5$ maybe?
that doesn't look like a subgroup to me
Why not?
I mean add the exponents of $a$ and check if it's even
So it contains $a^2$
17:01
ah wait im stupid, if cancellation happens, it still happens in pairs
I suppose it doesn't matter if we count $a^{-1}$ as contributing $1$ or $-1$ to the count
yeah, there's a hom $F_2\rightarrow\mathbb{Z}\times\mathbb{Z}$ that's induced by $a\mapsto0$ in the first and $b\mapsto0$ in the second factor, your subgroup is the preimage of $2\mathbb{Z}\times2\mathbb{Z}$
so very much a subgroup
I guess better look at the map $F_2\rightarrow\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}\times\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$
your thing is precisely the kernel and the map is surjective
so it has index 4 in F_2, hence free of rank 5
So what are five things that generate it
$a^2, b^2, (ab)^2, (a^{-1}b)^2, (a^{-1} b^{-1})^2$ probably ought to do the trick
How would one evaluate $\int _\sqrt{x}^xe^{\frac{x}y}dy$?
I've seen that there is no closed form but it does appear in one of my questions...
17:08
yeah, something like that looks right
There are algorithms for these kinds of questions, look at the original work by Nielsen or Schreier, @AkivaWeinberger; maybe also any good book on combinatorial group theory
Next question
Consider the language over $\{a,b\}$ of strings with an even number of $a$s and $b$s; what's a regex that generates it
(so no more $a^{-1}$s)
@Eminem What was the original question?
This is the kind of thing you can use to get practice with your research skills :)
Evaluate $\int_1^2(\int _\sqrt{x}^xe^{\frac{x}y}dy)dx+\int_2^4(\int _\sqrt{x}^2e^{\frac{x}y}dy)dx$
That is the full question.
The first step is almost certainly to switch the order of integration
17:12
Ive tried using additive or symmetry but nothing...
hmmm
and turn it into $\int_?^?\int_?^?e^{x/y}dx\ dy$ (some more work to determine what the right bounds are so I wrote question marks)
\o @EdwardEvans
@AkivaWeinberger Is this correct? $\int_1^2\int_{y^2}^ye^{x/y}dx\ dy$
I'm not sure
17:24
pffff im so bad at this
I haven't done this in a while
I think this doesn't constrain $x$ between $1$ and $2$? So maybe you need $\int_y^{\min\{y^2,2\}}$ or something and then split it up
I don't know. Draw it
17:55
"We are currently offline for maintenance"
Nooooooo
Was the main site offline just now? Or was it just me?
@AkivaWeinberger it can be represented by a deterministic finite-state automaton so there is a corresponding regex
lul
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