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19:05
Uhm @TedShifrin the last result we used about sequences isn't true if we only have $\lim(a_n+b_n) = m$ right?
I mean without knowing any info of $a_n$ and $b_n$
Of course. You can add two divergent sequences and get a convergent one.
Yeah, if $a_n = n+m$ for fixed $m$ and $b_n = -n$ then both $a_n$ and $b_n$ aren't convergent but the sum is.
Right.
And if we know $a_n\to L$ the only way is that $b_n$ goes to $m-L$ or we get a contradiction.
Interesting, didn't notice that. Is a strong result.
That's what you figured out a while ago, yes :)
19:09
Yeah but I am trying to digest it :P
Don't get indigestion.
ted you seem good at this, have you considered a career in mathematics instruction
Kekw
Guys do you know the book "Calculus" of Robert Adams?
It looks like Apostol's one but more applied.
(Calculus, not mathematical analysis)
19:14
I taught out of his multivariable calculus once. It had some interesting mistakes.
Oh I learnt multivariable from there, I liked the vector field calculus section.
He had a false proof of the max/min test in several variables with even a counterexample as an exercise. (Some authors do such things on purpose and make a remark ... I think his was inadvertent.)
It was an ok book, but obviously I wrote my own :P
I remember having problems at that proof in particular.
And I remember blaming it to my poor algebra formation at that time (zero knowledge of quadratic forms)
Well, I don't know if he fixed the proof. I taught out of that book back in the 1990s. As I recall, he basically argued that if a function has a local max at the origin when restricted to each line through the origin, then it has a local max at the origin. This is very false.
Funny the things I remember ...
Now where did I leave my car keys? ....
one time i lost my keys and it turned out that i had put them in the freezer.
19:19
That's the typical Alzheimers move.
i guess i'd dropped them while adjusting something else in the freezer. i don't know. this was about 15 years ago, so i've been operating in the world for a while after that.
Not worth panicking just yet.
in my family dementia tends not to hit until the 70s at a minimum, and sometimes 80s.
so i have 50 more years.
I'm not sure how many I have. 70 is around the corner.
one of my grandparents did die at 49, which is alarming, because i am at least 20 years away from that age.
19:23
Uh huh. Sure.
for those just joining us, i am 41 and spend an unusual amount of time trying to sound younger than that.
last time i saw my maternal grandmother you could see the onset of dementia
which was...oof
Why, Odes?
19:26
semi: my grandmother's dementia was a tiny bit funny. she'd see cars on TV and think that the people driving them had stolen her car.
and we laughed about it even when she was alive.
@TedShifrin It has pretty good pics
I have lots of good multivariable integral problems in my book :)
(keep in mind i am used to robert adams pics :P)
@TedShifrin What's your book name?
the main thing i remember is her not being aware that i'd graduated college
Don't say that, @leslie. I suffered almost 20 years with my mom's.
19:27
Ah, found it :P
ted: i am sorry, i wouldn't want it to last that long.
See my profile, @Odes. Also the 112 YouTube lectures.
Wow that's really huge.
the betty white exit is about as good as one can hope for: dying in your sleep, just in time to screw up a major publication's plans
Yes, Betty did it just right. So did the mother of one of my good friends here; she just fell asleep with her tablet on her lap and never woke up.
19:31
on one hand it is sad she didn't make it to 100, but the fact that she died just in time to make the People magazine cover incorrect is just funny
I'm sure she planned it that way.
@TedShifrin how much time does it take to teach all the contents of that book/videos?
1 year?
There is a lot of content. Here, in spain, that content usually takes 18 ects (idk the equivalence in the US)
Yes, I covered pretty much the whole book in one year (4 lectures a week).
Ah it seems its 2 ects : 1 american credit, so 9 american credits
Credits depend on the university. But usually numbers of almost-hours of class per week.
19:38
Uhm interesting. I've never seen the concept of differential forms in the uni. Only when I studied diff geo by my own.
I'm a huge fan of differential forms. Most of my research used them to a great extent.
19:55
Odestheory12: Alternatively, take ordered sets $A=\{k\in \mathbb N: k\ne 3n \text{ for any } n\in \mathbb N\}$ and $B=\{3n: n\in \mathbb N\}$. Assuming the result that I wrote [earlier](https://chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/60153064#60153064) to be true, consider the sequences $(x_a), a\in \mathbb A$ and note that it converges to some L by the use of the linked result and the given condition. $(x_b)$ converges to L, is given.
So by the linked result, since $A\cup B=\mathbb N$ and that $A\cap B=\emptyset$, the sequence $(x_n)$ also converges.
Yeah, when I said that $\{S_{3n}\}, \{S_{3n-1}\} ,\{S_{3n-2}\}$ describe the whole sequence $\{S_n\}$, i meant $A\cap B \cap C =\emptyset$
It looks cool described like that
Wait can you use induction to prove that statement @Koro
Ah nah, $A$ and $B$ aren't finite sets
is not inductive either
Cauchy sequences are a pretty good tool for this kind of proofs.
20:11
Or using contradiction.
I need to practice a bit more proofs using the negation of limit definition
 
1 hour later…
21:24
i use contranegative myself.
curious why the mad rush to close seems to hit a hiatus. not complaining.
madness comes in waves?
some strange second order human group dynamic
always found it strange that waves should be dampened
21:42
hmmm...most herd mentality involves the boom, bust, and echo sequence. sorta like the business cycle
yeah, but how does the '2nd order' effect come about?
21:57
don't know; but, group dynamics may turn into gang mentality very quickly
Here's a traditional song you may enjoy, @copper.hat. Aoife O'Donovan and Sarah Jarosz do some beautiful harmonies on Some Tyrant. Sarah's playing an octave mandolin.
Some delta blues. Robert Johnson's Crossroads, by one of my favourite young performers, Chiara Kilchling & her friend Diletta. Chiara is a multi-instrumentalist and a painter. She lives in Germany, but mostly sings in English, although she has recorded a couple of songs in Hungarian.
22:17
nice!
am i being rude? math.stackexchange.com/questions/4357091/given-the-subspace-x-0-x-1-x-n-c-and-a-vector-v-in-mathbbrn?noredirect=1#comment9096948_4357091
They all play & sing a diverse range of styles. Here's Aiofe doing Joni Mitchell's Coyote, in celebration of Joni's birthday, on Live From Here (the show formerly known as Prarie Home Companion).
oh wow, i thought from the first that Sarah Jarosz was Aoife O'Donovan based on the way she sang.
Slightly brusque, yes. But presumably this was assigned as homework after projection was defined and discussed. In my classes I used to make people to projection onto hyperplanes two ways (one, projecting onto the normal; the other, using the projection formula for projecting on a subspace).
Sarah's of Polish extraction, but grew up in Texas.
Are Poles allowed in Texas?
(no math humo(u)r to follow)
22:25
only on the right half plane
I'm of Polish and Russian extraction, but I had the decency to grow up in CA and MA.
@copper.hat The OP doesn't seem to mind. That question's likely to get closed if the OP doesn't show some attempt & explain where they're stuck.
I just ran into my computer science professor from last semester. He said he was shocked I did well on the final since I'm a math major. I'm going to take it as a compliment.
:D
For real though, that class was probably the hardest I've taken in my academic career. I was dreaming about binary search trees in the days leading up to the exam.
22:31
Some playful young Russian ladies, Beloe Zlato, who usually sing in Russian, doing California Dreaming
coolio
I've sometimes dreamed I'm coding, but it's really hard to read in dreams, and computers don't work very well.
I know what you mean. I get the feeling that what I'm seeing is almost correct, but then when I wake up, it seems like nonsense.
Except one time I actually did dream the solution to a proof.
It was a really simple one, though.
proof by nightmare
22:40
I think your subconscious can come up with good precursor material while your dreaming, but you need to actually be conscious to make the final synthesis. I've often fallen asleep after working on a mathematical proof or coding problem, and then 5 minutes after I wake up I know exactly what to do.
they should allow 5 minute naps during the putnam
@364539917 I second this.
Chiara's also done a nice version of California Dreaming, but here she is with her friend Jesse doing Going To California by Led Zeppelin. I almost like her version better than the original. :)
22:56
@TedShifrin my advisor was Polish
@PM2Ring my few good ideas all came after some meditation (longer story there)
oh my, the answer is sooo sledgehammer than i may need to answer
Polish mathematicians cracked the original version of the Enigma code. The work at Bletchley Park by Turing et al was a direct development of the Polish technique. Without that original Polish work, it would've taken a lot more time to crack the more advanced versions of Enigma, and England would probably have fallen at the end of 1942 or early 43.
i suspect my advisor's time in Poland was not the stuff of great memories.
Turing got his posthumous apology for his abominable treatment. not that it did him any good.
i had my daughter read Singh's The Code, she says it was what make CS interesting to her
This reminds me of one of Ted's starred comments about reducing a problem to something you know www.funnyjunksite.com/clean-jokes/mathematician-fireman/
23:30
Andrew Hodges wrote a good biography: Alan Turing: The Enigma, which is well worth reading, and a section of his website contains a lot of info about Turing. turing.org.uk/index.html The book has a lot of info about the Enigma machine and how it was cracked. Hodges is a mathematical physicist. His PhD advisor was Roger Penrose.
Excellent book!
yeah, i read the enigma
i haven't read that. korner's pleasures of counting contains quite a bit about the enigma that is not in the code book (although i do like the code book)
23:52
im stuck at Korners discussion of internecine squabbles
i've never directly come up with anything in my sleep, but i did come up with a simplification of something that had already been written but not submitted yet. woke up and it was all there.
my coauthor asked where it came from and i had to tell him, a dream.
reminds me of the simpsons episode where one cop tells another, i think we should go investigate X. chief wiggum, who has just had a dream mimicking a scene from twin peaks that led him to the same conclusion, says "did you have the same backwards-talking dream with the flaming cards?" and after a pause the other cop says "... i'll drive."
:-)
i'm really running the psq gauntlet today
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