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00:15
this is the furthest I got in fact share.icloud.com/photos/0458dYbOGyMalGuWOcCvnSuNg
00:29
Hey. I'm going to ask a very weird and may seem like I'm joking question but I'm really not. I don't know what is meant by last digit of a number. That would mean there is a first digit. Is it right to assume that the last digit in 123567 is 1 and the first digit is 7?
i think most of the time, when people say 'last digit,' they mean the last one you'd write when writing the decimal expansion of the number from left to right. so 7 in this case.
this kind of ambiguity sometimes comes up in storing data. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endianness
Thanks leslie. This language has always confused me. That makes sense. I think i was thinking of camparing place value. Earlier place values of the number are at the beginning of that number so they are first. I'm going to try to shake that thinking or that connection and try to use your thinking instead.
00:51
I guess in Hebrew it might be reversed, but otherwise it’s totally standard. We write left to right.
i googled that. apparently they do it the same way, although left-to-right is something of a red herring i guess.
'most significant' and 'least significant' are sometimes used to remove the ambiguity. as on that page on endianness.
a red herring in that it doesn't explain why we start with the biggest digit. if you were thinking of a number as a power series in 10 with digit coefficients it might seem more natural to go the other way.
on a properly populated chat, someone would have brought up the p-adics by now. i guess the party really is at copper's house.
01:15
come on over. my wife is watching grown men throw balls into a broken net.
No, you’re bringing agridolce leeks to robjohn’s.
Something new for me to try :-)
tonight will be take-out lamb vindaloo
01:33
Hi guys. What means a unobservable stochastic process?
02:17
Any tips on how to use the first part to solve the last one?
02:32
nevermind, finally figured it out
 
2 hours later…
04:13
Surely you’re not posting a homework problem for us to do.
No , it was from a test. But I couldn’t solve this question
Show us what you tried.
I’m trying to post image but facing a bug.
It says can’t be posted. I’ll try to type
@TedShifrin I also had a lot of difficulty in understanding the statements too.
04:33
I should see conditional probabilities, and you have none.
You should have events for accident and red and green lights.
E1 , E2 is for accident sir
At Red , green signal
You want the probability of a red light GIVEN that there was no accident.
Yes sir
What’s the probability that there was no accident?
1/5 + 1/8 = 8/40+5/40 sir
04:37
No no.
You need to work with Bayes formula.
You have it?
05:04
No point trying to help some people.
05:45
Question Ted...
Is there a way that I can back out a general form of a linear operator if it is on a vector space of functions?
So to be specific, I was asked to find the adjoint of $T(f) = f' + 3f$. So if I put in a general form of a vector in $P_1(\mathbb{R})$ such as $a + bx$ I'll get $(3a +b) + 3bx$
What does back out mean?
after doing all the necessary work (converting to a matrix, transpose, etc) I would get the adjoint $T^*(x) = 3a + (a+3b)x$
And what is the inner product?
the inner product is $\langle f,g \rangle = \int_{-1}^{1}f(t)g(t)dt$
but I'm not even specifically talking about that. So I have these two expressions for the linear operators. Is there a way I could express $T^*(f)$ in the form $T^*(f) = f_{something} + c \cdot f_{something\ else}$
That's what I'm meaning by "backing out"
or whatever else would be added onto my $T^*(f)$. THat was just a suggestion of what I'm thinking about
do you understand what I'm explaining @copper.hat ?
Yes, but I think you are not making use of the fact that this is a 2d problem.
You want a formula for $T^*g$ in terms of $g,g'$.
06:01
yes
You need to use the formula $\langle T^* g,f \rangle = \int_{-1}^1 (gf' +3gf)$ to determine the form of $T^*g$.
hmmmm.......I see, but don't see.......I'll work a little bit with it tonight and if all else fails I'll come back tomorrow with some questions.
hold on, i'm a little distracted here
06:54
@dc3rd sorry, my brain is not cooperating tonight.
all good...happens to us all.....
07:21
If the tangent space is one-dimensional, and I look at the Ricci tensor Ric(x,x), is this just straight up equal to the scalar curvature since I am only "adding" 1 summand?
@Jakobian Here is a question you might find interesting that I've been thinking about lately. Let $X$ be a continuum and let $K(X)$ be its hyperspace of compact sets (with the Hausdorff metric/Vietoris topology). Must $K(X)$ contain a copy of the Hilbert cube (that is $[0,1]^\omega$) with nonempty interior?
Remarks: $K(X)$ always contains a copy of $[0,1]^\omega$ and the answer is positive for Peano continua (in that case $K(X)\simeq[0,1]^\omega$)
dc3rd, pay attention to domains. if they haven't been given, work generally with the definition of the domain of the adjoint (hint it is not always everything) and try to find conditions that make it interesting
 
4 hours later…
11:12
When a wire is full of electron even if electrons are accelerating I think current will remain same all over the wire.
If a single electron acclerates then other electron will acclerate at same rate so I think current will be same right?
@AlessandroCodenotti I do find it interesting but I don't think I have studied hyperspaces enough yet to have tools for solving such question
 
1 hour later…
12:32
Can I ask a naive question from which I have no experience of doing yet? Can this be extended by analytic continuation? Because this is only valid at 0<x<2
1
Q: Revised: Proof verification for the function $f(x)=\frac{x^{s-1}}{s^{x}-1}$ in terms of the incomplete gamma-function and the polylogarithm function

Sureta JustinRegarding my previous post: A ‘quite’ elementary function $f(x)=\frac{x^{s-1}}{s^{x}-1}$ related to Riemann-Zeta function About the relation of the function $f(x)$ in terms of the Zeta-Function, I now give a proof of this relation via the incomplete gamma function Again let’s supposed the integra...

Kindly ask me for further inquiry to this thank you!
 
3 hours later…
16:01
3
Q: Prove that if $M$ is maximal ideal of $S$ and $\varphi$ is surjective then $\varphi^{-1}\left( M\right) $ is maximal ideal of $R$.

MancalaI'm thinking of Dummit Abstract Algebra, Chap 7, sectin 4, exercise 13b. I've tried to show that $R/\varphi^{-1}\left( M\right) $ is division ring, but was not successful. Can anybody help me? Let $\varphi:R\rightarrow S$ be a homomorphism of commutative rings. (a) If $P$ is a prime ideal of...

Here, what is a counterexample to b) in case subjectivity condition is not given?
I tried thinking of inclusion homomorphism $f: Z_{12}\to Z$ and then (3) is a maximal ideal of Z but $f^{-1}((3))=\{0,3,6,9\}$ is also a maximal ideal in $Z_{12}$.
16:27
Today I've learnt about the geometric KKM-principle for Hilbert spaces
@Koro consider $\Bbb Z \to \Bbb Q$. $(0)$ is maximal in $\Bbb Q$
also there's no inclusion homomorphism $\Bbb Z_{12} \to \Bbb Z$
17:35
@LukasHeger thank you so much :-).
@LukasHeger not the one determined by $\bar 1\mapsto 1$ ?
what's 12*1?
0 in Z_{12}
so ..?
I guess the question I really meant to ask is: what is $1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1$?
Oh yes, 12*1 gets mappped to 12 then. And to 0 as well, which means that $1\mapsto 1$ determines no homomorphism.
Thank you!
you're welcome
17:59
A non-vanishing $1-$dim. Killing field $X$ bounded by $[0,1]$ where $X$ flows from $(0,0)$ to $(1,0)$ s.t. we have a global flow on $M=(0,1).$ Does a construction exist?
18:18
@dc3rd Excuse my brain out last night. (Excuse the slight abuse of notation.) The general inner product is $\langle a+bx, c+dx \rangle = 2ac +{2 \over 3}bd$. Then $\langle a+bx, T(c+dx) \rangle = \langle a+bx, 3c+d+3dx) \rangle = 2a[3c+d] +{2 \over 3}b[3d] = 2[3a]c+ {2 \over 3}[3a+3b]d$. From this alone we get $T^*(a+bx) = 3a+(3a+3b)x$ (assuming I have made no mistakes, which is a biggie). In this case no need to deal with matrices, etc.
19:16
Hi guys, how are you? Can someone say what means an unobservable stochastic process?
I got it as a stochastic process that is stationary for human perceptions but the process itself doesn't.
19:32
Am I right?
Ok that makes sense @copper.hat , but how do I determine what $g$ is from that expression? I get that all polynomials will be of that form once the operator is applied, but what is the application on the functions to make that form?
19:47
This might sound like a silly quesiton, but if ker f = ker (I - f)? They are the same space right? if Ker f = 0 where f is a Fredholm Operator (bounded linear map between Banach spaces), does that mean ker (I - f) = 0 also?
20:10
lemon: questions in front of things that appear to be hypotheses ("if ker f = ker(I - f)?") are a bit confusing. if f is fredholm, then ker(f) and ker(I-f) might not be the same, or even have the same dimension, even if you assume ker(f) = {0}. consider f = I
I m trying to resolve a simple issue right now in PDE. If ker L = 0 where L is the elliptic fredholm operator, i want to use the fredholm alternatives to argue L must also be surjective and so it is isomorphism.
hm, what is your definition of 'fredholm'? that conclusion should fall right out of either the definition, or a theorem that is fairly close to proximity to the definition in a textbook or set of course notes.
if it doesn't, there should be some examples. i don't know how important it is that L be 'elliptic' here. what is elliptic? does it have a non-PDE definition?
if there isn't one provided, you might need to do some work here. or worse, it might not be true.
there's more than 1 fredholm operator definition? i thought there was only one...
20:25
is 'elliptic' characterized in terms of properties of one or more points in the spectrum, or is it more than that?
OK, this might actually need some PDE, if it's true. i don't see how that definition easily boils down to a property that you could plug into the definition of 'fredholm.' i was hoping it might, but maybe it doesn't.
you can certainly have injective fredholm operators that aren't surjective. i was hoping there was some simple way of seeing, without detouring too much through PDE, that such operators could not be 'elliptic'. maybe there isn't.
what were u thinking that " that conclusion should fall right out of either the definition, or a theorem "
i was thinking, if you're seeing this in a PDE book and there isn't a lot of general operator theory around it, then it ought to be provided to you from some PDE result. hopefully something about solvability of these things given certain data.
but it sounds like maybe that's not the case, or maybe this is something you're trying to prove on the way to getting solvability of those things given certain data.
so maybe i've got it backwards.
Does it simplify things if I say L is self-adjoint?
20:35
yes.
what's your definition of 'fredholm'? there's only one notion of fredholm, but different books may introduce it in different, but equivalent ways. like invertibility, or other notions similar to fredholmness.
It's only self-adjoint if it smoked ajoint alone
anyway, math.stackexchange.com/questions/3078469/… might help. i'm not sure of the PDE context if you are on a hilbert space or not. but dim ker L* is dim coker(L) in the hilbert space setting.
@leslietownes its pretty much just the standard way, like wikipedia way " bounded linear operator with finite kernel"
between banach spaces, but we could assume hilbert
so if you know that L has closed range and ker L = 0 and L = L* then you know that L is surjective.
So I am looking at the Fredholm ALternative, but that one talks about maps on I - L
20:44
it's weird to me that we don't seem to be using 'elliptic' but maybe that goes into proving self adjointness or something else.
which maybe actually makes sense. never mind about that being weird.
@leslietownes what is that bar over A in that link
closure in the norm topology.
if A is fredholm then A has closed range and you can remove the bar at no additional cost.
hang on this doesn't have anything to do with fredholm alternative
21:15
@dc3rd I don't understand what you are asking. I am just using the general form of an element of $P_1$. and matching coefficients. Just shortcutting the matrix formation, etc.
So, for $ \langle g, Tf \rangle $ I have $g(x) = a+bx, f(x) = c+dx$. If I let $(T^* g)(x) = e +fx$, then the formula $\langle g, Tf \rangle = \langle T^*g, f \rangle$ gives $2ec +{2 \over 3}fd = 2[3a]c+ {2 \over 3}[3a+3b]d$ (for all $c,d$) from which we get $e=3a, f=3a+3b$ and so $(T^*g)(x) = 3a+(3a+3b)x$.
21:29
@copper.hat Yes I understand that Copper. So for $T(f)$ we had $T(f) = f' + 3f'$. Could I write something like that for $T^*(g)$? Just as an example $T^*(g) = g'' + 4g' + 2g$? That's what I was asking. Could I extract that sort of expression from the work you did above?
That is where I got hung up last night. You can, but (as far as I can determine) you end up with an awkward expression like $T^*g = 3(g-g'x)+ 3(g-g'x)x +3g'x$.
Joe
Unless you allow pointwise evaluation...
how did you even come up with that expression? Alright...I just preferred to respect the cloak of anonymity, but I suppose Joe is a regular enough name.... :P
If $g(x) = a+bx$ then $b=g'$ and $a=(g-g'x)$.
Of course, we also have stuff like $a=g(0), b= {1 \over 2} ( g(1)-g(-1))$ etc.
21:47
point evaluation on P_1 is also representable by inner producting with elements of P_1. the calculational awkwardness arguably arises from the fact that there is no one function that does this for all P_n (because point evaluations do not extend to the completion of all polynomials under the norm)
i vaguely alluded to this with my remark about domains. we never got precise about the domain although i infer from subsequent conversation that everything is just P_1
i was worried it might be all C^1 functions, or something like that, where the domain of the adjoint is just {0} i think
without boundary conditions
well, last night i was drinking white wine, not adjoint.
that's the right choice
it would have been my reflexive response
I love using the words mutatis mutandis in a sentence.
the argument for banach spaces should work for frechet spaces, mutants mutants
i miss having real life conversations with word play
usually i just get the 'huh' response.

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