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00:37
I will try.
(Diagram 0)
Recall the question was "Suppose I have a coin, a bag, and a bunch of red and blue marbles. I flip the coin twice and for each head, I put a red marble in the bag and each tail, I put a blue marble in the bag. Question 1: I look in the bag and tell you that I see a red marble; what is the probability that both marbles are red? Question 2: I draw a red marble out of the bag. what is the probability that the remaining marble is red?".
Question 1 mentions that the bag has at least one red ball which means we rule out BB.
As we see in Diagram 0 RR, RB and BR have the same probability to occour.
Question 2 mentions that you take out the red ball.
Here your possible outcomes are $R_1R_2$, $R_2R_1$, $RB$, $BR$. We got 2 RR and one RB and one BR so half of them are RR.
@TedShifrin
In my diagram those 16 possible outcomes' order matter so if you see $B_2B_1$ then first ball is $B_2$ and second one $B_1$.
01:08
So you label the Rs in the second case but not in the first. Can you justify that?
@TedShifrin which case are we talking about?
Both :)
I’m asking why you distinguish the two Rs in question 2 but not in question 1.
I think robjohn’s version (having an independent observer report in question 1) is essential.
Ah I see I was showing the order.
If you yourself are looking at the bag, how do you see both balls without knowing what you saw?
RR came from coin flip and $R_1R_2$ to distinguish that both balls are not same.
01:17
As you’re stating it, if you yourself look and see at random only one of the two balls, the two questions are equivalent.
Wording is crazy important in this stuff.
Bob
Bob
Hello Ted
Hi Bob
Bob
Bob
anything new with you? lately the news has been bad
perhaps you have some good news you would like to share
that is an understatement.
@TedShifrin But you are not looking at the bag. You are told there is at least one ball in the bag that is red.
01:22
@CuriousMind As I said, wording is super important. This is not how you phrased it.
@Bob Personally, I’m healthy and very fortunate. Globally, the US and the world suck. So no.
Bob
Bob
@TedShifrin Glad to hear you are healthy and fortunate. I have been having a bad few weeks in the stock market. I do not like that.
@leslie I have given in with 90s and turned on the AC (set at 80).
"I look in the bag and tell you that I see a red marble; what is the probability that both marbles are red? " I think you are talking about this ted
Bob
Bob
I noticed that the rocket launch to the moon has been delayed again.
Oh, the stock market should have bombed badly during Tromp. We’re paying now.
01:25
Oh so by "I" it means RobJohn was talking
we just got back from the pool (weirdly nobody was there) and have it on 75.
@CuriousMind yes
@leslietownes You will crash the electricity grid.
Bob
Bob
@TedShifrin I gather you are not a fan of Donald Trump. I have two good friends that are. I am not.
our house doesn't get any late-day sun, so the AC actually is off right now, despite being set at 75.
That is the understatement of the century. He has led to what is likely the end of our democracy.
@leslietownes mine is off, too. Specious ….
Bob
Bob
01:28
@TedShifrin I do not think that our democracy will survive.
ok so I think everything is clear now...
So your friends are partly to blame.
Bob
Bob
correction
@TedShifrin I do think that our democracy will survive.
that's quite a correction.
as someone said, wording is crazy important in this stuff.
No, it is likely not to. Pay attention to what the MAGA people have done to voting. And that Graham threatens violence if T is brought to account.
@leslietownes Verily.
01:30
that is pretty rare way of thinking me see
The GOP has turned to autocracy, anti-constitution.
@CuriousMind Huh?
Bob
Bob
not all of the GOP and the GOP is currently out of power
so were the nazis in 1930. we're in the middle of volume 1 of a history of the third reich.
All but a set of measure zero. You are not paying attention, truly.
Leslie and I agree again, very sadly.
i hate agreeing with you, ted.
01:32
I know.
@TedShifrin Nevermind :)
Bob
Bob
German did not have a 200 year history of free elections. We do
You are totally naive. The process has been undermined in plain sight. Republicans can change results in many states if they don’t like them. Have you been following the news?
News according to FOX, maybe.
I’m going to cook dinner. BBIAB.
Bob
Bob
Nice chatting
I am going to bed
good night
 
1 hour later…
02:48
Interesting that Bob has two friends that are supporters of Mr T. I have two that I have to contend with on a regular basis at the dog park.
03:04
I won't even inquire.
Sometimes they spout such garbage.
So they’re fine with destroying democracy and installing a lying thug dictator.
The problem is that they don't see him as a lying thug dictator.
For some unknown reason, they ignore the evidence, or have drunk the koolaid and think that the evidence is fabricated.
It’s the fault of Graham, McConnell, McCarthy et al for all rolling over.
03:20
For the theorem above, does the converse hold true as well?
if T is a normal operator and eigenvectors $u,v$ are orthogonal, then will they correspond to distinct eigenvalues?
I believe it to be the case however I'm just looking for confirmation
No. Of course not.
Look at the most well-known matrices.
03:40
@robjohn Any thoughts on this? It's a bit unusual.
03:54
If I am reading this properly, the inner product would be $0$ if the first derivative has constant magnitude.
but I am not sure I understand their question
About
> Master student. Now I am taking a research in geometry and analysis.

> Bachelor in Top 2 from China.
@robjohn The fact that $f$ is vector-valued makes this a little subtle.
Oh, I guess I didn't notice that. It does complicate things.
Yeah, I missed it when I made my first comment, to which he responded by making the derivative nonsingular.
The derivative will be a matrix, I guess
04:02
Yes, $n\times n$.
So the hessian is a vector-valued bilinear form.
yeah, I haven't thought about those.
(for a long time :)
I have in some contexts (like second fundamental form of a non-hypersurface).
@user4539917 About?
@TedShifrin From the user's profile, sir.
I do not understand. What is your comment/question?
04:07
Just providing some background context, sir.
for whom?
The OP
No clue what you’re talking about.
me neither
04:09
Oh ….
ah, the author of the question
:-)
Sorry for being too terse.
He’s asked some not-so-good questions before. But there’s nothing wrong with this question. I just don’t know the answer yet.
I have no thoughts on it either.
I suspect there’s a counterexample, but who knows.
04:25
Got a downvote on an answer today that I think is fine (and so have the 138 upvoters). I have no idea if they just don't understand the answer or one of the steps. Without comment, I can't help.
once in a while, I get someone who downvoted when they thought they were upvoting
after 5 minutes, they can't change their vote unless the answer is edited.
138 to 1 sounds like a random act of unkindness...but, yeah it could be just a misunderstanding
04:40
@robjohn I misvoted once like that.
04:53
Honest mistake.
Suppose I have a positive semidefinite operator P on l^2 (self-adjoint and bounded). Let S_j denote projection from l^2 onto first j coordinates.
I am wondering if the supremum sup trace([S_j (P + L^{-1})S_j^*]^{-1}) converges to sup trace((P + L^{-1})^{-1}) as j \to infinity, where the suprema range over L, which are self-adjoint positive operators with tr(L) <= 1.
 
4 hours later…
09:18
Hi everyone.
Could anybody take a look at my question plz?
5
Q: Numbers of ‘Equilateral Division’ of 2-$\sqrt{3}$-$\sqrt{7}$ Right Triangle

Thomas PengProblem: A right triangle has two right angled sides with lengths $2$ and $\sqrt{3}$. Cut this right triangle twice (into three pieces) and put the three pieces together to form a equilateral triangle. Solution: Now my questions are: Is there another way? How do you prove that? More generally, i...

 
2 hours later…
11:18
I'm trying to prove the following: Let $\Gamma = \{|z-z_0|=r\}$. Then for any $z\in\Bbb C_{\infty}$,
$$z^* = {r^2\over \bar{z}-\bar{z}_0}.$$
I already know that if $\Gamma$ is the unit circle, then $z^* = {1\over\bar{z}}$. For general case, I used the fact that cross ratio is invariant under Mobius transformations. First note that $|z_i-z_0| =r$ for $i =1,2,3$.
\begin{align*}
\overline{[z:z_1:z_2:z_3]} & = \overline{[z-z_0:z_1-z_0:z_2-z_0:z_3-z_0]}\\
& = \overline{\left[{1\over r}(z-z_0):{1\over r}(z_1-z_0):{1\over r}(z_2-z_0):{1\over r}(z_3-z_0)\right]}\\
Something is wrong in the middle of the argument but I can't find
Here, $z^*$ is a symmetric point relative to $\Gamma$ i.e., $\overline{[z:z_1:z_2:z_3]} = [z^*:z_1:z_2:z_3]$ for $z_1,z_2,z_3\in\Gamma\subset\Bbb C_{\infty}$: circle.
Jam
Jam
11:45
a prime element of a Ring R does it remain prime element on the ring R[a]={m+na|m,n in R}
2 is a prime in Z. But 2 is not a prime in $\mathbb{Z}[i\sqrt{17}]$ since it divides -16 but neither $1-+i\sqrt{17}$
@Jam depends on what a is supposed to be
an article, usually representing a single item ;-)
what a is supposed to b? color me confused
Jam
Jam
12:33
Let $I=<x+3y,x-y>$ and $\mathbb{C}[x,y]$ is I prime ? is I principal?
can i say x=y so x+3y=4x=0 so $\mathbb{C}/I \cong \mathbb{C}$
you have to formulate those equalities with residue classes, but yes the conclusion is correct
Jam
Jam
i want to write it in amore rigorous way will you help me?
i gues ill need a couple of ismoprhism theorems
$\mathbb{C}[x,y]/<x-y> \cong \mathbb{C}[x]$ trivial isomorphisms
now $\mathbb{C}[x] \ <4x> \cong \mathbb{C}$
whats the argument now with I and c[x,y] to combine them
$\mathbb{C}[x,y]/I=(\mathbb{C}[x,y]/\langle x-y\rangle)/(I/\langle x-y\rangle)$ and under your isomorphism $\mathbb{C}[x,y]/\langle x-y\rangle\cong\mathbb{C}[x]$ the ideal $I/\langle x-y\rangle$ corresponds to $\langle 4x\rangle$, so this quotient is $\mathbb{C}[x]/\langle 4x\rangle\cong\mathbb{C}$
Jam
Jam
12:54
ohh thanks !!
note that the projection $\mathbb{C}[x,y]\rightarrow\mathbb{C}$ inducing this isomorphism is given by $x\mapsto0$ and $y\mapsto0$, so its kernel is $I=\langle x,y\rangle$ a posteriori
you could also argue $I=\langle x,y\rangle$ for an alternative argument, but it's more or less equivalent
Jam
Jam
yes that was my initial argument
<x,y>=<x-y,x+y> and thats where i stuck
im trying to use the following property
<m,n>=<m+rn,n> for any r in the ring
yeah, you can use that as well
Jam
Jam
didnt find a clever way to get it 3y
if you do id be glad to tell me. I tried reversing the argument and solve for some r but no luck
$\langle x+3y,x-y\rangle=\langle (x+3y)-(x-y),x-y\rangle=\langle 4y,x-y\rangle=...$
Jam
Jam
13:08
omg
that was redicussly easy
i forgot i can multiply by different units its generator
tho i shouldnt rely on memory on something like that
<u1x,u2y>=<x,y> for unitis in R
@leslietownes I c...
Jam
Jam
is principallity of ideals invariant under isomorphism?
i know it preserves the p.I.D structure
but for 2 specific ideals ?
what do you mean
Jam
Jam
if I and J are isomorphic
and I is principal
is J princiapl?
well isomorphic as rings
13:23
so I and J are rings?
Jam
Jam
is there any other notion for ideals to be isomorphic
i was thinking <x+3y,x-y>=<x,y> so the first one is not principal. but this is not an isomorphism they are actually equals as sets.
but suppose they dont belong as subsets to the same set. I and J and I is generated by one element and is isomorphic to J
is J generated by the image of that element too?
i think yes just like vector spaces
bases go to bases
what does it mean for ideals to be isomorphic
note than ideal is not an independent notion, it lives inside some ring
so keep that in mind when you try formulating what you want
Jam
Jam
yes sometimes i think of ideals as rings on themselfs
but it is no right
cause rx in I for every r in R
It is well known that SSA is not a valid congruency rule; however if we are given two sides and an angle opposite to the longer side then it becomes valid, how to prove this? Is there a geometric proof? Also is it always the case that it fails if the angle is opposite the shorter side?
Jam
Jam
13:40
im trying to prove that an epimorphism from k[x] where k is a field to an integral domain must be 1-1. But i dont want to use the fact k[x]/kerf integral domain iff kerf is prime.
i want to prove it more elementary
i know f(1)=1 since i go to an integral domain
f(g(x))=0 =>$ a_nf(x)^n+...+a_0=0$
since $f(x)^n cant be zero in an integral domain all ai=0 and im done?
ohh right i have to exclude i cant divide with f(x) to say all ai=0
ok solved it
so either it is a field or the map is 1-1
that initial statement is very incorrect
the alst statement is correct
though I do not follow your argument
Jam
Jam
since i have an epimorphism to an integral domain f(1)=1
now take any g(x) f(g(x)) to be zero is equivalent to $a_nf(x)^n...+a_0=0$
since f(1)=1 f(a)=a
hm.. nope thats wrong
i dont know is ai exist in the image as elements
if*
@robjohn could you take a look at my question?(if you have time)
Jam
Jam
it could be K[x]--> Z
well, $f(1)=1$ holds for any ring homomorphism, nothing to do with epimorphism or the codomain being an integral domain
Jam
Jam
13:54
isnt the zero function also an homomorphism?
not a ring homomorphism
be precise about what you mean by "epimorphism"
Jam
Jam
in my notes we count the zero function as a homomorphism
say Z to Z f(m)=0
point is my argument is not valid for many reasons
ok, then define what "epimorphism" means here
you have a map from k[x] to some integral domain, what properties are you assuming this map to have
Jam
Jam
f(a+b)=f(a)+f(b)
f(ab)=f(a)f(b)
kai is onto
kai?
Jam
Jam
13:58
and*
damn kai=and but in greek
i think i got dislexia hahaha
i wanna prove the result in an elementary way
oh, I see
Jam
Jam
not using R/I integral domain iff I is prime
so a surjective ring homomorphism except you are not requiring that $f(1)=1$
Jam
Jam
ye but to be onto it has f(g(x))=1 and u can prove that g(x) is 1
however, as you say, in this case because the codomain is an integral domain, either $f(1)=0$ in which case $f$ is the zero homomorphism or $f(1)=1$
Jam
Jam
14:00
ye
for the record, when you are talking about homomorphism of rings, epimorphism =/= surjective
anyway, primality is a very elementary notion. I don't think you'll have success formulating this argument without (implicit) reference to primality.
Jam
Jam
ye ok
ty
14:46
halo my beautifuls
I have a deep mathematical question : Who is the most attractive mathematician of all time?
15:07
"Attractive" in which sense?
15:55
Climate has huge effects on electronic devices. I think in very humid climates, laptops start to malfunction.
The probability that the median of these N numbers chosen from the [1, M] range is an integer. can somebody suggest something
16:28
I feel this must be all known... If I repeatedly add a uniform random number from (0,1) what is the expected number of numbers before you get to 1 or more?
16:46
63
Q: Choose a random number between $0$ and $1$ and record its value. Keep doing it until the sum of the numbers exceeds $1$. How many tries do we need?

user25329Choose a random number between $0$ and $1$ and record its value. Do this again and add the second number to the first number. Keep doing this until the sum of the numbers exceeds $1$. What's the expected value of the number of random numbers needed to accomplish this?

@leslietownes
?
If you have time
mm, i dunno. interesting question though. it probably follows from some geometric characterization of the ambiguity (i.e. the set of possibilities) that having the longer side then resolves.
ted: our coyote (lounging next to a tree outside) says hi.
Thanks. Is he overheated?
he looks hot, yes.
It’s always good to ask for an expected value when you
know not what it be.
16:58
my wife and daughter are now outside watering some plants, in full view of the coyote. the concern is that if we don't do this, the plants will die
My book didn't prove the James characterization of weak compactness in full generality, but restricted the proof to the separable case (using Godefroy theorem) because it's apparently hard in the non-separable case. I wonder if I should look up the proof in full generality, or maybe I should just give up?
(give up for now at least)
give up unless you need the non separable case for something
Yes. That's probably the most sane thing to do. I did even search in the references but it looked crazy hard with my current knowledge.
What is this symbol $\ni$?
Is it 'such that'?
Isn't it $\in$ but backwards
17:42
@Koro Depends on context.
I have seen this usually being used as in $\mathbb Z\ni x$.
I am most familiar with it in the setting $A \ni x$, where $A$ is a set, and $x$ is an element of the set.
You could read it as "$A$ contains $x$ as an element."
But then I saw $\ni$ being used in class in the place of 'such that'.
Or, really, just $x$ is an element of $A$.
@XanderHenderson yes, that's what I'm also familiar with.
17:44
@Koro It can be used that way, yes.
i've ranted about this before, but the 'such that' symbol can simply be omitted from the 'formal/symbolic logic' that people pretend they are doing when they write it.
@XanderHenderson thanks a lot :).
it's a really bad habit and adds nothing. imvho.
then, what's its subsitute?
writing nothing at all.
you can simply omit it, or if it's somehow ambiguous, it would have been ambiguous anyway.
17:47
Ohh.
prototypical example would be something like forall x exists y such that __. just erase "such that." it's nothing
i guess it allows people to think of symbolic formulae as more closely corresponding with spoken language, which isn't nothing.
(Trying to write without 'such that' and seeing how it looks.) Let $(X, M, \mu)$ be a measure space. Then I define $\bar M:=\{ E\cup F: E\in M, F\subset N, N\in M, \mu(N)=0\}$. Suppose $S\in M$, then there exists $E, N\in M, F\subset N, \mu(N)=0, S=E\cup F$.
hmm, looks okay. :)
@leslietownes sometimes I feel like not writing 'such that' or '$A\subset X$ with A having property so and so' at all.
18:11
if you were feeding that to a computer i might replace some of the commas with "ands" but that is definitely the spirit.
19:05
you can greatly simplify this by using outer measure
The people I’ve seen insist on the s.t. Symbol put dots on either side. I personally have never used it …. Not once.
19:43
it seems to have cooled a little here. only about 90 now.
It was 87 here at 8 AM. Good thing this is all just a libtard hoax.
20:05
Suppose that $B_n:=\cup_{i=1}^n A_i \in M$ for all $n\in \mathbb N$, can I then say that $\cup_{i=1}^\infty A_i\in M$?
Thoughts on how this question should be tagged?
Is it elementary number theory?
The problem is that: I can’t even use contradiction here. If $\color{red}{\cup_{i=1}^\infty\not \in M}$, I am having difficulty interpreting red part.
discrete something something.
koro: what's M? some results in measure theory do take the flavor of "there is no abstract or general reason why this union ought to be in __, but if it is, [conclusion holds]."
I’m trying to prove that the set of all v* measurable sets is a sigma algebra , which I’m denoting by M.
20:23
Thanks Leslie. I understood.
For example: If I take the set of natural nos. N, and then I define M={ E (subset of N): E is finite or E^c is finite}
Then, it is an algebra but not a sigma algebra.
koro i am not presently recommending this as an option, but finitely additive measure theory is a good way of re-approaching measure theory after learning the countably additive case
so maybe a semester or two from now, check it out
it's very much not what you need to develop a well behaved integral but it sheds a lot of of light on why countably additive proofs are the way they are
20:41
@leslietownes yeah, the book also uses finite additive of outer measure for disjoint sets.
21:11
@leslietownes which book is this?
 
3 hours later…
23:57
Anyone know whether the "set of all propositions" is a small set categorically-speaking?
I need to know for some code

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