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01:33
What's the real part of $(1+i)^p$ for odd $p$?
Combine this with $(a+b)^p\equiv a^p+b^p\pmod p$ for prime $p$
Finish with Euler's criterion
@TedShifrin Yikes!
Students in my area can take precalculus at the college as juniors, then calculus as seniors.
I am sort-of kind-of toying with the idea of building a four semester sequence of courses which assumes high school algebra and geometry as a prerequisite, and gets to multivariable calculus in semester four (basically, a semester of precalc, with an emphasis on polynomials and a deemphasis of transcendental functions; followed by the standard 3 semester calc sequence, more or less).
The idea being that students who are successful in that sequence finish high school with an AS or AA and math prereqs for the sciences done.
@AkivaWeinberger $3$.
Plus or minus some epsilon.
@XanderHenderson yep, it was the fact that I really love mathematics (and good at it) that kept me relevant and even top of the list in mathematics classes back there, I suspect a "normal" american student who doesn't exactly enjoy math would have a much harder time there. Especially since the competition is VERY real. Everyone is studying.
Also, what kind of anime did you happen to come across?
@XanderHenderson Deempasis on trig, log, exp? Bad for everyone.
@Gokuカカロット Recently? Not much...
@TedShifrin No, they come back later.
Also, on the subject of a university bound student not taking many courses outside their major, that is true, but it is somewhat compensated for by the fact that extracurricular and club activities are actually really important in Japan, especially if you want to maintain a good track record in High school. That's why I had to be part of at least one club otherwise I wouldn't be able to graduate
01:47
Put them in the calculus curriculum, when you actually have the tools to describe them properly.
@XanderHenderson I'm assuming it was some "high school" anime? Because anime like Dragon Ball isn't exactly a great indicator of life in Japan, or life in general.
A fair bit of trig can probably stay in the precalc portion of the class---most of the elementary stuff is pretty geometrical, and doesn't require appeals to continuity or completeness.
There isn’t time in the calculus curriculum to learn all the trig and exponential stuff, plus problem solving.
You’re thinking too rigorously. Who really cares, besides you?
@TedShifrin I'm not really proposing that any material be left out entirely---I am only suggesting that topics get moved around.
And I know that such a program can be successful, because I've taught that sequence at UCR---except that sequence is done in four quarters, not four semesters.
Plus they need higher math skills for high school (and college) chem and physics,
01:51
You do need the calculus you'll learn in order to make sense of college physics
@Gokuカカロット I've never seen a Dragon's Ball.
@TedShifrin I don't disagree, but I also don't want to conflate "math skills" with "knows certain topics".
@XanderHenderson You made an inside joke that only the Dragon Ball community is aware of, without knowing it. You're a genius
@Gokuカカロット ...
@XanderHenderson 😯😯😯
Okay?
@Gokuカカロット In any event, I can't really think of any of the trash anime that led to my understanding of Japanese high school. The things that I remember are the things that are, in my opinion, not trash.
01:52
"Are you after the Dragon Balls too?". "Wait the Dragon's what?!"
@XanderHenderson better not be some generic "romcom"
Like, I had Nausicaa, Cowboy Bebop, and Trigun bootlegs in 2000ish.
Yeah okay, you get a pass. Cowboy Bebop is awesome
I love its opening theme
Nausicaa is better. :P
Joe Hisashi > Yoko Kano.
Saint Seiya is better than that :P
@Gokuカカロット One of my favorites from a kid
01:54
Hironbu Nagayama >>>> everyone else
@Gokuカカロット No idea what that is.
@D.C.theIII saint seiya was awesome wasn't it?
@XanderHenderson it's a dinosaur
I just finished binge watching a bunch of old classic anime over the holidays: Fist of the North Star, Street Fighter, Ninja Scroll, Sakigake Otokojuku, Tekken,
Hokuto No Ken. Man, I miss that
Kenshiro is the goat
I didn't want to use the proper name just in case.
01:56
"You are already dead"
You have to understand that, in the 90s and early 2000s, the popular conception of "anime" in the US was that it was all hentai, watched by lonely nerds. If you wanted to watch anime, you had to get 8th generation fansubbed bootleg VHS copies of things, shipped in from Hong Kong.
Raoh and Kaioh are beasts
It’s not all nerds?
We had to work for it, so even trash anime was better than nothing.
@XanderHenderson that "concept" still exists and in fact it may be more valid now than it was back then.
Many anime today, even non hentai, have extreme "fan service"
01:58
@TedShifrin Not any more. It has thoroughly entered popular culture.
The first episode of Dragonball had Goku take off Bulma's undies....
rest assured, the lonely nerds are still there.
@XanderHenderson you're right about that. I didn't watch all the one's I mentioned when I was a kid and they had just hit the scene because of how difficult it was to find them. But I had a trip down memory lane that sparked a light in the recesses of my mind to go back and watch
@Gokuカカロット Everything appropriately cis and heteronormative?
@TedShifrin Dragon Ball was, but quite few of them from even back then were more progressive than one would think
02:00
@TedShifrin its from a 1984 comic, and Goku in question is an 11 year old clueless boy who's only human interaction was his adoptive grandfather who he accidentally killed, cut him some slack
but then again they were probably looking at things through a perverted lense and not with the intention of normalizing things
@Gokuカカロット One can cut Goku slack without giving similar charity to the artists and animators.
Asian culture can be very homophobic.
@XanderHenderson hey, to be fair Toei animation didn't show everything just that the clothes were off, that's all. If they wanted they could've gone further like many anime did back then
@D.C.theIII it was more of a gag trope than anything else. Toriyama thinks stuff like this is funny and he's far from the only mangaka who thinks that even ignoring those that took clear inspiration from him
Even Saint Seiya wasn't immune to such tropes. Its literally known for Yaoi....
@D.C.theIII You and I have very different tastes. :D
02:06
Now that I think of it, this subculture of ecchi loving lonely nerds has existed for a while.
Urusei Yatsura existed for this very reason
ban anime. impure corrupt medium, degradation of the human spirit
@shintuku Naw. Some of it is good.
Though, aside from Ghibli releases, I haven't seen much in the last 20 years. So maybe all the good stuff has dried up and gone away?
ghibli is great animation film
@XanderHenderson Oh no, there's still a lot of good stuff. Arguably much more so now than ever before
@shintuku no thanks. The rest of the world isnt China, nor do we want to be
shintuku: and the cephalopod spirit
02:16
@leslietownes spirited away. Don't forget that
I watched Captain Tsubasa 1983, probably the first real sports anime. It was great
@Gokuカカロット Yeah it was definitely all tropes. The outlandishness of it is what made it funny
@D.C.theIII Yep, especially the fact that scenes/tropes like this made for potentially really funny dubs
@Gokuカカロット "I AM EDASHIMA HEIHACHI!!!"
 
1 hour later…
03:51
is there any odd perfect number?
@shintuku wasn't that a film company? I have a number of their films.
koro: famous open problem.
surprising, even perfect numbers are completely classified as $2^m\times $ Mersenne prime.
goldbach's conjecture is easier to resolve for odd numbers, too
03:59
😮
So is there any proof which uses Goldbach's conjecture?
and then of course one would think of- how to prove this without using Goldbach's conjecture? This is like -how to prove this without AOC.
or without using continuum hypothesis.
i can't help but reading Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez when people type AOC
04:55
Hi everyone, could you please explain to me why $\dot{V}$ is negative definite in this proof
I've managed only to show it is negative semi-definite as follows
Basically, my question boils down to this term $x^T JJ^T x$, is this always positive definite?
it'll be positive semidefinite (what some people just call 'positive'). without more, not guaranteed to be positive definite.
we discussed this once before around chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/61312272#61312272 where a question came up about whether there were assumptions on the dimensions of J.
something about redundant robots.
maybe someone else has further ideas, my thinking has not progressed beyond then.
@CroCo They stipulated $J$ has full rank. So it’s right.
Not semi-definite, but definite.
@leslietownes thank you so much. There was a discussion I completely lost track of. Studying is stressing me out a lot.
no worries, i'm surprised i remembered it. six months ago!
time flies when you're, well, exhausted all the time from everything.
You don’t remember yesterday!
05:07
who said that?
Until I started my graduate studies, I had a vivid memory. It is very difficult for me to understand how stress can have a detrimental effect on memory.
You are truly an inspiration to me for developing your skills without the aid of the internet when you were a student.
Back then, you must have been a bookworm. :)
oh, i had the internet, it just wasn't as useful. google indexing the contents of PDFs was big. that happened, i forget when, but feels like the middle of grad school.
05:42
I typed my thesis on a Hermes portable typewriter.
did you have a set of stamps for the sum notation and everything?
Given this question
Point $A, B$ and $C$ are points on the circle with centre $O$. $CD$ is tangent to the circle $O$ at point $C$ and the points $A, O$ and $C$ are collinear (lie in a straight line). Given that the equation $\frac{a\pi - b\sqrt{3} - c}{d}$ represents the area of the shaded region in its simplest form, what is $a + b + c + d$?
Is it a necessary to have the condition that a, b, c, d are relatively prime to each other in the quesiton body?
If so, why?
@leslietownes Nope. The official version was typed (for a not inconsiderable fee) by a secretary on a Selectric.
@Ajay It says “in simplest form.” Fractions are otherwise very non-unique.
So the condition isn't necessary?
05:55
So in the question body we don't need to state that a, b, c, d are relatively prime to each other.
I'm wondering if it's a necessary condition to solve the question definitively.
Did you read what I said?
Yes, but I don't quite understand what you mean.
What does it mean to say fractions are non-unique?
They are the same?
Explain.
06:00
You can have a fraction like $\frac{27}{15}$ which is also the same as the fraction $\frac{9}{5}$.
So unlike primes they are very similar as they have more than 1 factor other than 1 and themselves?
Precisely. So how do you make it so that you determine a unique representation for the fraction?
@TedShifrin It was very difficult to access journals and papers at that time, so how did you manage to access them?
Sorry I had to google "a Hermes portable typewriter."
In the library. Finding articles on a subject was an art form.
Put the fraction in simplest form?
Right. So no more questions.
06:05
Ok.
@TedShifrin one question, completely unrelated from before.
Is it possible to find the length of one side of a scalene given the other two sides but no angles?
ANd given its area?
06:24
No and yes, with trig.
How?
In most cases, there will be two angles possible (supplementary)
There are no angles here however
You will find the sine of the angle between the known sides
And then use law of cosines.
06:27
$\text{Area}=\frac12ab\sin(C)$
then yes, the law of cosines gives the third side.
But i'm not allowed a calculator
You do not need one.
Just a brain.
And to find the angle I need to calculate sin(θ)=13/15
Are you sure about that?
$65 = \frac{1}{2} \cdot 10 \cdot 17 \cdot sin(\theta)$, no?
06:31
Yes.
OHHHH MY GODDD IM STUPID
tq guys
But if you know the sine, you can find the cosine and not “know” the angle.
one of two cosines
@TedShifrin what relation could I use?
Right @robjohn
06:35
I can only think of sin(θ) = cos(90 - θ)
Surely you
know more.
Not by memory
but I can check
This is absolutely fundamental
oh
where is the point $(\cos(x),\sin(x))$?
06:36
is the Pythagoras one
yes
So, if $\sin(\theta)=\frac{13}{17}$, what is $\cos(\theta)$?
it is $\frac{2 \sqrt{14}}{15}$
I eventually dont' get any of the answer options tho.
try again...
$\sqrt{17^2-13^2}=$?
I get \sqrt{120/289}
so $\frac{2 \sqrt{30}}{17}$
06:45
So now I apply the cosine rule.
that would be the next step
I get the answer as $x = \sqrt{389 - 40 \sqrt{30}}$
That or the conjugate is what I get, but that does not match any of the given values.
Even though (B) is the only real choice
07:17
Real is not to be imagined!
07:36
Indeed
07:49
Crappy crappy MC question.
 
3 hours later…
11:11
The guy above me beat cancer
 
1 hour later…
12:34
I don't understand the following proof:
It is to prove that $\sum_{d|n} \phi(d)=n$, where $\phi$ is the Euler phi function.
Proof: Reduce $1/n, 2/n,...,\frac{n-1}n, n/n$ to smallest form. Denominators will all be divisors of $n$. If $d|n$, then there are $\phi(d)$ many $d$ in the denominator. QED.
I don't understand the last sentence.
I guess there are various ways to formulate basically the same proof.
You're asking when the denominator of $\frac kn$ is equal to $d$ (after simplification).
You can use that $\gcd(k,n)=t \Leftrightarrow \gcd(\frac kt,\frac nt)=1$.
To get the denominator equal to $d$, you need $\gcd(k,n)=\frac nd$.
I.e. $\gcd(k,n)=\frac nd \Leftrightarrow \gcd(\frac {kd}n,d)=1$.
So $k\mapsto\frac{kd}n$ is a bijection between the set all numerators $k$ in fractions where the simplified fraction has the denumerator equal to $d$ and the set $\{j\in\mathbb N; 1\le j\le d; \gcd(j,d)=1\}$.
I have no doubts that there are better ways how to formulate this.
@Koro Did you take the above proof from some of the answers here: Is there a direct, elementary proof of $n = \sum_{k|n} \phi(k)$?
Thanks :). I understand what you're saying except the fourth sentence. I'm thinking about that.
@MartinSleziak No, it is from a textbook on number theory.
Pete L. Clark's answer gives a proof which is in a similar vein, but doesn't use the fractions. (Personally I prefer the formulation in that answer.)
24
A: Is there a direct, elementary proof of $n = \sum_{k|n} \phi(k)$?

Pete L. ClarkClearly $n$ counts the number of elements in the set $ \{1,\ldots,n\}$. This suggests that to get a combinatorial proof we should count the number of elements in this set in a different way and get $\sum_{k \mid n} \varphi(k)$. For $k \mid n$, let $S(k)$ be the set of $m \in \{1,\ldots,n\}$ suc...

By "fourth sentence" you mean this?
5 mins ago, by Martin Sleziak
To get the denominator equal to $d$, you need $\gcd(k,n)=\frac nd$.
12:46
yes.
If I want to simplify the fraction $\frac kn$ to the basic form (what is actually the correct terminology in English?)
If I want to simplify the fraction $\frac kn$ to the basic form, then I divide both $k$ and $n$ by $\gcd(k,n)$.
So the denominator will be $\frac{n}{\gcd(k,n)}$.
@MartinSleziak I have studied that proof before. That's a group theory proof. I want to understand this one without using group theory.
Oh yes, of course!!
The condition $\frac{n}{\gcd(k,n)}=d$ is equivalent to $\gcd(k,n)=\frac nd$.
@Koro I do not see any use for group theory in Pete L. Clark's answer.
Ireland and Rosen: A Classical Introduction to Modern Number Theory - from the GTM. I think I've seen that book.
@MartinSleziak of course. I don't know what I was thinking.
I understand it now: the idea is that the every denominator in reduced form of 1/n,..., n/n divides $n$.
so we have after reduction: a/b, (a,b)=1. Suppose a/b is not 1/n. Then how many such a's are there? $\phi(b)$. So there are $\phi(b)$ many a/b's such that (a,b)=1.
We do this for every $b$; since total no. of fractions is n, we have $\sum_{d|n}\phi(d)=n$.
 
1 hour later…
14:12
@MartinSleziak "in lowest terms" is what we used in school.
14:28
is there any general term for certain type of primes?
for example: 2k is even for every integer k.
I know that it is not possible for all primes, but is there any subclass of primes for which it is possible?
I want this to prove that $\sum_p 1/p$ diverges, summation is over all positive primes.
That problem is in PMA
14:43
are you sure?
I recall that was for $\sum 1/n$
What about "$p\in \mathbb P$" which usually means that $p$ runs over the primes ?
Or just write "p prime" below the sum
One could have a look what notation is used elsewhere. For example, on Wikipedia: Divergence of the sum of the reciprocals of the primes.
At the same time, I would consider something like this perfectly fine: "In the following, whenever an index in a sum or in a product is denoted by $p$, this means that we're summing (multiplying) only primes from the given range."
In the other words, to have a convention that $\sum_p \frac1p$ means some only over primes.
The Wikipedia article has this formulation in one place: "In the following, a sum or product taken over p always represents a sum or product taken over a specified set of primes."
BTW I think I have seen $\mathbb P$ for the set of all primes. (But I do not think that this notation is used too often.)
15:05
I just noticed that the formulas $e^x=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{x^n}{n!}$ and $n!=\int_0^\infty\frac{x^n}{e^x}dx$ mirror each other
Written another way,$$\sum_{n=0}^\infty\frac{x^n}{n!e^x}=\int_0^\infty\frac{x^n}{n!e^x}dx=1$$
Though, in the former $n$ is a dummy variable and in the latter $x$ is, so they're not that similar
I wonder if there's a deeper reason behind it
There is this question on the main site: Factorial and exponential dual identities.
What's Approach Zero?
Like a LaTeX-based search engine?
@AkivaWeinberger Click the link.
It is a "math aware" search engine.
> “Math-aware” means you can add math expression(s) as some of your keywords to have search engine help you find similar expressions and return those documents/topics that you may find relevant to your query. In short, a typical search engine plus math search.
I believe it was originally called Approach0 - maybe that's the cause of the confusion.
 
1 hour later…
16:16
If $\{a_n\}$ is a sequence in $\Bbb C\setminus\{0\}$ then $\prod_{n}(1+a_n)$ converges iff $\sum\log(1+a_n)$ converges. Suppose $a_n\to 0$ as $n\to\infty$, then the sum converges iff $\sum\log(1-a_n)$ converges?
About this one:
0
Q: $D^2$ is not homeomorphic to $D^n/S^{n-1} $

3ibfwcbiThe following example was left in exercise of my topology class. I think I would need help on how to prove the asserstion asked. Let $D^n$ denote the unit ball in the n-th dimensional euclidean space and let $S^{n-1} $be the unit sphere. Show that $D^2 $ is not homeomorphic to $D^n /S^{n-1}$. T...

I know that $D^n/S^{n-1}\simeq S^n$.
But then I thought is a disk homeomorphic to a sphere?
if not, then why not?
$S^n, D^n$ both are compact, connected and pathconnected.
does one have to use fundamental group here somehow? or am I missing something?
16:33
@Koro First, I haven't thought about this in forever, so I could be wrong.
If I take an interval [0,1]. I keep wrapping it around and around and I think that it does give me a disk. If I connect 0 to 1 and just one winding, I get a 1-sphere.
That said, I don't think that the fundamental group is the right tool. Look at homology groups.
oops I don't think I know homology groups.
I have studied homotopy and path homotopy though
that said, it seems that $D^2$ should be homeomorphic to the said space.
@Koro Well, even that should be good enough.
The disk deformation retracts to a point.
The sphere does not.
Could anyone please check my proof here, regarding the relation between the third derivative and concavity?
16:43
you can see it with fundamental groups using a trick
in the $n=2$ case
not sure if we're considering general $n$, the question doesn't seem decided on that
Is a $14^\circ$ angle constructible with a compass and straightedge?
17:03
What do you know about constructible angles? Which ones are and aren’t?
@TedShifrin I don't know much beyond the fact that dyadic rational multiples of $\pi$ are constructible, as well as dyadic multiples of $\pi / 3$ and $\pi / 5$. However, according to Wikipedia, dyadic multiples of $\pi / n$, where $n$ is the product of distinct Fermat primes.
this is one of those pretty ingenious applications of galois theory
@Thorgott OR it is precisely the kind of question Galois theory was invented to answer. :D
hmm, I don't think so
You can figure out which integer multiples of $1^\circ$ are constructible quite easily.
17:11
I think Gauss already knew how to construct all the possible ones before Galois' time
and the impossibility results only came after Galois
Well, what I'm talking about doesn't use any of that.
Just the elementary field theory ($[K:\Bbb Q]$ must be a power of $2$).
The important thing, @Goku, is to realize that if you can construct $\alpha$ and $\beta$, then you can construct their sum/difference, as well.
17:47
@Koro While $S^2$ is simply connected ($\pi_1(S^2)=1$) and it's compact and connected, there are other tools we can use to show that it's not contractible and therefore not homeomorphic to $D^n$ for any $n$.
For one thing, $\pi_2(S^2)$ (the second homotopy group) is $\Bbb Z$. However, though $\pi_2$ is relatively easy to define, it is hard to calculate in general. Showing that $\pi_2(S^2)=\Bbb Z$ isn't trivial.
For another thing, $H_2(S^2)$ (the second homology group) and $H^2(S^2)$ (the second cohomology group) are both $\Bbb Z$. There are good algorithms for calculating homology and cohomology in many cases, but they take some machinery to set up and define.
@Koro Here's a simple proof that $S^2$ is not homeomorphic to $D^n$ for any $n$: if you delete two points, $S^2\setminus\{p,q\}$ is not simply connected while $D^n\setminus\{p,q\}$ is for $n\ge3$. And $S^2\setminus\{p\}$ is simply connected while $D^2\setminus\{p\}$ isn't if $p$ is an interior point.
(and of course $D^1\setminus\{p\}$ isn't even connected if $p$ is an interior point of $D^1=[-1,1]$.)
This doesn't show you that $S^2$ isn't homotopy equivalent to $D^n$, however, and it doesn't deal with $S^m$ for $m>2$.
@XanderHenderson I think you don't need the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory for this, though you can use earlier Galois theory topics
18:03
Hi. I'm looking for some feedback, please:
in Helpful Commentary, 1 min ago, by Shaun
Here's another answer of mine that got a questionable downvote:
0
A: What is the meaning of symbol " : " in demonstrating the group in GAP? For example C_8:(C_2×C_2).

ShaunIt means a semidirect product. In general, we can write $$G = N:Q$$ for $$G = N\rtimes Q$$ (or $G=Q\ltimes N$) for a semidirect product, where $N$ is normal in $G$.

@Shaun Are you looking for feedback because you don't know if your answer is any good? or are you looking for feedback because you want to understand the downvote?
If the latter, I would suggest that your request is futile. Only the downvoter knows why they voted as they did.
I would guess, however, that the person who downvoted your answer is the same as the person who downvoted the question, and that the downvote is meant to send the message "please don't answer low-quality or unclear questions".
2
@Shaun: Don't you have the semidirect product symbol backwards?
Or, frankly, after reading the question in more detail, I wonder if it is even an appropriate question for Math SE? It seems like the GAP documentation is the right place to look---the question isn't really about mathematics, but about how a particular software package notates things.
No, I was wrong. Never mind.
Yeah, it really isn't a MSE question.
Thank you for the feedback. I meant both senses, now that you mention them.
18:19
Let me assume that $f\in L^p(\Bbb{R})$, then let me consider $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda$ where $\lambda$ is the Lebesque measure on $\Bbb{R}$. Now I want to consider the limit as $n\rightarrow \infty$. I know that $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda=\int_\Bbb{R} \Bbb{1}_{(-\infty,-n]}(x)|f(x)|^p~ d\lambda$ now using dominated convergence we can take the limit inside ad get $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda\rightarrow 0$.

My question is, since I know that $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda\leq \int_\Bbb{R} |f(x)|^p~d\lambda<\infty$ can I also immediately say that
Odd that you chose to work on $(-\infty,-n]$ rather than $[n,\infty)$. All that extra typing.
hahah your right
So, $\int_n^\infty$ is a non-increasing function of $n$, and so you can look at its $\inf$. What are the possibilities?
@TedShifrin Hi!
hi @Alexandru
18:26
@TedShifrin it can be any constant?
I have been working on a new quadrature technique for oscillatory integrals that pop up in my work with a British numerical analyst but they seem to be a near miss for my original cases. i was daydreaming a little bit while i was doing that and it gave me a fun little idea to explore.
@user123234 I can see $0$ and $\infty$. How could it be $1$?
@TedShifrin sorry it can only be zero
If the function is in $L^p$, yes.
right otherwise it can also be infinity, it can not be another constant since then it would mean that the function is somehow bounded which would then mean that it goes to $0$ as $n$ tends to infinity right?
18:37
How can $F(n) = \int_n^\infty |f(x)|\,dx \to 1$ as $n\to\infty$?
This would mean we have an infinite mass at $\infty$. Without dominated convergence, how do you rule this out?
@AkivaWeinberger Thanks. :)
@TedShifrin that's what I wanted to say it cannot happen that it is a constant.
But if we assume the function is in $L^p$ do I then need the dominated convergence argument or can I argue also as in my second approach?
How have you argued? You just said.
My first approach would be the dominated convergence which is clearly true. But when we work with series, we also said if the serie is finite then $\lim_{n\rightarrow \infty} \sum_{k=n}^\infty ...=0$. Without using DCT. Or mabye it is in the background and I don't see it. Therefore I wanted to argue as follows:

Since I know that $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda\leq \int_\Bbb{R} |f(x)|^p~d\lambda<\infty$ can I also immediately say that the "tail-integral" goes to $0$ as $n\rightarrow \infty$, since the integral itself is bounded.
Well, I was asking for a proof of that statement.
I am forgetting about the $p$th power stuff. So $G(n) = \int_0^n |f(x)|dx$ increases and converges. So ... ?
18:49
I found something interesting related to simple conectivity: If $M\subset\Bbb R^n$ is a smooth submanifold of dimension $m<n-2$, then $\Bbb R^n\setminus M$ is simply connected.
This was my original proof using DCT

Let me assume that $f\in L^p(\Bbb{R})$, then let me consider $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda$ where $\lambda$ is the Lebesque measure on $\Bbb{R}$. Now I want to consider the limit as $n\rightarrow \infty$. I know that $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda=\int_\Bbb{R} \Bbb{1}_{(-\infty,-n]}(x)|f(x)|^p~ d\lambda$ now using dominated convergence we can take the limit inside ad get $\int_{-\infty}^{-n} |f(x)|^p ~d\lambda\rightarrow 0$.
I don't want dominated convergence.
@onepotatotwopotato More basic: Why is $\Bbb R^n\backslash M$ connected if $m<n-1$?
@TedShifrin does it need to be bounded
18:55
It's bounded if your hypothesis is that the integral $\int_0^\infty$ exists, yes.
and you will not assume this?
or will you hear something else?
Yes, yes, of course we assume that.
ah so my answer should be different
I'm just asking you to make your assertion rigorous in the second case.
But I don't see what is missing to make it rigorous
19:02
I'm gonna start a Hice Stack Exchange site
@Goku You never responded to my constructibility questions.
here's a somewhat non-trivial generalization: if $M$ is a smooth manifold and $N\subseteq M$ is a smooth submanifold, then the inclusion $M\setminus N\rightarrow M$ is $(\mathrm{codim}(N)-2)$-connected
@TedShifrin oh darn, I didn't even get the ping. Let me see
@Thor You need parens in that statement.
where?
better?
19:04
@user123234 I guess I wanted the comment that $\int_0^\infty - \int_0^n = \int_n^\infty$. Are we assuming $\int_0^\infty = \lim\int_0^n$ by definition or what?
Yes, @Thor.
So the only way I know how to speak about $\int_0^\infty $ is to say it is $\lim\int_0^n$
That's certainly how we define it with the Riemann integral. In the case of the Lebesgue integral, I think you're trying to prove it (that's what your dominated convergence theorem argument does).
19:22
hmm, small correction: I think I wanna assume $N$ closed in the above
on the other hand, an easy induction on top allows me to generalize to finite unions of closed submanifolds
19:51
What about the Grassmann integral @TedShifrin
Grassmannian sheaf stalks
The Eisen-bud might have something to say about this
Should I try flagging my own questions or answers? What'll happen if I do?
20:09
Why?
For least squares approximation, could I minimize $||Ax^*- b||^2$ by taking a derivative and setting equal to $0$? What would that look like exactly?
If $V,W$ are Banach spaces over a $\Bbb{K}$ and $A:V\rightarrow W$, $B:W^*\rightarrow V^*$ are linear operators such that $\langle l,Av\rangle=\langle Bl,v\rangle $ for all $v\in V$ and for all $l\in W^*$ how can I show that if $A$ is bounded also $B$ is bounded?
I first thought about cauchy-schwarz inequality but this does not help me
20:27
yes, langle and rangle are not necessarily standing in for an inner product there. see math.stackexchange.com/questions/1756697/…
@leslietownes but there they talk about the adjoint operator why do I know that $B$ is the adjoint of $A$? Is this always when one operator goes from $A\rightarrow B$ and the other from $B^*\rightarrow A^*$
the hypothesis you're assuming is the only thing they use about the 'adjoint operator.' just repeat the argument.
But does the hypothesis tells me that it is a Hilbert space adjoint?
no, i think they are using langle rangle to denote the dual pairings between V, W, and their duals. i.e. $\langle l, Av \rangle$ is shorthand for what you might more traditionally write as $l(Av)$ because $l$, an element of $W^*$, is a function on $W$, and $Av$ is an element of $W$.
ahh okey I see
I will try to redo the argument then
20:45
I am studying the series with terms $a_k=\frac{1}{\sqrt{k}\ln{k}}$ and it is claimed that, for large enough $k$, $a_k\geq \frac{1}{k}$. I would be grateful if someone could shed some light on why that inequality holds, that is $$\frac{1}{\sqrt{k}\ln{k}}\geq \frac{1}{k}$$.
@schn because $\frac{\ln k}{\sqrt{k}}\to 0$ as $k\to\infty$
@Jakobian Thanks for the reply. Aha, so it's simply because $\ln k$ is smaller than $\sqrt {k}$ for large $k$. Got it.
@TedShifrin why not?
Curiosity. Where would we be, as a race, without this curiosity?
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