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00:15
Seems like you totally ignored what I suggested.
the author defined neighborhoods with balls since he started with metric spaces
but the logic wasn't working out, what if the balls went past the metric space. since it is an arbitrary metric space, this is possible
even if it isn't embedded in any other metric space
in any case i switched author and this one has his definitions worked out
properly
@shintuku say what?
If $X$ is your world, then all points live in $X$. Period.
oh
right heheh
If you’re talking about $[a,b]\subset \Bbb R$, then you make it clear that you’re dealing with a subset of a metric space.
Eventually, then, you learn about subspace topology.
00:44
In this example of the category $\text{Mat}_R$, so the objects are like the dimension $j$ of an $i x j$ matrix? And the morphisms $f: j \rightarrow m$ takes an $i x j$ object into say a $i x m$ object?
Or here is what I think (hopefully) more clearly: My interpretation: assign to each object $r \in R$ the collection of $\alpha \times r$ matrix where $\alpha$ can be any element of positive integers. Then, a morphism $f: r \rightarrow r'$ is the collection of all $r \times r'$ matrices. In other words, the collection of all matrices that when multiplying any $\alpha \times r$ matrix results in an $\alpha \times r'$ matrix.
Ack I mean $r$ and $r'$ are positive integers, not elements of the ring
no, a morphism $f\colon r\rightarrow r^{\prime}$ is the same thing as a single $r^{\prime}\times r$ matrix (note the order of $r$ and $r^{\prime}$, too)
01:00
Oh I see so each such matrix is its own morphism
So in this case, the domain and codomain of all morphisms are singletons of positive integers? I.e., any morphism looks like $f: \{a\} \rightarrow \{b\}$ where $a,b$ are positive integers
Hm okay so I think this is refined: A way to think about it: assign to each object $p$ the collection of $p \times \alpha$ matrices where $\alpha$ can be any positive integer. Then, a morphism $f: p \rightarrow p'$ is a single $p' \times p$ matrix. In other words, a matrix that when left multiplying any $p \times \alpha$ matrix results in a $p' \times \alpha$ matrix.
 
3 hours later…
03:40
I am trying to model the probability of winning a game like Mastermind/Wordle in a set number of turns. Intuitively, the probability of winning at the beginning is Pr(Winning), then after the first guess the player gets a clue, it becomes Pr(Winning | First Clue),
but I'm not sure if also have to condition on what round it is, like Pr(Winning | It Is Round 1), Pr(Winning | (It Is Round 2 ∩ First Clue)), etc. That looks really awkward but I don't think the probability is the same every round even if you don't look at the clues, so I'm not sure if I need to introduce two variables at every round or just one.
03:53
Is there anyone here for conversation?
04:05
user: yeah, if you want to "model" wordle in a simplified sense (and not just duplicate what it does exactly), you need to make some kind of assumptions about how the player will play the game. otherwise you don't know what guesses are possible (let alone likely) in a way that you can assign probabilities. even at one guess, let alone a sequence of multiple guesses.
some of those choices in modeling mimic real life choices, e.g., do you assume the player never makes a guess that is inconsistent with revealed information (roughly speaking, wordle's "hard mode"), or do you let a player guess more generally (for example, if it allows them to more quickly rule out candidates).
and does the player want to maximize the probability of winning at a given turn, or the probability of winning within the allowable number of turns (perhaps at some cost of always making slightly more guesses on average), or something else.
if you want to assign numbers to things, there's also the modeling question of, do you use the actual dictionary that wordle uses, or do you compute with reference to a larger/different dictionary that might better reflect what people will guess.
Dirichlet problem is more important than I thought. I thought it has some meaning in pde but it's used a lot in the classification of Riemann surfaces
04:30
@leslietownes Ahhh, I went ahead and posted on main site before I noticed you'd responded, so that has a bit more detail (math.stackexchange.com/questions/4688692/…) tl;dr: I'm actually modeling Mastermind rather than Wordle so the space of legal solutions is well defined at 1296 possibilities, I assume the solution is generated uniformly randomly and the player guesses uniformly randomly among only solutions that are consistent with the clues.
04:58
I have one confusion: If a continuous function $h$ is subharmonic on a Riemann surface $M$, then $h$ satisfies the maximum principle. If $M$ is compact, then $h$ should obtain maximum at some point $P\in M$. Then suddenly $h$ is a constant function?
Compact means no boundary. What does the max principle say?
Oh there's nothing to confuse of
$h$ is constant. I only considered compact case
 
2 hours later…
06:45
A complex valued harmonic function that is not analytic.
Why?
Harmonic function is supposed to be real valued.
But I think $f(z)=\bar z$ should answer this. f=u+iv. Both u and v satisfy Laplacian=0 is the obvious meaning of complex valued harmonic function.
has anyone worked through emily riehl's category theory in context book? I was looking for an introduction to the topic and came across this text
@TedShifrin: But complex variable substitution does not seem to be working here: f is entire, then evaluating $\int_0^{2\pi} f(e^{i\theta}z) d\theta$
This integral is equal to $2\pi f(0)$ for every z in C.
Now, let's use subst. $u= e^{i\theta}z$ so that $du= i e^{i\theta} zd\theta$.
Suppose z is non zero. Then, $u$ is a simple closed curve at z. So we get: $\int_\gamma -if(u)/u du$, where $\gamma$ is $u= e^{i\theta} z$ as $\theta$ goes from 0 to 2 pi.
@robjohn: I understand now your comment about harmonic functions. Since the function is real valued on boundary, its imaginary part is 0 on the boundary hence 0 in the interior also by MMT.
I'm not sure if the subst. aftermath is correct or not.
Does $\gamma$ enclose the origin?
07:12
Why can't a non constant real valued harmonic function be in $L^1$?
@shintuku if $X$ is the entire metric space, then each element of the open cover of $X$ is contained in $X$.
@Koro $L^1$ of what?
$L^1(\mathbb R^2)$
@shintuku I had this confusion too once. What if we take radius of a ball so large that we go beyond the metric space? But that's not possible.
-1
Q: Proving that a metric space $X$ is open and closed subset of itself.

KoroLet $X$ be a metric space. Let $d$ be its distance function. Proving that $X$ is closed: Complement of $X$ relative to $X=\emptyset$, which is an open set (as all points of an open set are interior points and $\emptyset$ is empty and therefore vacuously $\emptyset$ is open) and hence $X$ is clos...

@shintuku please see the comments here. :-)
@Koro Consider integrating the harmonic $u$ in balls of radius $r$ around a point $z_0$ so that $u(z_0)\ne0$. $\int_{B_r(z_0)}u(x,y)\,\mathrm{d}x\,\mathrm{d}y=\pi r^2u(z_0)$, which is unbounded as $r\to\infty$.
Taking the absolute value of $u$ possibly makes that even bigger.
@robjohn how did you get the integral?
I know mean value theorem (for integrals) holds for harmonic functions.
07:22
That is, I have for every r>0, $u(z_0)= \frac 1{2\pi} \int_0^{2\pi} u(z_0+re^{i\theta}) d\theta$.
for any $z_0\in B_r(z_0)$.
it would be $\frac1{2\pi r}$
no?
It is the mean value
it works for circles and disks
oh, nvm you are not using normal lebesgue measure
it is $\frac1{2\pi r}$ when the measure is $r\,\mathrm{d}\theta$, but you've already divided out the $r$.
Is exercise 1.1.i.ii just asking to show that a morphism has a unique inverse (if it exists)? or something along those lines
I am confused because i didn't think of an isomorphism as something a morphism "can have" more like a morphism can be an isomorphism and if it is it can have an inverse? somethingg along those lines
@Koro $\int_0^R\int_0^{2\pi}u\!\left(z_0+re^{i\theta}\right)r\,\mathrm{d}\theta\,\mathrm{d}r=\int_0^R2\pi ru(z_0)\,\mathrm{d}r=\pi R^2u(z_0)$ (integration in polar coordinates)
07:29
@SillyGoose this exercise is poorly worded if they don't define inverse morphisms before. What they mean is that in (i) g is f's "inverse isomorphism". Then you just show that this is unique if it exists in (ii).
silly: i agree that "being an isomorphism" is a property of a morphism, not something that a morphism "can have," but i might feel differently about an "inverse morphism" or an "inverse isomorphism"
ahh okay so the "double sided inverse" $g$ (as in gives you the identity for respective domain/codomain) is what we want to show is unique if it exists
see how it defines those concepts
yes
okay i see
@robjohn Thanks a lot. You're so amazing :-).
5
excellent
07:31
@leslietownes you are up late
unfortunately such terms are not defined in the text (at least to my knowledge)
but this clears it up :D
category theory is so exciting hehe
@SillyGoose yeah they are relying on the reader to be more knowledgeable on general ideas from mathematics, I expect.
Not very good pedagogically, though.
anak: all night every night
friday night
How many hours do you sleep, sir?
07:33
Well I am going to retire for the night. Goodnight silly goose and friends.
cya pal
i'm exaggerating, but i'm often up at this hour. it's rarely as active as it is now
Looking at your activity histogram, I would guess you average about 4 hours per day 😴
I want to adopt an Alaskan Malamute.
But I think that it won't survive weather here.
same goes for an Akita Inu.
07:46
they have double fur suited to keep them in cold temperatures.
same for a Husky and St. Bernard.
I guess you could constantly trim down their fur; but, that seems a bit too time consuming.
an identity morphisms is always an isomorphisms right? because it is (by definition) its own inverse isomorphism?
 
1 hour later…
Now I see why hyperbolic geometry is important: For most Riemann surfaces (with suitable riemannain metric) $M$, its universal cover $\tilde{M}$ is conformally equivalent to upper half space (or hyperbolic space).
I always wondered why people interested in hyperbolic geometry (especially among low-dimensional topologiests)
Every Riemann surface can be classified into three types (as humans): Elliptic (i.e., compact Riemann surface), parabolic and hyperbolic. The name hyperbolic is suggestive as the surface has hyperbolic structure. But the other two cases... why?
 
1 hour later…
10:33
Can I deduce that $(A\cap B)\setminus C=(A\cap C)\setminus(B\cap C)$ is false because if $x \in (A\cap B)\setminus C$ then $x \notin C$ and so $x \notin (A\cap C)$, hence $x \notin (A \cap C)\setminus (B\cap C)$?
10:48
This works if $(A\cap B)\setminus C$ is non-empty. It can happen that both sides are empty and hence equal, though, e.g. if $C=A\cap B$.
Suppose that $f:S^1\to C$ is continuous and is such that $f(z)= f(\bar z)$ for all z in $S^1$. Can it be extended holomorphically to all of the unit disk?
11:05
Is this right time to say goodbye?
11:20
@Thorgott This kind of (counter) example is very useful, thanks a lot. Is it ok if I put a link to your solution in my post on main, where I asked this question? Then all solutions are in one place
11:38
sure
 
1 hour later…
13:05
10
Q: The degree of a meromorphic form in a genus $g$ Riemann surface is equal to $2g-2$… is this in some way related to the Gauss-Bonnet theorem?

dahemarI’m following an introductory course on Riemann surfaces. Today, the lecturer proved the fact that the degree of a meromorphic form in a genus $g$ Riemann surface is equal to $2g-2$ (we can deduce from this, for instance, that the sum of orders of zeros of a holomorphic nontrivial form is $2g-2$ ...

Mad
Mad
13:33
Hello
How can i understand the concept of Degeneracy in quantum mechanics in mathematical terms?
Spesifically, regarding hte multiplicity of the eigenvalues
 
2 hours later…
15:35
Two things: Stoke's and Guass-Bonnet. about 70% of math theorems are corollary of those two.
16:22
@PlaceReporter99 The other day you were talking about the non-integer real solution of $2x=x^x$. Here are a few more digits. 0.346323362278580922064856552180886772113545454682821 Note that it differs from the value given in your Wolfram | Alpha link.
17:03
@PM2Ring Mathematica concurs. Where is the WA link that gives a different result?
17:19
@onepotatotwopotato Even though they're at the top of my favorites list, I have to say the 70% is drastic exaggeration.
17:32
It's interesting that I've gone for so long and not used them much
I've been hiding in the seedy underbelly of 30% of mathematics.
2
Let $x_n$ be a sequence of distinct reals and $a$ some real number. If $$a<\mathrm{sup}\{x_n,x_{n+1},\ldots\}$$ holds for all $n$, is it then true that $a<x_n$ holds for infinitely many $x_n$?
17:52
For some context, I am working problem 27e) in chapter 22 of Spivak's Calculus. We are asked to show that if $x_n$ is a sequence of distinct reals, then $$\limsup_{n\to\infty} x_n=\limsup A,$$ where $A=\{x_n: n\in\mathbb{N}\}$. His definition of $\limsup_{n\to\infty} x_n$ is $\lim_{n\to\infty}y_n$, where $y_n=\mathrm{sup}\{x_n,x_{n+1},\ldots\}$.
schn: yes. if the set of x_n larger than a is finite, there is some N for which x_n <= a holds for all n >= N, and then that sequence of sups (as a function of n) will also be at most a for all n >= N, and its limit will too.
that sup (as a function of n) is a nonincreasing sequence of numbers whose limit is "lim sup x_n." in fact, this is one of the definitions of "lim sup x_n" and the thing you're asking about is very close to one of its defining properties.
ah, so it's spivak's definition. it's a common definition (as one of its advantages, it most easily answers the question of why the thing is called the 'lim sup')
another definition in use involves subsequential limits, where the thing you're asking about would be true almost directly by that definition. here, he's effectively asking you to deduce stuff about the set of subsequential limits from his definition.
What is $\limsup A$?
It is the infimum of the set of all almost upper bounds of $A$, defined in some exercise in chapter 8.
That’s the sup.
Almost upper bounds?
Wait. Totally lost.
@robjohn It's linked just under chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/63440611#63440611 It uses this mysterious expression 1/7 (3 π + log(2 π) - 7 tan^(-1)(π)) but PlaceReporter99 didn't explain why that should be related to the solution of $2x=x^x$. I suspect that expression involving pi was found using an inverse symbolic calculator.
18:00
Yeah, it's confusing, but it's problem 8.18 where he defines almost upper bounds.
OK. I’ve never assigned these exercises.
@PM2Ring thanks. I looked at the linked transcript, but I must have missed it.
I assigned the shadow point problem because it’s interesting.
"Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows!"
@PM2Ring The link I was following was for the 28th, so I was far off.
Do points have shadows?
18:15
@leslietownes hmm, thank you leslie, how do you know there is some N for which x_n<=a holds? Recall, I was asking if a<x_n for infinitely many x_n.
> if the set of x_n larger than a is finite
They’re shady characters, @robjohn.
I suppose points don't have shadows. And even very small discs don't cast much of a shadow, due to diffraction, and atmospheric scattering. OTOH, pens above mirrors can have two shadows. ;) physics.stackexchange.com/q/761659/123208 (currently on the HNQ)
@PM2Ring looking at the picture, and having done some ray tracing, it seems that the dual reflection is because of the blockage of light on the way to the mirror and the way from the mirror.
I assume that is mentioned in the answers.
Yes, the first answer is what I was talking about.
There's also a nice diagram in AccidentalTaylorExpansion's answer.
Speaking of shadows, from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arago_spot
> Poisson studied Fresnel's theory in detail and, being a supporter of the particle theory of light, looked for a way to prove it wrong. Poisson thought that he had found a flaw when he argued that a consequence of Fresnel's theory was that there would exist an on-axis bright spot in the shadow of a circular obstacle, where there should be complete darkness according to the particle theory of light.
> This prediction was seen as an absurd consequence of the wave theory, and the failure of that prediction should be a strong argument to reject Fresnel's theory.
> However, the head of the committee, Dominique-François-Jean Arago, decided to actually perform the experiment. He molded a 2 mm metallic disk to a glass plate with wax. He succeeded in observing the predicted spot, which convinced most scientists of the wave nature of light and gave Fresnel the win.
18:28
@PM2Ring one could tell the distance to the light source by the ratio of the shadow sizes and the distance of the mirror to the wall.
That sounds like a similar triangles problem...
it should be
I have a PDE, like the discrete NLS, that I want to show the existence of a particular kind of solution. I thought about a variational approach, but I do not understand how to apply the idea of a weak solution to a discrete system. My function space is in ell^2 for what its worth.

Does anyone have insight on this sort of thing?
I meant, applying Dirichlet's principle
19:10
What did Hilbert call Hilbert spaces?
Home. ;)
Hi, does anyone have Klainerman's Lecture notes? I found a link but it says 404 error.
$e^{i\pi}+1=0$ is considered beautiful because it has 5 important constants of Mathematics and 3 important operations (addition, multiplication and exponentiation).
@Koro mine spaces
19:55
@Koro when he began doing the work that led to his name being attached to it, i'm not sure that the concepts of abstract vector space, abstract inner product, etc. were being used in his context, so it's hard to say. certainly by the end of his life he would have gotten used to people calling them hilbert spaces.
Sorta like Chern with Chern classes. Only after 20+ years did he stop calling them characteristic classes (at least in lectures).
20:24
the axiomatic definition of hilbert space goes back at least to von neumann in 1927, although he calls them 'abstract' hilbert spaces, and still uses 'hilbert space' to mean something slightly more concrete (square summable sequences of complex numbers with the usual inner product).
some earlier papers by various people use 'hilbert space' to mean the closed unit ball of that specific hilbert space (or maybe its real counterpart)
21:16
I've a doubt
If I consider $x=r\cos \theta$ and I want to find $\frac{\partial r}{\partial x}$, I can prove that it's $\cos \theta$ using the fact that $r^2=x^2+y^2$. Can this be proven using the fact that $r=x/ \cos \theta$ without using the derivative of the inverse function?
why make life more difficult?
I don't see why it can't be done.
Any reference to study homology groups of product of two cell complexes?
don't know but at first glance I'd take the derivative of both sides with respect to x
Say, I want to find $\mathbb S^1\times \mathbb T$
argh, it involves Tensor products.
@Sine You need the whole derivative matrix. It does not work term by term.
21:31
what is this algebra doing in my algebraic topology
koro: it's not too bad if there's no torsion
The whole issue is what variables are being held fixed. I've written several answers on main explaining this whole thing. When you do $\partial r/\partial x$, you're fixing $y$. When you do $\partial x/\partial r$, you're fixing $\theta$. Only if you fix the same variable will the two be reciprocals.
I need to revise that. All I remember of tensor products is: tensor with Q kills torsions.
@Koro Since you're talking about complexes that have no torsion in their homology, you'll get just tensor products but no Tor terms. In general, there will be Tor terms.
So from the linear algebra I've done up to this point everything has been "Hilbert Space Lite"?..........Just a question of curiousity.
@TedShifrin can you send me a link of an answer when you've time ?
21:36
Yes, I just found one for you.
Take two points $z_1, z_2 \in H$. Find a g ∈ SL(2;R) such that $gz_1 = i$ and
$gz_2 = iy$ for some y > 0.
what does this even mean?
I think that g here is a Mobius transformation
@Sine: Here is another.
$g(z)= \frac{az+b}{cz+d}, ad-bc=1, a,b,c,d\in \mathbb R.$
Yes, that's $SL(2,\Bbb R)$.
21:40
H is upper half plane.
So I have to calculate a,b,c and d. Isn't there any less computational method?
Right. You act on vectors $\begin{bmatrix}1\\z\end{bmatrix}$ (or the upside-down).
Yes, you use the fact that Möbius transformations preserve cross-ratio. You take four points, three given, and one $z$.
Are the numbers $F_n\pm 1$ (where $F_n$ denotes the $n$ th fibonacci-number) all composite for $n>6$ ?
@D.C.theIII how do you mean? some linear algebra doesn't need/use the structure of hilbert space. and, a lot of the hilbert space stuff you see in intro linear algebra isn't "lite" (e.g. the infinite dimensional situation is very similar to the finite dimensional one and a lot of the same proofs go through, or modified versions of those ideas still work).
Who knows.
I think chat gpt can answer this.
incorrectly
21:43
Linear algebra with the inner product (as you did in my book), @D.C.the
Note that the question of whether $V^{\perp\perp} = V$ came up early in the exercises. This can be false in infinite dimensions.
@TedShifrin what is the action? Not the product of matrices.
What is cross ratio?
Didn't I tell you that just above?
If you haven't learned cross-ratio, it's in all the standard complex variables books. Stein is the worst choice, because he more than anyone else de-emphasizes the geometry.
really getting into stein's complex analysis book.
Up to conventions, $[a:b:c:d] = \dfrac{\frac{c-a}{d-a}}{\frac{c-b}{d-b}}$.
@leslie I was scandalized to find out that he didn't emphasize the multi-valued nature of log at all. In some sense, log didn't appear until 1/3 the way through.
I never heard this term before. 😱😱😱
21:47
It's classical projective geometry, Koro.
Sometimes I think we should just go back to the 19th century to teach math.
koro at some point you have to stop bragging about what you haven't heard of, or acting like this is obscure and/or scary.
it's in conway, for example. how frightening or obscure can it be
as is, and i hesitate to bring this up, inversion in a circle.
I think it actually may be an exercise in Stein. :)
Yes, inversion is also ancient geometry.
Bite your tongue, leslie.
Has Munchkin been swimming with ducks today?
@TedShifrin i've never actually looked at it. i was just joking about getting into it because it obscured the geometry.
@leslietownes thanks, I'll check it out.
we go when the UV is down and it's shady, usually around 6pm.
21:49
Ah, when it starts to get chilly.
Everyone COVID-free these days?
yes. munchkin might have some stomach bug (one of her best friends was out this week with one, and she complains of her stomach hurting), but no respiratory stuff. knock on wood.
knocks on leslie's brain
@Sine Any questions?
@Ted Just finishing to read your second answer
OK, cool.
22:03
Looks ok to me @Ted, so basically in general we have to use the Jacobian in such cases
in this exercise, are we meant to take the commuting diagram as a definition for our morphisms in the slice category?
But with polar coordinates we can consider that $r^2=x^2+y^2$ and do fastly the job
I am confused it we are meant to prove that the morphisms in the slice category are commutative diagrams OR if they are by definition so
@SineoftheTime Depends what job you're trying to do!!! What job precisely?
@TedShifrin $\frac{\partial r}{\partial x}$
22:08
@TedShifrin yes, I understood the idea. I take the 4 points as $(z_1,z_2, i, z)$ and then use the fact that Mobius trans. doesn't change the cross prod.
$\frac{\partial }{\partial x} \sqrt{x^2+y^2}=\frac{2x}{2r}=\frac{x}{r}=\cos \theta$
But it gives me $g$ in terms of $g(i)$.
OK, @Sine, sure, but why would this have anything to do with the inverse function?
nvm, g(i) doesn't matter.
@Koro No. In general, you take three points $a,b,c$ and want to map them to $A,B,C$. Then the Möbius transformation is obtained by solving $[a:b:c:z] = [A:B:C:w]$.
22:13
Mobius transf. is determined by 3 values.
You don't mix domain and codomain in your cross-ratio.
@SillyGoose in context that looks like a definition of 'morphism' in that category (i.e. not something to prove - the thing to prove is that with that definition of 'morphism' and those objects, the various basic axioms are met, e.g. there's an identity, composition is associative, etc.
Right. Your question was underdetermined.
yes, I understood that. In my case, I had only two points.
I'm free to choose the third one myself.
:-)
okay awesome that makes a lot more sense :) thank you @leslietownes
22:14
Yeah, right. They basically want to arrange (e.g., for hyperbolic distance?) that the two points lie on a vertical ray.
@TedShifrin Thanks a lot for the insights :-)
@TedShifrin this isn't about the inverse function, I was referring to taking the reciprocal but now it's clear
silly: maybe kinda lame of the author to use "morphism" two ways there without distinguishing them. the objects in c/C are morphisms in C (the author just says "morphisms" :( ), and the morphisms in c/C are those diagrams.
OK, @Sine. Glad you're happy :)
thank you, clear as always :)
22:15
@leslie The glib answers to this one are scary.
silly: another "strictly speaking..." point here is that, the author ought to be telling you how they propose to compose putative "morphisms" in c/C.
its very common to informally just specify a category by saying what the objects and morphisms are, and leaving it to the reader to understand the composition law, but that's pretty bad practice at the very beginning.
Sorta like defining a group by just its elements and forgetting to say what the group operation is :P
particularly if (like in a lot of category theory references) a lot of toy examples consist of taking fairly unusual things to be objects and morphisms.
the background vibe seems to be "if i say what the morphisms are without saying more, and the morphisms happen to be functions or closely related to functions, then the composition law is function composition, or whatever closely related thing to function composition would work as a composition law because you can figure that out."
@TedShifrin doing the cross product you only find a normal vector, but you don't know if the plane is translated right?
which as a vibe is just, i dunno, faster and looser than i like to play. and i am not hugely into formalism.
22:20
@Sine No, you need to take vectors that actually lie in the plane, not vectors from the origin to the points. This person succeeded only because the origin happened to be in the plane.
hm i see i was definitely confused by the group being defined as a groupoid with a single object and i had to look at an earlier example in the book to understand that the morphisms of the groupoid are "representing" the group elements :P
but yea the usage of morphism to refer to morphisms in the original category as well as objects in the slice category can be confusing XD
But so in this exercise, morphism composition would look something like this right?
Good night
Night, @Sine.
22:38
err wait okay so i think this is actually the more clear way of showing that the composition of two such morphsims is again a morphism of the wanted form>
22:57
Find the Jacobian of a Mobius transformation on H given by a; b; c; d considering
it as a function from a subset of $R^2$ to itself.
is there any way to avoid computations here?
23:12
Compute the complex derivative?
@TedShifrin and @leslietownes Inner product was the key phrase I was missing from my statement......the precision of mathematics strikes again to humble me. So where in my learning adventure do we dub these objects "Hilbert Spaces"?
When you get to function spaces like $L^2$, typically.
right on.

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