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00:24
I need to find the moment of inertia of the body $(x^2+y^2+z^2)^2=a^2 xy, \ x > 0, y > 0$ about the $xOy$ plane. The density of the body is $\rho$ (constant) So, it means I have to calculate $\rho \underset{V}{\int \int \int} z dx dy dz$. I moved to spherical coordinates, where the condition $xy > 0$ (in this case it's equivalent to $x,y > 0$ gave me that $\sin (2\theta) > 0 \rightarrow \phi \in [0, \pi/2]$.
So I had an integral $\rho \int_{0}^{\pi/2} d\theta \int_{0}^{\pi} d\psi \int_{0}^{a\cos (\psi) \sqrt{\cos\phi \sin \phi}} r^3 \sin^2 (\psi) dr$, which is $\dfrac{\rho a^4 \pi^2}{1024}$. The answer in the book is $\dfrac{3}{10} 2^{-10} \sqrt{\pi} \rho a^5$. Could someone give a hint what went wrong? Also it's possible the mistake is in the book.
Maybe there is a way to say right off the bat whether the answer is correct or not, using the physical meaning of the moment of inertia
00:49
Moment of inertia sounds wrong. This is just the moment, which means it’s computing the $z$-coordinate of the center of mass. Isn’t this volume symmetric about the $xy$-plane, in which case the answer should be $0$? What is $\psi$? This is all a jumbled mess.
@TedShifrin Sorry again for inconvenience of the translation, Ted!. In Russian mathematics we have spherical coordinates $(r, \phi, \psi)$, I knew that Europeans use $\theta$, so I changed it.
But you’re mixing everything up. You’re not consistent.
I mix everything where?
Read what you wrote.
And you have $z$ wrong, whatever letter ….
It’s a total inconsistent mess.
Gosh. You're right, it's all messed up. Let me use the comfortable notation for me, spherical coordinates -- $(r, \phi, \psi). \rho $ -- density of the body.
01:03
I don’t care about the density. It’s constant. Ignore it.
I assume $\psi$ is the angle in the $xy$-plane?
And address my point. As stated, the integral of $z$ over the region is $0$ by symmetry.
Moment of the $(x^2+y^2+z^2)^2 = a^2 xy, x,y > 0$ about the xOy.
Yes, give me a second
It’s the moment of the region bounded by that surface.
Why do you say that if there is a symmetry, the moment is zero?
Not a symmetry. The symmetry about the $xy$-plane, so $z$ averages to $0$.
And here. We use spherical sub that looks like that:
\begin{eqnarray}
x=r\cos(\phi)\cos(\psi) \\
y=r\sin(\phi) \cos(\psi) \\
z= r \sin(\psi)
\end{eqnarray}
01:11
Horrid. $\psi$ is the latitude. No one uses that anywhere except in geography.
:)) Russians use it
Still worthless.
OK, so what are your $\phi$ and $\psi$ limits?
@TedShifrin I see your point, but to me it's not obvious that the integral is going to be zero, if I'm looking at the formula. The book says: "Static moment about xOy is $I_{xOy}^{(1)} = \underset{V}{\int\int\int} z \cdot \rho (x,y,z) dxdydz$
Yes, that is $0$ if the region is symmetric about the plane. It’s just the fact that the integral of an odd function from $-a$ to $a$ is $0$.
So aside from your variable mess, there is a problem with your book.
@TedShifrin Well, from the equations it seems like $\phi$ is not limited at all, so it circles all the way around and changed from $0$ to $2\pi$. And from the condition $x,y > 0$ I got that, first, it's equivalent here to $x\cdot y > 0$. So $r^2 cos^2 (\psi) cos(\phi)sin(\phi) > 0$. So, $sin(2\phi)>0 \rightarrow \phi \in [0, \pi/2]$.
01:17
No, no. It’s not equivalent. It tells you $\phi$ goes from $0$ to $\pi/2$.
@TedShifrin Ugh. Yes, I see that now. However, if you're holding nothing against it, let's get the integral in spherical coordinates to be zero.
$xy>0$ also when $\pi<\phi<3\pi/2$.
@TedShifrin Yes, that's a mistake here
I suspect they want $z\ge 0$.
Okay. Let's say $z \geq 0$.
01:20
@TedShifrin You sure seem to be looking forward to it
So, in that case, what are the $\psi$ limits, presumably?
To answer your question: I'll probably die in a car crash of some sort
@冥王Hades Yes, I am ghoulish.
That word brings back bad memories
Now you wish to restrict my vocabulary? I’ll drop that word if you hold by your two-month ban.
01:22
So, if $z \geq 0$,then $\sin (\psi) \geq 0 \rightarrow \psi \in [0, \pi]$.
Wrong.
@TedShifrin you know I wish I could rewind my life and learn affine geometry before learning euclidean geometry too deeply
This is why the Russian custom sucks.
USSR theme stops
drinking coffee without eating something priori makes me nauseous
01:25
Isn’t $\psi$ automatically limited between $-\pi/2$ and $\pi/2$?
@onepotatotwopotato Then don’t do it; grow up.
@TedShifrin Well as far as I know it can be both $[-\pi/2, \pi/2]$ and $[0, \pi].$
Strangely nostalgic walking past my Japanese highschool even though it has been 4 years at best since then
From the geometrical POV it's better to take the first option, but I don't care. So you mean that $\psi \in [0, \pi/2]$?
No. This is why this definition sucks completely. Draw a picture and look at it. Stop the formulas.
@TedShifrin "Draw a picture and look at it. Stop the formulas." I can't believe you're saying that
01:27
Tell me how $\psi$ is actually defined.
Of course I’m saying it.
Actually I enjoy it but I'm a bit worried I might have cancer because of that
If we draw the picture, $\psi$ travels from the north pole to the south pole of the sphere.
Yeah I get it now. This is a dream. I'm about to wake up soon late for my next class
Then your formulas are all wrong, Magnus. Look carefully. If you were doing this, I would not be ranting, but you messed up big time.
If that’s true, $z= r\cos\psi$.
Ooooooooh, shoot.
01:30
Bro 💀
So confess. What’s going on?
I need a minute. It was so convincing and righteous to me, I never thought about it
Hrumph.
The attorney rests his case.
It still works, obviously, just need to think about the meaning of the angles in this case
Not this case. Always …
01:35
I mean in the case of my spherical sub
@TedShifrin just saw some US political news. What the hell's going on?
The Constitution is in danger of being overthrown and we’re teetering toward dictatorship.
Okay, so here it's all the other way around.
$\psi \in [0, 2\pi], \phi \in [-\pi/2, \pi/2]$
I'm never going to use that again xddddd
So you’ve totally told me the wrong angles.
01:41
@TedShifrin oh, so just your average day in the US? Okay
@TedShifrin Meme of the guy with the rope around his neck, saying "First time?"
I barely remember what the Constitution even stated, been a long while since I last touched US History
So what are the correct formulas for $x,y,z$?
$\begin{eqnarray} x= r\sin(\psi)\cos(\phi) \\ y=r\sin(\psi)\sin(\phi) \\ z=r\cos(\psi)\end{eqnarray}$
NO. LOL. This means $\phi\in [0,2\pi]$ and $\psi\in [0,\pi]$.
Hopeless.
You can’t do anything correctly until you get this right.
01:47
Gosh, okay
Back to basics.
Teaching this stuff for 50+ years makes me intolerant!
Fighting real hard the urge to say something snarky
Patience is a Noble virtue.
smacks Hades
I’m more patient than Hades deserves.
01:49
Rolls -1/12 eyes :p
An eye unroll!
@TedShifrin Can't smack the concept of death itself Ted
Are you suggesting I’m dead?
Nearly fell into a drain 💀
@TedShifrin No but I am
Welcome back @BalarkaSen
01:53
I have the sudden urge to head back to my home and play Piano
A Chopin Nocturne would be good.
$x=r\cos(\phi)\cos(\psi) , y= r\sin(\phi)\cos(\psi), z=r\sin(\psi)$
This is where you started an hour ago. And the ranges on the variables? (Still draw a picture!)
$\phi \in [0, 2\pi], \psi \in [-\pi/2, \pi/2]$
At this point just use software to draw a sphere.
01:58
OK, agreed.
What is $dV$ in spherical coords?
Not the point, Hades. I want him to see the angles.
$r^2 \sin (\psi)$
Nope
Still a mess.
I'll never teach.
@冥王Hades Ok
02:02
With your angle definition, Magnus, it $r^2\cos\psi$.
Well I was calculating the Jacobian
Note this is positive except at the poles.
Calculating with the $x,y,z$ you just gave me? Double-check.
@TedShifrin Yep
Then you messed up.
Wonder if our Linear Algebra papers have been graded yet
02:05
First time I told you the Jacobian I always used
The Jacobian depends on Russian/European/American coords.
I mean, you wrote the answer yourself, I just informed you I was calculating it at the moment. I was quite sure it was what it was, but decided to check it via calculation.
It's 5am here :)
There is a good picture for it, too. See my YouTube lecture on spherical coordinates.
Well, go to sleep and get it all figured out tomorrow.
I won't till I get my homework done.
It’s dinnertime for me.
02:09
I'm not able to sleep if I'm stuck on a problem.
Yeah, something like that.
I was stuck for over a year on my thesis problem in grad school. That’s a long time not to sleep.
Do you know who Voevodsky is?
I remember encountering a geometry problem, around 10 months ago. I began solving it at exactly 1:15AM and by the time I was done, the birds were chirping and I could see the sunlight start to seep in
I was lucky it was a Sunday
02:11
Sometimes he wasn't sleeping for 4-5 days
I've read in his interview that he was kind of talking and interacting with his hallucinations about mathematics
Most of my research career, I was stuck on things for months.
I have a research task, but at the moments when I get stuck with spherical coordinates for no reason, it feels like the only thing I should do is to clean the streets with a shovel
Dang. Maybe math guys are gifted with some weird supernatural willpower or something I don't know.
Most of them are psychos, like Voevodsky
or Mikhailov
If we're talking about 4-5 days of not sleeping
Don't disturb my circles.
02:15
I have went 48 hours without sleep and I fell seriously ill after that
I don’t subscribe to insanity.
Have went ?
I was preparing for my algebra exam for probably 48 hours, and then I just fell asleep and missed the exam itself xd
OK, I'm gone for now.
@TedShifrin Thanks for help and patience, Ted!
02:17
@MagnusAlexander smh must all good academics do incredible amounts of amphetamines
Almost every math professor I meet who talks about their career always reveals how they dedicated weeks, even months, to a single task/problem, like Ted himself.
I regularly go 48 hours without food.
it's called a thesis
I don't know how one manifests such unnatural willpower.
@冥王Hades That's naturally how this works
You get a hard task from the prof, and you have it in your mind for a long period of time until you can say something meaningful about it or solve it
02:20
Attention is a strange beast.
I'm assuming the professors usually do this to their best students?
This guy Andrew Wiles (I guess) spend some decades solving Fermat's Theorem
@冥王Hades In Russia every student has to go through it
7 years alone.
Not everyone has that kind of insane dedication, I'm not sure if I do to be honest
I'm not sure about Europe/USA, but here you get some hard problem from prof. and you work on it for 1 year and you write a paper on how you tried to crack it
02:22
He wasn't in solitary confinement.
It's not really necessary to crack it, though, nobody will kick you out for that, but the work must be done
@MagnusAlexander TokyoU is kinda like that. I've even been given the opportunity, along with 2 other guys, to take graduate level courses even before completing my first year.
In here it's called special courses, we have tons of them, different levels. Additional courses. Anyone can attend
The downside (if you can call it that) is that I spend the majority of my time with math, and because of that I nearly failed general ed subjects.
Not a good thing for my average
@冥王Hades I take some courses in the beginning of the semester, but somewhere in the middle I realize I won't be able to pass it and that I have no time for it so I give up
Now I only attend p-adic calculus course, bc my task that I'll be trying to solve this summer is about this
02:30
I wish I could opt out of them but I can't
They're needed to graduate
General ed subjects is what?
I've never been good at languages intensive subjects that require lots of rote memorization
@MagnusAlexander history, English, civics, etc
Uh. We have English, but I know it better than the teacher. And I'm being objective. 80% of the info I consume is english, so this course takes me zero effort. Apart from that, we have no such subjects. I mean, the ones which are not related to maths
English + PE, that's it
@MagnusAlexander I'm good at PE, but it's hard because everyone here is good at it because of how Japanese high schools work. For English, English classes in Japan are actually very hard, and I'm a native speaker. They dive way too deep and far beyond what is needed to have a conversation
What does PE stand for?
02:35
@user726941 Physical Ed
At uni?
Yeah, its not mandatory here but I do it because I'm good at it
🤔 hmmm
It's kinda more of a formal thing, PE. I go in there like once a month just to show I'm alive. I'm in uni's armwrestling team and I train at home xd
I'm in the soccer team
02:38
@冥王Hades That's the problem with academic English, mostly it's overlearning. But I guess this is good to have in your arsenal when you have to write an article of some kind.
@MagnusAlexander We have to read really difficult novels, some of which are from philosophers.
@TedShifrin You need a subscription for that?
I have never ever really learned any grammar rule for English tbh. I just listened to Ed Sheeran songs and apart from trying Ed's patience with Russian notation, I think I communicate pretty well
@冥王Hades That's actually cool. As long as it all doesn't turn into grammar tests and other crap, I'm okay with such a class
@MagnusAlexander it does turn into tests. We share those classes with students from other departments like humanities and social sciences, and they're very good at this kind of stuff, so they always score the highest on it, even though I'm a native English speaker
Well, we have an opportunity not to care about our grades at all. You just need to get the min score to pass, and forget about it. I think it's not the case in Japan, you guys are having kind of an education cult or smth.
In Russia even if your avg is 2.5/5 but you're smart you can go anywhere (I mean the job)
02:46
@MagnusAlexander the top tier universities are extremely competitive here yes. And I hate losing so I have no choice but to take this seriously
Few years and ChatGPT will wipe the floor with your humanitarian department, so no worries xD
@MagnusAlexander wish it does so sooner
It won't take over math any time soon (if ever) so I'm safe
Yes, but once you subscribe it is extremely hard to unsubscribe @robjohn
I'm not sure if it will ever take over math
At least safe to say that math will be the last to go down
@robjohn Apparently!
02:49
It won't take over math. The way chatGPT "thinks" (spoiler: it doesn't) is fundamentally different to how one does math
@TedShifrin Darn! I hate subscription services.
John Nash cancelled his "subscription."
Introducing subscription based Math Stack Exchange
Coming soon.
I hate PlayStation Multiplayer subscriptions just to access my own internet from my own console....but here we are.
Online players on consoles are hilariously weak anyway so its a total waste
02:53
Perhaps Math Overflow will start it.
Don't give Stack Overflow ideas
They have something like it.
Some executive club for programmers.
Don't you guys think Ted will always be for free
Yes
What's he gonna do? Start an OnlyFans?
You're salty lmao
02:56
That's what losing a game does to you
I dunno, maybe tomorrow we wake up and this chat costs 10 bucks
I'm jumping off the edge of the earth if that happens
you'll like this, ted. i took munchkin to the third of a group of ice skating classes. very elementary stuff, maybe too elementary, and the instructor is not paid enough to care. she essentially boycotted the lesson by standing in one place, ignoring all instructions, and skating only during the 10 minute 'free skate' at the end.
on the way home i said, we'll see how it goes next week. munchkin said: "i'm not skating. next week i'll do the same thing. you'll see and you'll learn." calmly, like a murderer taunting the police.
I always forget who Munchkin is
my daughter, hades, but it might as well be you. :)
02:58
LoL
I thought that this is some kind of a cat at first
But this theory collapsed once Munchkin started talking
@leslietownes me? How? I'm Hades.
@MagnusAlexander a talking cat maybe?
Everyone's gangsta till Leslie takes you to ice skating
@冥王Hades I need one more sleepless night for this theory to seem possible
@MagnusAlexander and some vodka
Vodka is crap.
More than that, I never drank alcohol in my life, I have no idea why someone finds this enjoyable xd
03:03
2 days ago, by Ted Shifrin
Absolute crap.
@MagnusAlexander ruining your liver is fun
Not the vodka! It's a better soju!
@MagnusAlexander maybe I'll come to Russia after graduating and work for Sukhoi
I'm in a rather peculiar situation: Identify G in the short exact sequence 0→N→G→H→0 provided that N and H are abelian.
Sukhoi?
Who's that
03:08
@MagnusAlexander I can't believe you just asked that. You're in Russia right?
@MagnusAlexander Sukhoi is Russia's largest aircraft manufacturer
I'm gonna take a nap, see ya later.
@leslietownes They should politely disenroll her.
03:33
Better yet, don't take her to the next session.
If she asks why, quote her calmly with "you'll see and you'll learn."
04:09
If she doesn't ask why, then just let it go and wait for another opportune moment 😈
user: the only problem is i think she would enjoy that too much. it's a weird game of chicken that we're playing. i didn't exactly want to drive her to ice skating, either, but 4 is too early to learn "if i just complain enough i can avoid it."
:D
She sounds wise beyond her years...
... these kind of games usually come as they approach their teens.
yes, it's pretty bad. her other thing is sneaking contraband (usually toys) into places where they are not allowed (e.g. portions of day care not devoted to playing) or advisable (e.g. in her hand, on the ice, at ice skating, where she almost lost it).
i think some of the other kids at day care look up to her as this badass of rule-breaking.
Introduce her to Baby Shakespeare material.
she knows enough skating to (1) sneak a toy into ice skating, (2) misplace and drop the toy during ice skating, (3) later skate over to the toy on the ice and pick it up without going down on one knee or falling over, without her instructor seeing. that's what's annoying about all of this.
anyway, i'm sorry if she ends up destroying the planet.
04:22
CoV has pretty much finished the planet.
Munchkin is, after all, her dad’s progeny.
"Just label yourself maximally difficult, Munchkin."
05:21
Hey everyone. I'm trying to prove that it's safe to add product objects to a category, and I'm finding it surprisingly difficult. It seems like it should be pretty straightforward.
Specifically, suppose we have any category C. Define the category C' as the category which is generated by following: the objects, arrows, and identities of C; the operator that, given any two objects a and b, produces an object called $a \times b$; and the operators and identities comprising the definition of a product object. Then C is a full subcategory of C'.
I managed to prove that C' doesn't have any arrows between the objects of C that C itself does not have. What I have yet to prove is that distinct arrows in C are still distinct in C'.
What I did was to define a normal form for arrows in C', and then use several different induction proofs to eventually prove that every arrow in C' can be written in this normal form.
Is there an easier way to prove that it's possible to add product objects to a category, while preserving the original category as a full subcategory? Or is that just how you do it--define a normal form and do a bunch of induction?
06:17
Let (X, d) be a metric space and A\subset X and x_0\in X. Define d(x_0, A) =\inf {d(x_0, a) :a\in A} . Under what condition on A , d(x_0, A)=d(x_0, a) for some a\in A?
I have found that if A\subset X compact the minimizing element exists.
d_{x_0} : X\to \Bbb{R} is continuous and A\subset X compact implies d(x_0, A) is attained.
@AlessandroCodenotti
I know this property is interesting in the setting of Hilbert space.
In this setting, we need closed linear subspace (more specifically closed convex set) and the minimizing vector is UNIQUE.
For arbitrary metric spaces I don't think you can do better than compactness. For normed vector spaces see here math.stackexchange.com/questions/3262013/…
why do you need complete + totally bounded, why wouldn't completeness suffice?
err, as long as A is closed
and complete
shouldn't you be able to furnish such a vector
06:32
Complete+totally bdd iff compact.
ah okay, perhaps completeness is insufficient, we need some version of what is basically convexity but in the metric space setting , plus completeness of $A$
the total boundedness works as a stand in
@user977780 I know. I'm trying to think about whether total boundedness is replaceable by something weaker.
and something more reasonable than tautological
but as was said it seems hard
yeah maybe sequential compactness is the obvious choice of weakening, but in the metric space setting that isnt any different to compactness, so its only useful to consider something weaker than sequential compactness in spaces with more structure, like normed vector spaces
d(x_0, A) =\inf {d(x_0, A) :a\in A} then \exists (a_n) \subset A ( we need only first countability of X) such that d( x_0,a_n) \to d(x_0, A) . Now by joint continuity of d, we can interchange lim and d.
where did you even use first countability
you defined d(x_0,A) in terms of an infimum, of course you can furnish such a sequence a_n?
We only need to make sure the sequence (a_n) \to a \in A
what is a?
the hard part here is asserting lim_n a_n or a subsequence thereof, exists..
06:43
@porridgemathematics Correct :) \Bbb{R} is first countable
There is a sequence converging to a limit point.
what?
i dont know what you are trying to do @user977780 , are you claiming you only need first countability to ensure lim_n a_n exists (or a subsequence thereof)? because if you are i dont understand your argument at all. You cant just assume lim_n a_n exists, if you have compactness of A then you can find a convergent subsequence..
@porridgemathematics I am claiming existence of the sequence of (a_n)
that requires nothing at all..
If lim a_n exists in A then there is nothing to prove.
yeah, but the existence of your sequence a_n didnt use first countability
its just happenstance that a metric space is always first countable
you didnt use first countability to recover a_n
06:48
@porridgemathematics Agree. Inf is a subsequential limit
also , I think having a neighbourhood base at x_0 of compact sets is sufficient
so thats technically weaker
in the metric space case
but its a pretty silly thing to assert because you dont know what x_0 is apriori
err no nvm, scratch that
@porridgemathematics Definitely :)
@porridgemathematics Yes. I am trying to find condition(s) on the set A.
it doesnt work, basically im trying to think of a good condition that ensures d(a_n,x_0)-d(a_m,x_0) -> 0 for large n,m also ensures a_n,a_m are eventually in a compact set, which is either a neighbourhood of x_0 or something away from arbitrarily small neighbourhoods of x_0
but I think this , if it turns into anything meaningful, will require a condition on the whole space X, not just A
08:06
Every bounded sequence of real nos. has a cgt. subsequence.
Every pt.wise bounded sequence of real valued functions need not have a cgt. subsequence.
However, this holds if the sequence functions are defined over a countable set.
Using this, the proof of Arzela Ascoli's is straightforward.
and so is Helly's selection.
arzela ascoli should really be viewed as the version for complex-valued functions on a LCh space
the proof is not harder than the usual one
LCh?
LCH
locally compact hausdorff
Ahh
well, on a sigma compact LCH space actually
and with regard to uniform convergence on compact subsets
08:22
@AlessandroCodenotti I already found one
@Jakobian Hindman-Strauss algebra in the Stone-Cech compactification is the usual reference (and a great book in general)
hmm... yeah it might be better, thanks
09:03
Let (X, T) be a topological space such that no continuous real valued map is one-to-one.
Quick examples: (X, \tau_p) particular point space, (\Bbb{S}^1, \tau_{euclidean})
The above two examples are not particularly interesting as both are pseudo compact spaces, every real valued continuous maps are CONSTANT. Extremely injective :)
09:32
@user977780 how is every continuous map $S^1\to\Bbb R$ constant?
@AlessandroCodenotti I'm going to write the proof of non-homogenity of $\mathbb{N}^*$ using Rudin-Frolik order
I never read the proof in detail
I did read Frolik's paper but I figured I'll do the modern rework of it
I know one can show the existence of weak P-points, but I never checked the details
Yes, that one is a different proof, by Kunen iirc?
09:35
Yes
It was the first proof historically (in ZFC, there is an earlier proof under CH)
yes, by Rudin, you can prove existence of P-points to prove it
I just thought that this "sum of ultrafilters" which is now part of what is called the Rudin-Frolik order, is an interesting construction of ultrafilters from others
The proof based on the book you mention is defined differently, so I believe it'll be detached from that, but I still found some explicit descriptions in a paper by Booth
Algebra on ultrafilters is very useful in surprising ways, it has been used for many results in infinitary Ramsey theory
Basically, $p\leq q $ iff $q = \sum(X, p)$ iff $p = \Omega(X, q)$ for some discrete family of ultrafilters $X$
so besides this ordering itself, there are those two operations $\Sigma$ and $\Omega$ on ultrafilters
and they can be explicitly described
Depending on that family of ultrafilters $X$
countable family*
So Frolik basically uses this relation $\leq$, defining it by explicitly mentioning what $\Sigma(X, p)$ is
then by counting argument, he shows $\mathbb{N}^*$ is not homogeneous
well it's more complicated than that I guess, since in all this he uses this ordering up to types of ultrafilters, which is sort of the equivalence classes from the quasi-order $\leq$ above
roughly speaking
10:08
@AlessandroCodenotti f:S^1\to \Bbb{R} continuous implies f(S^1) is compact and connected. Hence f(S^1) =[a, b] and a, b is attained. Then by Darboux property f : S^1\to[a, b] onto map. If f is injective then \forall x\in S^1 f(x) =a or b
@AlessandroCodenotti My bad. Continuous one-to-one map
The last two lines are totally incorrect. Pseudo compact iff every real valued continuous maps are bounded ( need not be constant)
In case of particular point topology, every continuous map is constant.
yeah, you can just use that a continuous map $S^1 \rightarrow [a,b]$ lifts to a continuous map $f: [0,1] \rightarrow [a,b]$, satisfying $f(0) = f(1)$, what you want to show is that there necessarily exist $x_1,x_2 \in (0,1)$ mapping to the same point, so you just apply the extreme/intermediate value theorem (there is a global maximum attained at some point $c_0 \in (0,1)$, then consider $f$ on $[0,c_0]$ and on $[c_0,1]$, use $f(0) = f(1)$ and the intermediate value theorem for non-injectivity)
if $f(0) = f(1)$ is equal to the global max, use the global min instead
no need to invoke any fancy results here
10:25
[Cont.. ] Let x\in S^1 then f(S^1\setminus {x} ) =[a, b]\setminus\{f(x) \}
Since S^1\{x} is connected, f(x) =a or f(x) =b
implies f(S^1) \subset \{a, b\}
thats just false..
I have assumed f is injective
continuous maps $S^1 \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ are the same as continuous map $[0,1] \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$, satisfying $f(0) = f(1)$
hmm okay
you can also do a non-contradiction proof
by just following your nose
10:34
@porridgemathematics Nice result! I will prove :)
@porridgemathematics 👃
11:30
@porridgemathematics Given any countable ordinal \alpha , Borel sets of type G_{\apha} is of type F_{\alpha+1}.
This is true in \Bbb{R}
But not in general topological spaces.
For an example, (X, \tau_p) particular point space then \{p\} \in G_0 but \{p\} isn't in F_{1} or F_{\sigma} as no closed set can contain the particular point p.
G_0= open sets, F_0= closed sets, G_1=G_{\delta}, F_1=F_{\sigma}, G_2=G_{\delta\sigma} etc.
@AlessandroCodenotti
11:49
I am able to show that the result is perfectly valid for any metrizable topological space.
The example above even not T_1
But another example: cofinite topology on an uncountable set. It is T_1.
 
2 hours later…
13:26
This is real cool: youtu.be/QCUFzLiBrYw
14:16
@MagnusAlexander I would like to clarify. I guess that there is a difference between every student in Moscow State University (or Moscow School of Economics, say) and "every student in Russia".
@Yai0Phah Oh yes. But MSU is just like 99% of other universities in Russia prefers soviet system and it's all the same everywhere. HSE has a pretty modern and European view on the matter, of course
 
2 hours later…
15:48
If $N \le M$ are monoids, does it still make sense to form the set $M/N := \{xN : x \in M\}$ and call $N$ a finite-index submonoid if $M/N$ is finite?
@AlessandroCodenotti how exactly does one estimate cardinality of $\{p : p\leq q\}$ where $\leq$ is the Rudin-Frolik order on $\beta\mathbb{N}$ i.e. $p\leq q$ if there is a injective $f:\mathbb{N}\to\beta\mathbb{N}$ with discrete image such that $f^*(p) = q$ where $f^*$ is the continuous extension to $\beta\mathbb{N}$?
16:02
Got into a fight this morning
16:42
I have a question about some elementary Euclidean geometry. The proof belove (see screenshot) is a lot of text, but none of it is deep. I am wondering why $(\epsilon,\epsilon)=1$, where $\epsilon=\sum_i \epsilon_i$ with $\{\epsilon_i\}$ an "admissible" set of linearly independent unit vectors (meaning that $(\epsilon_i,\epsilon_j)\leq 0$ for $i\neq j$, and $4(\epsilon_i,\epsilon_j)^2=0,1,2,3$ for $i\neq j$).
Previously it was determined that $0<(\epsilon,\epsilon)=n+2\sum_{i<j}(\epsilon_i,\epsilon_j)$, so I don't know how we suddenly know that $(\epsilon,\epsilon)=1$. It should be true then that $(\epsilon,\eta_0)=1$, and it isn't clear to me why that would be the case.
ohhh
never mind
they used the letter $\epsilon$ for two purposes
it's not the sum $\sum_i\epsilon_i$ anymore
just any unit vector in $\mathfrak A$
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