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00:30
The rain's a-comin'
00:55
I wonder how bad it'll be. So far San Diego is a panic scene (sorta like people in Georgia when an inch or two of snow are predicted ... go buy all the milk and bread within miles).
Can your dogs feel something in the air? My cat seems indifferent, so far.
01:14
I just got a text from my daughter's middle school.
Which informed me of a whole notification system that my ex-wife has never disclosed to me.
This is going to be a fun email... :(
01:39
I can imagine.
Moral of the story: never marry a shiksa.
Hi :) I thought I'd advertise a bounty:
2
Q: Show, using presentations, that $\Bbb Z_m\times\Bbb Z_n\cong\Bbb Z_{{\rm lcm}(m,n)}\times \Bbb Z_{\gcd(m,n)} .$

ShaunNote: This is an alternative-proof question and so is not a duplicate. The Question: Show, using group presentations, that $$\Bbb Z_m\times\Bbb Z_n\cong\Bbb Z_{{\rm lcm}(m,n)}\times \Bbb Z_{\gcd(m,n)}.$$ Motivation: I was trying to answer this question in particular . . . $\Bbb Z_m \times \Bbb ...

02:00
@XanderHenderson I personally draw other morals :)
I mean, there are others to be drawn. But it is still good advice, I think.
02:14
@TedShifrin Neither our cats, nor our dogs, nor our bunny seem to be acting weird.
02:41
my daughter is acting weird
03:14
@leslietownes Weirder than usual?
 
2 hours later…
05:17
I think we will have no problem even if f(x)<=g(x)<=h(x) at x=c
Isn't it?
what does it mean to say that a hyperboloid of 1 sheet contains a line in it?
It is not clear by looking at its graph.
Hey @Koro! How r u? Long time no see...where have you been? On vacation? Ha ha....
thomas: indeed, no problem if you additionally assume that the functions are defined at c and satisfy that inequality there (or indeed that they are defined at c but do not satisfy that inequality there). the likely reason for excluding c from the hypothesis is just that it isn't necessary to consider what happens there to get the result
@leslietownes K. Got it. Thanks!
koro: to say that a subset of R^3 contains a line has only one meaning that i can think of (i.e., the standard one, where "line" means the usual thing and "contains" means contains as a subset). is this not in R^3? if so, where is it? is it at least embedded in some R^n?
05:29
@Koro It in fact contains two lines through each point!.
i certainly join you in not finding it obvious that hyperboloids of one sheet are doubly ruled
06:12
Look at a saddle surface. There it is obvious. But they’re projectively equivalent :)
06:58
i was going to say that you've proved my point, but having heard that just once, it's going to be hard to forget it. i will classify it as 'obvious, once you know why it is obvious.'
in the spirit of "there's no trick to this, it's just this little trick"
 
2 hours later…
09:28
@XanderHenderson just absorb the energy from the sun like those next stage vegan people
 
1 hour later…
10:43
math.stackexchange.com/q/4755763/668308 I actually asked the exact same question to one of the senior graduate students, but he didn't answer it. Only saying that it would be quite difficult to draw an actual picture.
 
2 hours later…
12:41
@TedShifrin I managed to show that the geodesics on a sphere are great circles. I just had to solve the following: $ f''(t)+ (f'(t). (N\circ f)') N\circ f(t)=0$ N is the unit normal vector. From here the details shape up quickly and I get the desired form of the geodesic.
I tried doing the same thing for a cylinder, i.e., showing that a geodesic on a cylinder ($x_1^2+x_2^2=r^2, r>0)$ is a helix. (vertical lines and points too I think. But let's not worry about that) But it doesn't work. The details are as under:
Suppose that f is a geodesic on the cylinder. $N(f(t))= \frac{(f_1(t), f_2(t),0)}{r}$. Then, I get $f''(t)+ \frac{\color{red}{f_1'(t)^2+f_2'(t)^2}}{r^2}(f_1(t), f_2(t),0)=0$. The problem is that the red colored term is not constant.
apart from this, I have $f_1^2(t)+f_2^2(t)+f_3^2(t)=r^2$ and $f'_{1}^2(t)+f'_2^2(t)+f'_3^2(t)=$ constant.
$f_1'^2(t)+f_1'^2(t)+f_3'^2(t)=$ constant.
I found a solution online but it doesn't make sense. 3rd line from below: I think that it should be instead-maximal geodesic is uniquely determined by initial position and initial velocity.
Otherwise it's circlular reasoning.
@ThomasFinley Hi, I'm good, thanks. How about you?
13:00
Consider $\sum_{n=0}^\infty (-1)^n x^{2^n}$, then $$a_n=\begin{cases}(-1)^k & \text{ if }n=2^k \\ 0 & \text{ if }n\neq2^k. \end{cases}$$ I'm interested in computing $|a_n|^{1/n}$, but I see a problem when $n=0$. Then $a_0=0$, but what is $|a_0|^{1/0}$? What if $a_0=1$, what would then $|a_0|^{1/0}$ equal?
@sunny Why are you "interested in computing $|a_n|^{1/n}$?
What is the end goal?
@XanderHenderson to compute $|a_n|^{1/n}$ to obtain the radius of convergence :) recall (Cauchy-)Hadamard's formula
@sunny Yes. This is basically the root test. Does the root test care what $a_0$ is?
Indeed, does it care what the first $n$ terms are for any finite $n$?
The goal is to take some kind of limit (the $\limsup$, to be precise)...
True, no, I guess $a_0$ is not so important then.
i don't get where this is valid in that complex plane: $$i s \frac{\partial ^2f(s,x)}{\partial s^2}=x \frac{\partial f(s,x)}{\partial x}$$
I wanna say it's valid for a particular solution $f(s,x)$ wherever that solution is valid
So I conclude that it's valid at least on some subset of $\Bbb C.$
13:17
@Koro nvm, it's done now.
chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/64227123#64227123 you have to look at the Schrodinger wave equation
13:34
@XanderHenderson what would be $\limsup_{n\to\infty} |a_n|^{1/n}$ of the sequence $a_n$ I stated above? I guess I could define $|a_n|^{1/n}$ to be whatever when $n=0$. So $$|a_n|^{1/n}=\begin{cases}1 & \text{ if }n=2^k \\ 0 & \text{ if }n\neq2^k \text{ and } n\neq 0 \\ C & \text{ if } n=0, \end{cases}$$ where $C$ is some arbitrary constant. Then $\limsup_{n\to\infty} |a_n|^{1/n}=1$ in any event, which gives the correct radius of convergence of the series.
@sunny I mean, you could. I'm not sure that you would want to.
A sort of analysis-y way of thinking about it would be to say that $a_n^{1/0}$ (which is nonsense) is $\lim_{x\to 0^+} a_n^{1/x}$. This is $1$ if $a_n = 1$, $\infty$ if $a_n > 1$, $0$ if $a_n \in (-1,1)$, and oscillatory otherwise.
But, like, why?
Who cares?
it is not relevant to the convergence or divergence of the series.
You should get used to the idea that it is always possible to ignore any finite number of terms when you take a limit (including a limit superior or limit inferior).
true, the expression $|a_n|^{1/n}$ for $n=0$ just put me off, but as you say, we can ignore it or just define it to be whatever. Either way, it doesn't matter!
13:51
Skip the "we can...just define it to be whatever". This isn't really correct (you can't just define things to be "whatever"). The point is that you don't need to define it in order to answer the question you are trying to answer. Ignore it. Don't worry about it. It doesn't matter.
14:11
15:31
Is this a standard theorem/lemma ?
If so, where can I find the proof ?
@PM2Ring With all due respect, is this a meme? Or a "true" book?
The way it's posted, ig the former is the case...
@ThomasFinley if $x$ is a non zero element of $W$ then think about the set ${\alpha x}$ where $\alpha \in F$
@Koro Yeah, I am good. Where have you been, recently? Earlier, you were active on MSE a lot! Hehe...
> O’Reilly Media's book covers on programming and technology have been parodied online using the term O RLY?, first popularised by a meme generator by Ben Halpern.
15:44
Another popular work by Leslie:
3
Sep 12, 2022 at 7:50, by PM 2Ring
user image
@PM2Ring Oh! Really?
@PM2Ring where are u getting these pics?
@SoumikMukherjee I don't understand, what are you trying to imply?
The set alpha *x, may not be finite but also may not be infinite
why not infinite?
The given field is infinite
@SoumikMukherjee but, it may happen, that c,d is a scalar and c * alpha=d * alpha... I mean why finite? Sorry, if I am missing something
you mean $cx=dx$?
@SoumikMukherjee yes
15:49
then that implies either $x=0$ or $c=d$
@SoumikMukherjee Will the inverse of x always exist? Otherwise, how is c=d ?
what is inverse of $x$? $x$ is a vector
$(c-d)x=0$ implies either $c=d$ or $x=0$
@SoumikMukherjee I know I sound stupid! But recently I read about integral domains and zero divisisors in Ring Theory and my brain is goin haywire
But is that always the case in vector spaces ?
@ThomasFinley what?
@SoumikMukherjee I mean, if ab=0 where a is a scalar and b is a vector or vice versa, then either a=0 or b=0 ?
15:55
@ThomasFinley There are several sites that generate them. You can see genuine O'Reilly covers and O'Rly covers on Google: google.com/search?q=O%27Reilly+Media+book+covers&tbm=isch
@ThomasFinley yes, I think you also proved that in chat
@SoumikMukherjee when ?
I didn't get that...
@PM2Ring oh! Ha ha, funny
@ThomasFinley Maybe it was a different question, like $0x=0$ using distributive property
@SoumikMukherjee Oh, yes. But that was, like if we multiply 0 by x or x by 0 we get 0. But here, isn't the thing we're discussing bout the reverse of it?
yeah it is different
16:02
@SoumikMukherjee hmm...so I'm saying will that always hold?
I never came accross that strangely!
but if $\alpha x=0$ and $\alpha$ is nonzero then you can multiply both sides by $\alpha^{-1}$ to get $x=0$
@ThomasFinley The scalars come from a field. Do fields contain zero divisors?
@SoumikMukherjee Oh! ok, so that proves it... But then returning back to the initial problem: We are considering that the set $\alpha'=c\alpha$ where c is a scalar and $\alpha\neq 0$ is a vector in a subspace S . Now, if all the $\alpha'$ ('s) are distinct we are done as then $S$ is infinite. But if, there exists $c,d$ such that, $c\alpha=d\alpha$ then, $c=d$ as $\alpha\neq 0$.
This means if, $c\neq d$ then, $c\alpha\neq d\alpha$ and since, the scalars come from an infinite field so, $S$ is infinite as well as each $\alpha'$ will be distinct for each distinct scalars. Did I get you?
@XanderHenderson Yeah, I got badly confused. Thanks! I think I get this.
@XanderHenderson A field never has a zero divisor.
@ThomasFinley yes.
Oh, actually, it is even simpler than the non-existence of zero divisors. If $a\ne b$ are scalars and $u$ is a nonzero vector, then $$au - bu = (a-b) u \ne 0. $$ Hence $au \ne bu$. This implies that $|\{au : a\in \mathbb{F}\}| = |\mathbb{F}|$, where $\mathbb{F}$ is the underlying field.
An explicit bijection is given by $a \mapsto au$ (where $u\ne 0$).
16:17
@SoumikMukherjee thanks.
If $S$ is a subspace of $V$ and $u \ne 0$ is an element of $S$, then $S$ contains $\{au : a\in\mathbb{F}\}$. Thus $|S| \ge |\{au : a\in\mathbb{F}\}| = |\mathbb{F}|$.
@XanderHenderson yeah, it's indeed a good way to demonstrate the result. I have noted it. Thank you for showing the explicit proof! I learnt a good strategy.
16:34
6
Q: Involutive fourier transform

goblin GONEThe writer here states I am introducing a viewpoint (the involutive convention) which makes the Fourier transform its own inverse (i.e., the Fourier transform so defined is an involution). If I am reading the notation correctly, the definition given is: $$F(f)(s) = \int_{-\infty}^{\inf...

 
1 hour later…
17:47
Let $S$ be an $n-$ surface in $\mathbb R^{n+1}$. Let $v\in S_p, p\in \mathbb R^{n+1}$ and $\alpha: I\to S$ be the maximal geodesic in $S$ with initial velocity. Show that the maximal geodesic $\beta$ with initial velocity $cv,c\in \mathbb R$ is given by $\beta(t)=\alpha(ct)$.
How to check maximality of $\beta$?
$\beta$ is a geodesic as $\ddot \beta(t)= c^2\alpha(ct)\perp S_{\alpha(ct)}$ as $\alpha$ is a geodesic.
not sure how to show that it is maximal too.
@geocalc33 was that a question?
here is a solution found online but it makes no sense.
nvm, I think I got it now.
18:10
@copper.hat I am just mulling over how the Fourier transform changes with the choice of metric. Trying to understand some things wrt to that.
@geocalc33 The Fourier transform is defined on an algebraic group with a natural Haar measure. I'm not sure that I see how a metric is involved, as the Fourier transform is not defined in terms of a metric.
@XanderHenderson Of course you are right.
I always am.
Except when I'm not.
Riemannian metric leads to volume form (but is not required).
In Soviet Russia, volume forms YOU!
18:17
@TedShifrin thanks ted
@XanderHenderson ah okay this now makes a lot of sense. Working with Fourier over $(0,1)$ instead of $\Bbb R$ makes things complicated because you lose the algebraic group structure.
but when one door closes another one opens
Loosely I view Fourier as a change of basis.
But you go to a different space!
@geocalc33 No. You generally regard $(0,1)$ as the torus, i.e. $\mathbb{R}/\mathbb{Z}$. The group operation is addition modulo $1$. The Fourier transform of a function on $(0,1)$ is a Fourier series (very roughly speaking).
Again, you should have a look at the concept of Pontryagin duality.
I am interpreting the word loosely very loosely.
18:32
@XanderHenderson okay I will look now and be happy
That explains it.
@copper.hat Even loosey-goosey?
Only when plucked.
Where are @leslie and Munchkin’s ducks/geese?
Apparently there is a storm in SoCal. My daughter drove to LA on Friday I think, hopefully the weather does not have too much impact.
18:34
The impact is yet to arrive.
Sorry a storm warning.
So much news about it I presumed it much have arrived already.
It seems to be shifting some , so it may be worse inland. Dunno yet.
But the strength has diminished.
The news is always a breathless doomsday when it comes to weather.
Yeah. But consider the alternative in Hawaii .
Can't imagine how a Californian weather reported would survive in Ireland.
True.
18:37
There is, however, a boy cried wolf effect eventually.
Apparently there is a systematic bias towards predicting worse weather from commercial weather reports than from the nws.
apparently people like when the weather is better than predicted. really. i am ashamed of the human race.
Besides, the world will end tomorrow anyway.
Aw... man.
The world's ending?
But that's where I keep all my stuff. :(
Just think, if it doesn't then you will feel sooo much better.
@XanderHenderson There's a children's tale like that! It's been around a long time.
Hi, amWhy!
18:50
It involves Chicken Licken, right?
Not Henny Penny!
@XanderHenderson Indeed!
@TedShifrin Who are you, anyhow? ;D
Chicken Licken is finger lickin' good!
For that chicken, the world really was ending. With breading and a deep fryer.
Did they have deep fryers back then?
(with apologies to my vegetarian and vegan brethren and sistren)
18:55
@XanderHenderson Reminds me of a bumper sticker of a chicken "speaking": "My worth can't me measured it how many chicken nuggets I make!"
@amWhy The bumper sticker is right. You also have to consider the wings, breasts, thighs, etc.
@XanderHenderson boo!!!
Gotta go feed my hummingbirds again.
Don’t they use cartilage to make “nuggets”?
@TedShifrin The old way was heating oil in a very large dutch oven, over an open pit fire
18:59
For the record, I believe I said that I had gone through almost five pounds of sugar this summer. That was incorrect. The big ol' bag o' sugar I bought was a 25 lb bag.
For the last two weeks, they've been going through sugar water at a rate of about 1 lb of sugar every 36 hours.
I’ve never bought larger than 10 lb. bags — when I lived in a house with plenty of kitchen storage.
Wow. The heat.
@XanderHenderson but isn't Fourier series a decomposoition of a periodic function as a linear combinatino of sines and cosines or complex exponentials?
@amWhy What did they use for oil? That’s a lot of suet or tallow.
@XanderHenderson oh nevermind - I got it you are right
19:03
@TedShifrin What they had: Whale oil, lard, etc. I'd like to see Gordon Ramsey in practice, back in the days of yore!
@copper.hat Regarding your angle convention question math.stackexchange.com/q/1504483 I suspect that your guess is correct, that it comes from astronomy. If you look "down" on the Solar System from the north, most motions are anti-clockwise. And when we draw planet orbits, we almost always draw the semi-major axis as horizontal, generally with the Sun at the origin and the perihelion on the +X axis.
@geocalc33 A function on the torus $T \simeq (0,1)$ is a periodic function. :P
@PM2Ring Navigation always fascinates me. Hence my curiosity re the difference in conventions.
$\DeclareMathOperator{\Hom}{Hom}$ I am very rusty at this, but if I recall correctly, the basic idea is that you first define the characters of a locally compact abelian group to be elements of $\Hom(G,T)$, where $T$ is the torus. That is, a character of a group is a homomorphism from that group to the torus. The collection of all characters ($\Hom(G,T)$) is itself a group. This group is the Pontryagin dual of $G$, usually denoted by $\hat{G}$.
The Fourier transform of a function on $G$ is a function on $\hat{G}$. So, for example, if $f$ is a periodic function on $\mathbb{R}$ (i.e. a function on the circle group $T$), then $\hat{f}$ is a function on the Pontryagin dual of $T$, which is the integers. So $\hat{f} : \mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{C}$ eats an integer $n$, and spits out the coefficient of $\mathrm{e}^{Cinx}$ in the Fourier series expansion of $f$.
(Where $C$ is some constant which depends on the period of the function---I think that it is usually something like $2\pi / L$, where $L$ is the period).
19:27
@copper.hat I have this book, from 1964. It's not a big book, but it contains a lot of info. It doesn't go deeply into theory, and all the calculations use logarithms. :)
Despite its age, and shortcomings, it's still a great little reference book. The author assumes the reader knows basic trig, and is smart (and diligent) enough to be a navigator, but he doesn't expect that you have an advanced maths degree. He explains spherical stuff well, but is a bit sketchy on elliptical stuff. In those days, you'd use special tables to apply elliptical corrections to spherical calculations.
20:20
I find that the time I spend on MSE goes down when school starts (resumes tomorrow), since I can't spare the time. Does the traffic usually go up during schooltime, since people ask HW questions?
@DavidRaveh Traffic tends to peak around midterms and finals.
Let $f(x)=\frac{x}{e^x-1}=\sum_{n=0}^\infty B_n \frac{x^n}{n!}$, where $B_n$ are the Bernoulli numbers ($f(0)=1$). I have a hard time understanding why $B_n=0$ for odd $n\geq 3$. The argument goes like this; since $\frac{x}{e^x-1}+\frac12 x$ is even, the result follows. I can see why $\frac{x}{e^x-1}+\frac12 x$ is even, but how does this relate to $\sum_{n=0}^\infty B_n \frac{x^n}{n!}$?
e.g. see here for why $\frac{x}{e^x-1}+\frac12 x$ is even.
20:47
I think I might have found the answer. It follows probably from the fact that $B_1=-\frac12$. Then $\frac{x}{e^x-1}+\frac12 x=\sum_{n=0}^\infty C_n \frac{x^n}{n!}$, where $C_n=B_n$ for $n\neq 1$ and $C_1=0$.
And since the power series is even, all odd numbered coefficients vanish...
@PM2Ring A long time ago I had hoped to do a little project for a 3rd grade class I used to volunteer in, basically a small sundial with various angles marked out. The idea was to estimate latitude & longitude using a few measurements and a clock. I decided that it was to far beyond their attention span on we settled on a make-it-yourself slide rule.
21:06
My sister just sent this to me with the caption "Jesus math":
21:38
How Rood
I just assumed they meant BornBorn
Or maybe BBoorrnn?
Is this operation being defined on a commutative ring?
which algebraic structure is the most divine?
Maybe its a rhetorical question as in Born to...
Not a fan of anyone telling me what to do or believe, even if implicit.
Going down a rat hole in the comments math.stackexchange.com/q/4756046/27978
I am one of Zorn's lemmings
Zorn's Lemma gives me nightmares sometimes
21:55
I just lose myself in a chain looking for a maximal element.
@copper.hat Just know that one exists. You don't need to see it.
I am a doubting Thomas
I believe AoC much more than ZL
Well, I mean, the Axiom of Choice is obvious. And the Well-Ordering Theorem is clearly false. As for Zorn's Lemma... who the hell knows?
Love that quote
22:04
4
Q: What's the point of maximal atlases?

krm2233If $M$ is topological space (lets say connected Hausdorff and second countable, because I don't think it matters particularly for the question) then we can give $M$ a smooth structure by specifying an open cover $\mathcal U = \{U_i : i \in I \}$ and homeomorphisms $\psi_i\colon U_i \to V_i \subs...

O_o
TL;DR
Yeah, I started reading Lee's manifold book and early on he gets into maximal atlases. I mean really?
My reaction to the question is to ask "What's the point of real numbers? Whenever we want to actually do any computations, we work with rational numbers, or algebraic numbers. Why do we need to know that the rationals have a metric completion if we never actually do anything with it?!"
I'm looking to define a function in the following fashion. Fix 9 "evenly spaced" green points on the real unit interval $I=(0,1)$. Let the points (where the y-coordinate is zero for all the points so I won't write it) be $S=[.1,.2,.3,...,.9].$ Now, randomly select 9 real numbers red in $I.$ Now this is how I want to develop the function. I want the function to count the number of red less than a given green. This will give a step function in $I^2$.
For example the first point in the function would be (.1, checks how many red are less than .1)
22:20
Yeah, but I think the maximal atlas stuff could be relegated to an appendix.
Hope that made sense^^
I’ve beaten COVID @TedShifrin
another victory for me!
And then I plan on making a fractal out of that method by letting $S$ go to 99 elements to 999 elements etc.
fractal step function.
@copper.hat *shrugs*
I "learned" out of Lee. I like the presentation
I needed something a bit more concrete first.
22:25
But I like to get my hands dirty with things like constructions of the real numbers, or of topologies from a basis. I guess I recognize that you don't need to do that nonsense.
But I like to start with that nonsense.
@geocalc33 Define "fractal". Though the kind of function you seem to be defining appears to be monotonically increasing, and monotonically increasing functions have Hausdorff dimension 1. Not fractal, so far as I am concerned.
i like to think of a fractal as a fixed point of some set valued mapping.
@XanderHenderson you're right...again. Not fractal
But yeah monotonically increasing
@copper.hat Okay. But most sets can be expressed as the fixed point of some set valued mapping...
matrix, i knew it.
E.g. the unit interval is the fixed point of the map $\Phi$, where $\Phi : \mathscr{P}(\mathbb{R}) \to \mathscr{P}(\mathbb{R})$ is defined to be $\varphi_1(A) \cup \varphi_2(A)$, with $\varphi_{1,2} : \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R}$ defined by $\varphi_1(x) = \frac{1}{2}x$ and $\varphi_2(x) = \frac{1}{2}x + \frac{1}{2}$.
22:33
restrict the set valued map to one induced by an ordinary function :-)
@copper.hat If that rules out the map I gave above, how do you deal with the Cantor set?
That's certainly a fractal, right?
you are right, i should stop here.
Just redefine $\varphi_1(x) = \frac{1}{3}x$ and $\varphi_2(x) = \frac{1}{3}x + \frac{2}{3}$. :P
perhaps the smallest fixed pint
@copper.hat That would be the emptyset.
22:35
i meant point, but now that i am thinking of pints
Or, if you insist on non-empty, then the Banach fixed point theorem tells us that there is a unique compact fixed "point" (the Cantor set is an example).
But that only applies to iterated function systems which are contractive.
i'm trying hard to be quiet
Heh.
Thanks to this bad answer, I found a typo in my thesis. :(
The second $0_{\mathbb{o}}$ should read $0_{\mathbb{k}}$. :'(
What is written there is NONSENSE!!!
Fried rice @XanderHenderson
Oh, joy. I'm being memed.
Thank goodness I have absolutely no idea what it means.
22:47
You aren’t. I’m just showing you fried rice
23:06
Homology of functions summing over square-free numbers maybe?
0
Q: A family of polynomials $f_n \in \Bbb{Z}[X]$ whose solutions $x$ lying in $\{p_n + 2, \dots, p_{n+1}^2 -2\}$ are precisely the twin prime averages.

MathCrackExchangeDerivation $$ x \in I_n = [p_{n} + 2, p_{n+1}^2 -2] $$ is not a solution to $X^2 - 1 \pmod {p_i}$ for all $i = 1..n$ where $p_n =$ the $n$th prime, for any prime $p_1, \dots, p_n \iff x$ is a twin prime average in $I_n$. That means we have a system of logically AND'd equations: $$ g_i(X) = X^2(X...

I have a chain complex at the end
when i see twin primes i think room temperature superconductors.
@copper.hat Weird. I think cold fusion.
Like, how you gonna fuse a pair of twin primes when it's cold out?
That looks wrong...
Hrm... that looks wrong, too...
Google says it's correct, now. Imma just hafta trust the Google.
Funny how I’m acting all nice and calm in this place while engaged in a fierce debate in another forum

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