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00:16
Dec 1 at 21:33, by Ted Shifrin
OK, so what order do you take the tangent vectors so that their cross-product gives that orientation?
indeed.
The search meister rears his electronic head.
00:42
beep boop
01:24
@Ted I think I found an index error in Griffiths & Harris!
01:37
@Thor I have pages and pages of scribbled notes on errors in G&H. There are plenty.
Although I did type up errata for Guillemin & Pollack, I never did so with G&H, because I knew I had far from a complete list.
Thor: Sanity check. What are $H^1(S^3,\Bbb Z_2)$ and $H^4(S^3,\Bbb Z_2)$?
$0$, no matter the coefficients
Of course. What is FShrike doing?
the cohomology ring of a wedge sum behaves very simply in general (if the spaces aren't completely bad), so I agree with Kevin's comment. I don't think there's any subtlety no matter if the sphere's dimensions are even or odd
But thanks :) Yeah, I don't either. .... I don't get the point of the question, honestly.
What error are you referring to?
@TedShifrin probably just slightly confused himself
01:47
That's the trouble with being precocious and doing graduate level mathematics in high school :)
@TedShifrin in the inductive proof of Giambelli's formula, the indices in the middle rows are all off by $2$
(p. 206)
@TedShifrin "Oxford undergraduate"
@Jakobian Only recently, yes.
@Thor I've never been through the general proof of Giambelli. I can't help.
As I said, my list of errata comes only from the stuff I've actually taught or read carefully.
it's a very easy to fix error, to be fair
Giambelli is more or less easy once you have Pieri, I'll present it in a seminar talk tomorrow (talk about working your results out in time...)
02:09
You’re hours ahead.
02:47
Hey @Ted!
Hi again, @robjohn.
The rain I mentioned earlier has dribbled in. Not really much to speak of yet.
None here … despite predictions. But 80-94% chances the next three days. We shall see.
Wednesday, we're supposed to get heavy rain and a bit of thunder.
How enlightning.
 
3 hours later…
05:26
Does Krull's Theorem: "Let $R$ be a commutative ring, and let $I$ be a ideal of $R$ that is distinct from $R.$ Then there exists a maximal ideal $M$ of $R$ containing $I$" assume that R has an identity $1\neq 0$ ?
I know nowadays a ring is defined to have be commutative having an identity, but I follow mostly Herstein's book and there a ring may not necessarily be commutative and even might not have an identity.
So, this is why my confusion arose.
05:59
It normally assumes additive identity
I remembered the ring without 1 is called rng, there are some theorems that are able to extend to this but I never concern about this.
But I just read the proof, it seems like you don't need the identity to prove the theorem with Zorn's lema
In this case, having commutative is convinent so that you don't need to worry about left or right ideal. However, I would say it is more common to encounter ring that is not commutative than has no identity in Herstein's book. In addition, I don't the definition of commutative is necessarily connected to that the ring has identity though you can always join one.
"the" proof of that result? it might help focus the discussion if you linked to "a" proof of that result, so the hypotheses and argument and conclusion are clearer.
e.g. the version at proofwiki.org/wiki/Krull%27s_Theorem assumes the existence of a 1 in its rings, and uses it in the proof, in arguing that the union of a chain of proper ideals is proper.
06:14
Yes, that where I read. Oh I see. it does assume 1.
who knows what other proofs are out there. i expect that some kind of hypothesis is necessary, whether on there being a 1 in the ring, or on I not being just an ideal but some special kind of ideal, if only because if not, i'd expect a proof on a place like proofwiki to avoid the use of the hypothesis. but who knows.
it might be more instructive to focus on particular examples of "rings" that do not have 1 but whose ideal structure can be determined, if not entirely, enough to answer the question for that "ring."
a natural example from analysis would be R the ring of real valued functions on the reals having limit 0 at both +/- infinity, and I the set of all functions in R that have compact support. I is clearly a proper ideal in R. is I contained in a maximal ideal? [what are the maximal ideals in R?]
emm, can I do it with basic algebra and analysis knowledge that I have known?
possibly? i'm not specifically asking you, or anybody in particular. i'm just thinking out loud. i think this example would be tractable. it is probably even on MSE somewhere.
Let me google it somehow. Looks innocent. We never talk a lot of rng on class.
06:35
this example at least shows how the idea used in that proofwiki proof might fail in general. if you think of I as a non-unital "ring" in its own right, and let I_n denote the subset of I consisting of those functions with support in [-n, n], n a positive integer, then {I_n} seems to be a chain of proper ideals in I whose union is all of I.
so that particular use of zorn's lemma is definitely not going to work in general.
07:02
Yes, indeed
@Thorgott it didn't work.
@TedShifrin I see. So the determinant of $[E_i. E_j]$ can be written as some $BB^t$
@TedShifrin yeah, in that case, I was trying to understand curvatures.
I don't know how to preserve orientations in the case of cylinder.
8 hours ago, by Koro
The definition that I use for a map f:S--> \tilde S to be orientation preserving is the following: If for positively oriented bases v_1, ...,v_n\in S_p, the vectors dv_1,..., dv_n are positively oriented.
I have one confusion in the definition also: If for some positively oriented basis in S_p, the vectors df(v_1),...,df(v_n) are +ly oriented, can we have the same conclusion for all positively oriented basis in S_p?
No, we discussed the normal to get orientation, too. Remember these are surfaces, not $n$-dimensional.
07:19
I understand that for the cylinder. But this current situation seems different to me as it is about "orientation preserving of a map".
which has the definition as above.
but our cylinder discussion in past was about orientation on the cylinder, no?
Suppose that $f:S\to \tilde S$ is a smooth map between two oriented n- surfaces. We say f is orientation preserving (o.p.) if for all $p\in S$ and for all positively oriented bases $v_1,...,v_n$ in S_p (the tangent space to S at p), the vectors $df(v_1),..., df(v_n)$ are positively oriented in $\tilde S_{f(p)}$.
Suppose that for a smooth $f: S\to \tilde S$, we are only given that for some positive oriented bases in $S_p$, the image vectors under df are positively oriented. Can we conclude by this information that f is positively oriented?
07:34
0
Q: Let $R=\{\begin{pmatrix} 0 && a\\0 && b\end{pmatrix}:a,b\in\Bbb Q\}$, be a ring and $I=\{A\in R:A^2=0\}$ an ideal of $R.$ Show that $R/I\cong \Bbb Q.$

Thomas FinleyShow that $R=\{\begin{pmatrix} 0 && a\\0 && b\end{pmatrix}:a,b\in\Bbb Q\}$, is a subring of $M_2(\Bbb Q)$ and $I=\{A\in R:A^2=0\}$ is an ideal of $R.$ Finally, show that $R/I\cong \Bbb Q.$ I was able to show that $R=\{\begin{pmatrix} 0 && a\\0 && b\end{pmatrix}:a,b\in\Bbb Q\}$, is a subring of $M...

I need some help with this, please.
07:51
@ThomasFinley Did you try considering the map $f: R\to Q$ defined as $f(A)=f([a_{ij}])= a_{22}$?
i.e. A getting mapped to its (2,2)th entry.
the question is answered now on main.
Ooo
@Koro That was the only thing left. So frustrating
Let $R$ be a commutative ring with identity. Prove that there exists an epimorphism from $R$ to a field $F$.
Any idea how to solve this question?
in retrospect, what may have been the missing link between the attempt and the solution was an explicit identification of I as a set of matrices in more concrete terms than its definition.
thomas: this is basically that krull thing from earlier. consider a quotient map R -> R/m, m a maximal ideal.
is it true for any field F?
07:58
@leslietownes Then, the quotient map is an epimorphism. But where does the field comes to play?
can we have epimorphism $Z\to \mathbb R$?
@Koro Yes, I think the question is valid so...
koro: no, there's is an implicit quantifier there. prove there exists a field F such that there is an epiomorphism R to F.
@ThomasFinley I don't know the answer to your question off the top of my head..
@Koro maybe, it's not R it may be some other field
08:00
@leslietownes I see, thanks. It seems that Thomas misstated the question.
thomas: fill in the blank: R/m is a field if and only if the ideal m is [blank].
@leslietownes [blank] =maximal
koro: i don't know about 'misstated,' certainly it could have been phrased better. this is the kind of thing textbooks often do suboptimally.
@leslietownes Ahh I see. I misunderstood the question.
it is to be interpreted as 'Show that there is field F such that there is an epimorphism $R\to F$'.
@Koro yes
08:04
Okay. Then your question is answered right?
F= R/m as Leslie advised.
and the epimorphism is the quotient map.
@Koro ,@leslietownes and such a maximal ideal exists from Krull's Theorem, right?
Krull's Theorem:Let $R$ be a commutative ring with a identity, and let $I$ be a ideal of $R$ that is distinct from $R.$ Then there exists a maximal ideal $M$ of $R$ containing $I$.
there's maybe something kinda interesting to be said there, about how sometimes an omitted quantifier whose meaning can be inferred from context is an existential quantifier, although sometimes, perhaps even more often, it is a universal quantifier.
i had to teach an 'intro to proof' class once where the textbook went to great pains to belabor stuff like that, but also wasn't written very carefully in its own exercises. i wanted to kick its author. we did not have much choice over the textbook.
@ThomasFinley yeah, Zorn's lemma basically.
I didn't know it's called Krull's theorem.
@Koro , @leslietownes Thanks a ton!
thomas: yes. applying that result to the proper ideal I = {0} would return a maximal ideal in any commutative ring with identity, although as koro notes it is zorn magic and not something you generally have a lot of control over.
08:10
Got it.
for specific examples R you might not need the full force of zorns lemma of course. it's that "for all commutative rings with identity" that needs zorns lemma.
08:26
probably a silly question: Why doesn't probability tally with the truth here?
Say there's a town A and town B with population 100k, 200 k respectively. A crazy virus enters the picture and 'it makes people to throw stones randomly at one another'. In which town, would you be safer? In town A, right? Intuition suggests that.
But if we calculate the probability of getting hit by a stone in the towns, we get that the probability of getting stone hit in town A is about 1/(100 k) and in B it is 1/(200 k)!! So town B is safer??
please ignore this.
@leslietownes Zorn's lemma is precisely this:" If R is a commutative ring with identity then it has a maximal ideal", isn't it?
Joe
Joe
09:17
@ThomasFinley: No, Zorn's lemma is an assertion in order theory. It states that if $X$ is a partially ordered set, and every chain in $X$ is bounded above, then $X$ has a maximal element. However, one uses Zorn's lemma to prove a number of results, including the ideal theorem
@Joe "If R is a ring (not necessarily commutative) with identity then it has a maximal ideal" is true in general, right?
Does this theorem have a name?
Joe
Joe
@ThomasFinley: I have sometimes heard it being called the "Maximal Ideal Theorem". As for whether it is true in general, the answer is "yes, if you are working in $\mathsf{ZFC}$" (i.e. you are happy to freely use the axiom of choice). However, the Maximal Ideal Theorem is independent of $\mathsf{ZF}$ (assuming that $\mathsf{ZF}$ is consistent).
@Joe "if you are working in $\mathsf{ZFC}$"- What is $\mathsf{ZFC}$?
I don't know what $\mathsf{ZFC}$ stands for.
@ThomasFinley it fails for the zero ring
@ThomasFinley Zermelo-Frankel with choice, the set theory system everyone assumes for granted
Joe
Joe
@Jakobian: Heh, very true.
@ThomasFinley: Are you familiar with set theory? $\mathsf{ZFC}$ is the standard axiom system used in set theory, and is the most common foundational theory in mathematics
09:31
@Joe oh! I never had any idea about this axiom
Joe
Joe
@ThomasFinley: In that case, I would shorter my answer to "yes, every (nonzero) ring has a maximal ideal".
@Koro $\mathbb{Z}\to \mathbb{Q}$ is an epimorphism
Joe
Joe
It's great fun learning set theory. Every mathematical object, even numbers, can be realised as certain sets, and virtually every theorem in classical mathematics can, in principle, be proven in formal proofs in $\mathsf{ZFC}$.
About your specific query: $\mathsf{ZFC}$ includes an axiom called "the axiom of choice", and some people, for whatever reason, have felt uncomfortable using this axiom. However, the axiom of choice is widely accepted in mainstream mathematics these days. And, assuming the axiom of choice, the maximal ideal theorem is provable in set theory. But we can't prove the maximal ideal theorem in $\mathsf{ZF}$, which is $\mathsf{ZFC}$ with the axiom of choice omitted.
The $\mathsf{C}$ in $\mathsf{ZFC}$ stands for "choice"
@Joe So to sum up things: 'Maximal Ideal Theorem' states that: If R is a ring (not necessarily commutative) with identity $1\neq 0$ then it has a maximal ideal . We must note that $1\neq 0$ automatically implies $R$ is not a zero ring. The theorem fails if $R$ is a zero ring i.e if $R=\0\}$.
Am I correct?
Joe
Joe
Yes, you are correct
I would advise you not to worry about these thorny set-theoretic issues, until you feel the desire to learn about these thorny set-theoretic issues
09:40
@Joe Thanks a ton!
(Krull's Theorem:) Let $R$ be a commutative ring with a identity $1\neq 0,$ and let $I$ be a ideal of $R$ that is distinct from $R.$ Then there exists a maximal ideal $M$ of $R$ containing $I$.
This theorem is phrased correctly, right? Krull's theorem( as I wrote above fails again, if $R$ is a zero ring i.e if $R=\0\}$), right? @Joe , @Jakobian
Joe
Joe
@ThomasFinley: What you wrote is correct, although I think that the theorem is also true for noncommutative rings
I'll try to find a reference
2 hours ago, by Koro
Suppose that $f:S\to \tilde S$ is a smooth map between two oriented n- surfaces. We say f is orientation preserving (o.p.) if for all $p\in S$ and for all positively oriented bases $v_1,...,v_n$ in S_p (the tangent space to S at p), the vectors $df(v_1),..., df(v_n)$ are positively oriented in $\tilde S_{f(p)}$.
Suppose that for a smooth $f: S\to \tilde S$, we are only given that for some positive oriented bases in $S_p$, the image vectors under df are positively oriented. Can we conclude by this information that f is positively oriented?
the answer is - yes, we can.
Joe
Joe
09:57
@ThomasFinley: The theorem appears to also be true for noncommutative rings. If $R$ is a not necessarily commutative ring with $1\neq0$, and $I$ is a proper (two-sided) ideal in $R$, then there is a maximal (two-sided) ideal including $I$. In particular, letting $I=\{0\}$, we see that $R$ has a maximal (two-sided) ideal.
But I don't like having to work with noncommutative rings anyway, since I still have trouble telling my left from right.
10:44
@Joe Thanks for the clarification!
@Koro probably no.
This is a more accurate statement that Dieudonne is proving
With interpretation that what comes after fixing $U_0$ is consequence of fixing an appropiately small $U_0$
So it shouldn't be moreover, more like continuation of properties that $U_0$ satisfies
Perfect
11:09
@Koro then you must've made an error
11:23
@Koro there is only one ring homomorphism $\mathbb{Z}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ and it is not an epimorphism
I forgot to write $u(x_0) = y_0$
that said, I feel like if an introductory algebra lecture uses the term epimorphism, it's just a mistake and they intended to say surjective. nobody talks about epimorphisms of rings without calling specific attention to their subtle nature.
Omitting a lot of details this is more or less the proof
Except for continuous differentiability of $u$
It mainly runs on mean value theorem and Banach fixed point theorem
12:02
Hi there!
I have a connected Riemannian manifold M (not necessarily compact) with boundary. What conditions/ constraints do I need to impose on M in order to ensure that a non-vanishing vector field exists that is transverse at the boundary?
did you mean nowhere-vanishing?
Yes, nowhere vanishing. However, it seems you can push the zeros to infinity (in the non-Compact case). But even then it’s not clear if that’s feasible
12:19
a nowhere-vanishing vector field on $M$ exists iff
a) $M$ is compact, without boundary and $\chi(M)=0$
or
b) $M$ is non-compact or has non-empty boundary
so if $\partial M\neq\emptyset$, there exists a nowhere-vanishing vector field and I think you should always be able to make it transverse to the boundary
by perturbing it with a small vector field that is normal the boundary and supported in an arbitrarily small nbhd of the boundary
Is there any reference I could use? Seems like if you push the zeros to infinity in the non-compact case, then you still don’t know if there are infinitely many zeros at infinity - or in general how infinity looks topologicaly once you move All zero there. Or am I overthinking this?
Also, in the non-compact case, do we need to take the Euler characteristic into account? Or is it irrelevant?
"infinity" is not a place that exists, that's precisely why we can push zeros there and why the idea does not work in the compact case (in the compact case, there is no "infinity", so nowhere you can push the zeros to)
a nice explanation of these ideas is here: math.stackexchange.com/questions/3961266/…
the Euler characteristic in the non-compact case might not even be defined
what you actually want to take into account is the so-called Euler class, which just so happens to be equivalent data to the Euler characteristic in the compact case
however, the Euler class vanishes in the non-compact case
I was thinking about uniform convergence, and there's the well known theorem that states that given $\{f_n\}$ where $f_n$ are continuous, and $f=\lim f_n$ then $\int_I f=\lim \int_I f_n$ where $I$ is a compact interval. I was wondering if this is true if $I$ is unbounded. I found a counterexample where $f_n$ are not continuous but I didn't find anything if $f_n$ are continuous.
12:34
@Thorgott thanks! Your answer is very helpful. Just to summarize: if my manifold has a non-empty boundary and I want such a vector field as indicated, then i just need to restrict myself to “b) $M$ is non-compact or has non-empty boundary”?
sure
the part that needs verification is that the perturbation argument I sketched actually works
@SineoftheTime on $[1, \infty)$ consider $f_n(x) = 1_{[1, n]}/x$
You can make $f_n$ smooth if you want
12:50
0
Q: Let $p$ be a prime. Show that there exists two non isomorphic rings with $p$ elements. (Is my solution correct?)

Thomas FinleyLet $p$ be a prime. Show that there exists two non isomorphic rings with $p$ elements. I feel that there are two rings of order $p.$ They are $(\Bbb Z_p,+,.)$ And $(\Bbb Z_p,+,×),$ where $.$ is multiplication modulo $p$ and $×$ is such an operation so that $a.b=0,\forall a,b\in \Bbb Z_p.$ I took ...

I don't know how to show that $R\cong (\Bbb Z_p,+,×)$ if $R$ does not have a unit element, i.e $1\neq 0,$ where $×$ is such an operation so that $a.b=0,\forall a,b\in \Bbb Z_p.$
13:05
stop calling them just "rings" when you don't assume the existence of units
2
it invites an absurd amount of misunderstandings
also, what's the issue? you have written down two not necessarily unital rings. one has a unit, the other does not, so they are not isomorphic. you're done.
If we know the action of a Lie algebra $\mathfrak{g}$ on a vector space $V$, is there a way to canonically construct a Lie algebra action $\mathfrak{g}\oplus \mathfrak{g}$ on $V$?
@Thorgott I don't think thats the problem. The problem is not clarifying definition of ring
After that, I think they're free to call them rings
All rings are assumed to be commutative
I like to assume that rings are commutative, but thats only because I don't want to think of "sides"
@Thorgott No, I wanted to prove that there exists two rings upto isomorphisms that are of order $p$.
13:18
@Jakobian Anyone is free to use any word to mean anything they like. That doesn't mean that they are communicating effectively.
left-sided ideal, right-sided, I don't care. Just give me ideals
@ThomasFinley you're missing a word like "exactly" in that sentence
or "only" in the title to your question
@Thorgott Oh, I see how the misunderstanding occurs.
@XanderHenderson Yes. And that's solved by clarifying definition of a ring
choose your side Jakobian
13:21
@Thorgott Oh, I see how the misunderstanding occured
I have fixed the title now.
But then again I don't know how to show that $R\cong (\Bbb Z_p,+,×)$ if $R$ does not have a unit element, i.e $1\neq 0,$ where $×$ is such an operation so that $a.b=0,\forall a,b\in \Bbb Z_p.$
@XanderHenderson Hello, I hope you are doing well.
@Thorgott Can you please help me solve this problem?
I have mentioned my definition of rings.
Also, I have included the word, "only" in my post.
Since this is a ring of prime size, I think it'd be natural to consider some generator $a$ of its additive group
Take $b = n\cdot a$ for $1\leq n\leq p$, and suppose that $a\cdot b = 0$
I think the right approach is to then try to deduce that $xy = 0$ for all $x, y$ in your ring
@Jakobian But I am considering $1\neq 0$ is not in $R$.
You wanted to consider non-unital rings?
I already proved that if $R$ has a unit, then it is isomorphic to $\Bbb Z_p$ with the usual operations.
@Jakobian yes
@Jakobian Then taking integers $z, t$ such that $zn+tp = 1$. Then $a^2 = zn a^2 + tp a^2 = 0$
This shows that for this ring, $xy = 0$ for all $x, y$
13:33
@Jakobian What is $p$ ?
I get that $R=<a>$
@ThomasFinley A prime?
you gave some prime $p$
And $1\leq n\leq p$. Ok, I overlooked the notations from your previous comment.
Anyway, if $a\cdot b\neq 0$ for all $1\leq n\leq p$, then if $x, y$ are non-zero, then $xy = (ma)(na) = mn \cdot a = ka$ for some $1\leq k\leq p$ so that $xy$ is non-zero
@Jakobian I did not get how you concluded this. Till now, we have only shown, $a^2=0,\forall a\in R.$
All elements in $R$ are of the form $n\cdot a$ for some $n$
so their product is a multiple of $a^2 = 0$ by an integer
13:37
@Jakobian oh! Right.
actually I made a mistake
Those should be $1\leq n\leq p-1$ and $1\leq k\leq p-1$
@Jakobian where?
Its a minor mistake, I just wrote $p$ instead of $p-1$
@Jakobian Why do you even consider $a.b\neq 0$ ? You already proved $ab=0$
I've proved that if $ab = 0$ for some $b$ of chosen form, then the ring must be the ring for which the multiplication is trivial i.e. $xy = 0$
Now we have to consider case when $ab\neq 0$ for all $b$ of the chosen form, and prove its a field
13:41
@Jakobian ok
In particular this leads to the property akin of that of integral domains, $x\neq 0, y\neq 0$ implies $xy\neq 0$, but we don't know that this ring has unit $1$ yet, so we can't conclude its a field
Alright, the map $f:x\mapsto ax$ is injective, so a bijection, then $f, f^2, ...$ is a sequence of maps $f^n(x) = a^nx$
Since there is only finite amount of maps from this ring to itself, we must have $f^n = f^m$ for some $m < n$, thus $a^n x = a^m x$, so that $a^{n-m}x = x$ for all $x$
Now the element $e = a^{n-m}$, which is non-zero, is a unit of this ring
Thus the ring is actually an integral domain, so since finite integral domains are fields, its a field
Wait, I am getting confused. What I could make out was( I am quoting your statements):
Since this is a ring of prime size, I think it'd be natural to consider some generator $a$ of its additive group

Take $b = n\cdot a$ for $1\leq n\leq p$, and suppose that $a\cdot b = 0$

Then taking integers $z, t$ such that $zn+tp = 1$. Then $a^2 = zn a^2 + tp a^2 = 0$

This shows that for this ring, $xy = 0$ for all $x, y$


Anyway, if $a\cdot b\neq 0$ for all $1\leq n\leq p$, then if $x, y$ are non-zero, then $xy = (ma)(na) = mn \cdot a = ka$ for some $1\leq k\leq p$ so that $xy$ is non-zero
For $1\leq n\leq p-1$ and for some $1\leq k\leq p-1$
Ok, but how $a^2=0$ ?
I get that $zna^2=0$
But what about $tpa^2$ ?
$px = 0$ for all $x$
This is because the additive group is of size $p$
13:50
Ah, ok.
'Anyway, if $a\cdot b\neq 0$ for all $1\leq n\leq p$, then if $x, y$ are non-zero, then $xy = (ma)(na) = mn \cdot a = ka$ for some $1\leq k\leq p$ so that $xy$ is non-zero"--- Why is (ma)(na)=mn(a)?
@ThomasFinley I see I have a typo here too. It should be, if $x, y$ are non-zero then $x = ma, y = na$ for some $n, m$ co-prime to $p$, so $xy = mn a^2$ where $mn$ is also co-prime to $p$< so $xy\neq 0$
@Jakobian ok
If $x$ is non-zero in this ring, then $kx\neq 0$ for any integer $k$ co-prime with $x$
this uses only the additive group structure
Next portion: "I've proved that if $ab = 0$ for some $b$ of chosen form, then the ring must be the ring for which the multiplication is trivial i.e. $xy = 0$

Now we have to consider case when $ab\neq 0$ for all $b$ of the chosen form, and prove its a field"
Ok, till now I grasped everything.
Next comes: "In particular this leads to the property akin of that of integral domains, $x\neq 0, y\neq 0$ implies $xy\neq 0$, but we don't know that this ring has unit $1$ yet, so we can't conclude its a field
Alright, the map $f:x\mapsto ax$ is injective, so a bijection, then $f, f^2, ...$ is a sequence of maps $f^n(x) = a^nx$
Since there is only finite amount of maps from this ring to itself, we must have $f^n = f^m$ for some $m < n$, thus $a^n x = a^m x$, so that $a^{n-m}x = x$ for all $x$
Now the element $e = a^{n-m}$, which is non-zero, is a unit of this ring
"Alright, the map $f:x\mapsto ax$ is injective, so a bijection"---- So you are considering a mapping $f:R\to R$ such that $f(x)=ax,\forall x\in R.$
13:57
If $x,y\in R$ such that $f(x)=f(y)\implies ax=ay\implies a(x-y)=0\implies a=0$ or $x-y=0$. But $a\neq 0$ so, $x=y.$ This proves $f$ to be 1-1.
Sure
Let $y\in R$ then, $\exists n\in \Bbb Z$ such that $na=y.$
But then how $f$ is onto?
since $f$ is from $R$ to $R$ and $R$ has finite cardinality
@Jakobian Oh! Ok.
This is just a property of finite cardinals
14:01
Next, you consider a sequence of composite mappings "$f, f^2, ...$ is a sequence of maps $f^n(x) = a^nx$"
@Jakobian Or, er, what is the same, finite ordinals. This should basically follow from the fact that no finite ordinal is a limit ordinal
Ok, as $R$ has order $p$ so, $a^p=a\implies f^p=f$ so, the sequence is finite and repeating.
@ThomasFinley No, why
$R$ with multiplication is only a semigroup, you can't claim anything about $a^p$
Well $f^p(x)=a^px=ax=f(x)$ so?
@Jakobian oh gosh
Yes
@Jakobian 👍
14:03
So why is "we must have $f^n = f^m$ for some $m < n$, thus $a^n x = a^m x$, so that $a^{n-m}x = x$ for all $x$"?
$f, f^2, f^3, ...$ is an infinite sequence of maps
Because $R$ is finite, right?
but there is only a finite amount of maps $g:R\to R$ because $R$ is finite
@Jakobian yes and as $R$ is finite so in the sequence $a,a^2,a^3,...$ there are only finite number of elements. This means $\exists m,n\in\Bbb Z$ such that $a^m=a^n$ due to which $f^n=f^m.$
Right?
Thats another way of seeing it, yes
its important for $m, n$ to be distinct
14:07
@Jakobian yes.
"$a^n x = a^m x$, so that $a^{n-m}x = x$ for all $x$"
Now, why is this?
Inverse of $a^m$ might not exist?
Because $a^m\cdot (a^{n-m}x) = a^m\cdot x$ and $a^m$ is non-zero
from the property akin to that of integral domains we obtain $a^{n-m}x = x$
its important here that $n > m$
@Jakobian Ok
@Jakobian yes , WLOG, I presume.
"Now the element $e = a^{n-m}$, which is non-zero, is a unit of this ring
Thus the ring is actually an integral domain, so since finite integral domains are fields, its a field"
Ok, so $R$ is a field.
Now what?
We are done
14:11
How is $R\cong (\Bbb Z,+,×)$ ?
There is a unique field of size $p^n$ for prime $p$ and $n \geq 1$ a natural number
So, precisely, we have proved the result, "If R is commutative having p elements then R is a field", correct?
incorrect
Why?
We were proving this all the time!
Or did I miss something?
we've proven that "If $R$ is a ring with $p$ elements then either the multiplication is trivial or $R$ is a field"
nowhere did we assume commutativity
14:17
@Jakobian oh, even better.
So, if $R$ is a field then $R\cong Z_p$
This is due to the fact that:There is a unique field of size $p^n$ for prime $p$ and $n \geq 1$ a natural number
I think the above fact is some kind of a theorem, right?
If the multiplication in $R$ is trivial, then how can we show that $R\cong (Z_p,+,×),$ where $×$ is such an operation so that $a.b=0,\forall a,b\in \Bbb Z_p.$
For this, I think we still have to exhibit an isomorphism between $R$ and $Z_p$ explicitly. Isn't it?
What would that isomorphism be?
For fields of size $p$ - a prime, you can just write the isomorphism as $f(n\cdot 1_R) = n\cdot 1$
since any element will be an integer multiple of $1_R$
for other powers of $p$ it might be harder, I don't remember the argument
@Jakobian Ok, but what if the multiplication is trivial?
for a field?
@Jakobian no, we had two cases. 1. R is a field , 2. Multiplication in R is trivial.
If case 1 occurs then R is isomorphic to $\Bbb Z_p$
Oh, I misunderstood you, I thought you're still going over the case of field
14:28
Now, what happens for case 2?
@ThomasFinley Take any non-zero $a$ and then $f(n\cdot a) = n$ is an isomorphism
@Jakobian Wait, by $a$ you mean a generator for $R$ right?
Any non-zero element of $R$ is a generator for its additive group
It doesn't matter
To be precise, if $R=\langle a\rangle$ we take, $b\in R.$ Then, there exists $n\in \Bbb Z$ such that $b=na$ . $f$ maps $b$ to $n.$ So, $f(na)=n_p,\forall n\in\Bbb Z.$
Correct?
Use \langle and \rangle.
14:34
Its not pleasant to go over things so elementary
you can confirm your own doubts
@Jakobian confirmed it and yes what I wrote is correct
Thanks a lot! I got it completely!
 
1 hour later…
15:39
@Jakobian Till now, I have seen many solutions for this problem. But I can confidently say this seems to be the best to me. Thanks again!
 
3 hours later…
18:22
Howdy @Thor. How did your seminar lecture go?
18:37
hi, everything went smooth!
(although most Schubert varieties aren't smooth, of course)
slightly over the time (I always am), but nothing I'm significantly unhappy with
had a very enlightening discussion on whether the proof of Pieri's formula in Eisenbud & Harris is wrong or not afterwards
What was the conclusion? I don't know that book, sadly. I'm sure it has tons of gorgeous stuff in it.
Say $\phi: U\to R^3$ is smooth, $U\subset R^2$ is open. Define $v_1=d\phi/dx, v_2= d\phi/dy$. Look at det$(v_1, v_2, v_1\times v_2)$. Here think of , as a new row. How in the world is that determinant equal to $(v_1\times v_2).(v_1\times v_2)$?
=$\|v_1\|^2\|v_2\|^2- (v_1.v_2)^2$
I think I've told you this before, @Koro. It's actually the same computation you were doing yesterday, for which I gave you the linear algebra fix. But, independently, $\det(v_1,v_2,b) = b\cdot (v_1\times v_2)$.
This is in essence the definition of cross product.
18:53
In geometry and algebra, the triple product is a product of three 3-dimensional vectors, usually Euclidean vectors. The name "triple product" is used for two different products, the scalar-valued scalar triple product and, less often, the vector-valued vector triple product. == Scalar triple product == The scalar triple product (also called the mixed product, box product, or triple scalar product) is defined as the dot product of one of the vectors with the cross product of the other two. === Geometric interpretation === Geometrically, the scalar triple product...
there is a very weird step in the proof where they quote the technical and very annoying lemma 4.5. the conclusions are
a): it is unclear as it is written how that step in their proof invokes lemma 4.5. however, i have been convinced that there is a way of applying the lemma and making choices in the right sequence that makes the proof work.
b): the entirety of lemma 4.5 is, as far as Pieri's formula is concerned, entirely unnecessary and can be replaced by elementary linear algebra
other than that, though, I really like their proof. it's very geometric, unlike the less enlightening more algebraic proof in Griffiths & Harris that I only skimmed
Interesting. I have known Eisenbud and Harris for 4 decades or more. Eisenbud always struck me as more careful with details.
@leslietownes ohh yes, I remember it now :). Thank you so much.
having pasted that (which covers the topic but is also a good example of wikipedia spew) my only other observation is, there is a school of thought under which examples in R^3 and analogies with stuff like the cross product improve and solidify the intuition for general dimensions, and another school of thought where the number of different notions collapsing into the same notion in R^3 is seen as a peculiar distraction from general ideas. i am probably more in the latter camp.
@Koro Isn't this what I just wrote you above?
18:55
and also, as always, i wonder what dieudonne would dieu
I studied this thing many many years ago. We called it 'box product'.
@leslie I never included cross product in my linear algebra courses. I agree with you. But it's too important for multivariable calculus and physics in $\Bbb R^3$ not to pay attention to it. :)
@TedShifrin yes. I saw the triple product and I remembered it and could relate to your comment too.
But, Koro, this actually ties exactly into that linear algebra we were discussing with the determinants and $AA^\top$.
Take your two vectors and then put the normal in the third row/column.
So that normal, is of course, up to scalars the cross-product. Proceed.
Anyhow, to see it explicitly, @Koro, look at p. 40-41 of my diff geo text.
It's not necessarily a detail issue. I oftentimes have this experience that things get iffy when algebraic geometers start using the word "generic" a bit too freely. When I brought up my issue with the proof after the seminar, though, others immediately saw the fix, so it's not like it's grave or anything.
Explicitly, the point is that we have Schubert cycles $A,B$ and $C$ in complementary codimension. Picking general flags with respect to which we define them, we can assume $A$ and $B$ meet generically transversely so that $A\cap B$ represents the intersection product. Then, they make a cl
@leslietownes I am in the exterior algebra camp, we're really just observing that $v_1\wedge v_2\wedge\ast(v_1\wedge v_2)=\lVert v_1\wedge v_2\rVert^2\mathrm{vol}$ by definition of the Hodge star!
19:10
Ah, right, that is a typical situation with flags. ... McCrory and I wrote our first paper together being totally rigorous about what "generic" means in a situation with surfaces in $\Bbb P^3$ and doing some Thom-Boardman loci. Arnold had published the same formula for an intersection number with no rigor whatsoever about what "generic" means (nor justification).
oh, right
Yeah, all sorts of horrendous linear algebra stuff amounts to elegant stuff about the inner product on $\bigwedge^k\Bbb k^n$.
especially Laplace expansions
however, I don't have an elegant exterior algebra explanation for the $\det(1+vv^t)$ we had yesterday
@TedShifrin noted, thanks.
The determinant of AA^\top is the determinant of matrix with i,j th entry E_i. E_j.
@TedShifrin yeah, I think issues with what "genericity" means are as old as time. professionals will have no issue parsing the argument, but as someone who is not quite an algebraic geometer, it stumped me
19:14
Ah, but people throw it around without careful proofs. McCrory wrote very detailed proofs and defined exactly what generic meant. It took many pages.
The generic we have for transversality theory (complement of measure zero) is not nearly precise enough for most algebraic geometry.
@TedShifrin noted. I see how it defines the triple product (scalar). I put $b= v_1\times v_2$ to see that.
Cool, @Koro.
@Thorgott I don't remember that discussion, but this is a classic thing that shows up lots of places.
"general" for me usually means "holds on an open+dense", but I wager there's more sophisticated variants for sophisticated applications
Not to mention the difference between the Zariski topology and the usual :)
This discussion reminds me. We haven't seen @Balarka around in many months.
@TedShifrin yeah, but I've never actually found a proof I found fully satisfying
19:23
Where was this in yesterday's discussion? I recall figuring out a simple proof years ago.
19:34
Hi, I have a quick question. Here, in the section "Specifying a transformation by three points", the uniqueness of the Mobius transformation is up to a multiplicative constant right?
No. Unique, period.
If you're talking about $a,b,c,d$, those are unique up to multiplying by a non-zero constant.
ok makes sense
thank you
This is why the group of Möbius transformations is $PSL(2,\Bbb C)$.
I'm not familiar with this notation. For curiosity, what's $PSL$?
The P means projective, so you mod out by (nonzero) scalars.
$SL$ means matrices of determinant $1$.
19:39
👍
19:52
People don't study analytic functions over infinite-dimensional Banach spaces?
I don't know how to write convergent power series in infinitely many variables.
Oh, that was not $\det (I+vv^\top)$, though. :)
In particular, we had $[I|v]$ and I put $[-v^\top|1]$ on the bottom row.
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