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00:16
I'm working an exercise where I need to show every function, over a symmetric interval like $(-a,a)$, $a>0$, can be decomposed into a sum of an even and odd function. I've shown that, however, I also need to show the decomposition is unique. How do I do that?
the even part of $f$ is simply $g(x) = \frac {f(x) + f(-x)}2$
and the odd part of $f$ is $h(x) = \frac {f(x) - f(-x)}2$
depending on how you've argued that, you may only need to re order what is an assumption and what isn't, i.e. there may be no 'work' left to do. but it may help to at least think it through separately, if not write it separately. suppose f(x) = e(x) + o(x), with e even and o odd. can you show, using arguments that are probably very similar to ones you may have already come up with, that e(x) is given by the same formula as your "g"
00:33
right, I would just argue the same way I already have πŸ™ƒ
01:28
@psie this is a linear algebra problem
this is (not so) secretly an Eigenspace decomposition
BibTex is easy, but are there more comfortable ways to manage the bibliography? Writing every information of papers is really boring.
02:09
@ChoMedit I don't understand. Using whatever system you use, you are going to have to put the data into some kind of file somewhere at some point in time.
Don't you just have a a single .bib file that you use over and over and over again?
hello
is there any theorem that relates the tensor product of two finitely generated R-modules with the Tor functor?
Tor is the higher derived functor of tensor product.
yeah
I forgot to write down the rest of my question
02:19
so what I meant is: it seems that the free parts of the modules should behave well, and the torsion parts should have some weird behavior that might depend on the Tor
so there might be some kind of relation like "let $M_1 = R^{I_1} \otimes T_1$, (...). then the following sequence is exact:" and then the middle guy is $M_1\otimes M_2$, $R^{I_1\times I_2}$ appears somewhere and maybe $\mathrm{Tor}(T_k)$ too
This is gibberish to me. You need solid homological algebra. Maybe @Lukas can help.
@XanderHenderson That's true, but like, to cite some non-journal-style papers(like lecture notes) or making a citation label are really annoying things. That's of course not a problem of bibtex itself. By the way, I don' have a single .bib file that I usually copy again, but I think writing it is not that hard. It's just a boring thing.
It’s lucky for you that you were born after LaTeX. I wrote my PhD and my first several papers using typewriters.
Boring. Ha.
@TedShifrin haha yeah
02:31
I remember card catalogs and heavy tomes of Math Reviews.
happily the homological algebra course will be offered in the following semester
There are good books.
02:44
@PM2Ring I was at a nephew's wedding recently, and his contingent from Aberdeen came, but I must confess that it took a bit of listening to confirm (in my mind) that some were Scottish and not Irish. A bit sad given that a few decades ago I could make passable guesses at the county/shire of origin.
@ChoMedit My general process for most citations is "Google the paper -> Hit the "Cite" button -> Copy the bibtex code to my .bib file". It is relatively simple...
@TedShifrin My father was one of the very first people at University of Arizona to turn in a PhD dissertation as a computer printout (in... uh... 1982? 83?).
Lots of people hired folk to type up handwritten work.
Though that is harder to do in mathematics, where the symbols matter.
(I swear to g-d that the image in the "KayPro" article on Wikipedia could be me, except I didn't wear glasses until high school.)
@LucasHenrique so it sounds like you're working over a PID, so you have $M\cong R^r\oplus M_{tors}$ and $N\cong R^s\oplus N_{tors}$ for some $r,s\ge0$ and then $M\otimes N\cong R^{rs}\oplus M_{tors}^s\oplus N_{tors}^r\oplus(M_{tors}\otimes N_{tors})$. not sure if that's what you're getting.
oh, i thought it would be harder lol. thanks Thorgott :)
np
you can be more precise if you decompose the torsion parts into cyclic summands and calculate $R/p^m\otimes R/q^n$ for primes $p,q$ and $m,n\ge0$
 
4 hours later…
07:22
I have a confusion about the terminogy of a "subring". Is it obliged to preserve the unity?
On the contrary, an ideal isn't obliged to preserve the unity. I presume that's why we never call them "normal subring".
this depends on your set of definitions. when the definition of "ring" includes a multiplicative identity element, the definition of "subring" usually requires that the "subring" have the exact same multiplicative identity element. it wouldn't surprise me if some weirdos somewhere don't do this, but that is the usual convention.
of course, for some people, a "ring" might not be required to have a multiplicative identity element, and in that case, a "subring" may not be required to have one either (even if the ambient "ring" does have one). my impression is that this convention is increasingly less common, although it is used in at least some popular algebra books that were written in the mid-late 20th century
there is enough variation in this from textbook to textbook (and certainly on the internet, and in this chat) that one should be cautious about any statement about what "we" do or do not require of "rings" :)
so e.g. under what i have termed the "usual convention," if Z is the integers (or more generally any nonzero ring with multiplicative identity), the subset Z x {0}, while an ideal in the product Z x Z, would not be a "subring" of Z x Z.
 
2 hours later…
09:18
@Jakobian @AlessandroCodenotti If $\alpha$ is an ordinal and $n\in\Bbb Z_+$, then is
$$(\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)' = \begin{cases} \omega^\beta\cdot n+1 & \text{if }\beta+1 = \alpha\\
\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1 & \text{if }\alpha\text{ is a limit ordinal}\end{cases}$$
true?
here $'$ means the derived set
 
2 hours later…
Mad
Mad
11:43
I am abit confused about Cartans closed Sub group theorem for Lie gorups. Are not Lie groups topological groups, is not an open subgroup of a Topological group automatically Closed? So by Cartans theorem, would this not mean any open or closed subgroup of a lie group a lie sub group
11:57
yes, open subgroups are automatically closed
but the fact that an open subgroup of a Lie group is itself a Lie group is a lot more trivial
Mad
Mad
Open subsets of a toplogical smooth manfiold are themselves such, they inherit also the group structure, and it remains to prove only that the multiplication and the inverse are smooth mappings
Which i guess is trivially done by taking the limitation on the subset?
yes, you are just restricting smooth maps to smooth submanifolds
the hard part is just proving that closed subgroups are automatically smooth submanifolds
but for open subgroups, this is trivial, cause all open subsets are automatically smooth submanifolds!
Mad
Mad
12:19
I see
12:59
@onepotatotwopotato no. For example the derived set won't contain any naturals
You seem to be concerned either by $\sup$ or ordinal type of the derived set ... but those are speculations by me
@Jakobian why?
for example if $\alpha=2$ and $n=1$ then it's true
Because $\{n\}$ is open
Your set will consist of limit ordinals
13:17
then what's $(\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)'$ then?
The set of all limit ordinals $\leq \omega^\alpha\cdot n $
can you provide a proof of that?
13:33
It pretty much follows from definitions
If $x$ is a successor ordinal and $y+1 = x$, then $\{x\} = (y, x+1)$ is open
If $x = 0$ then $\{0\} = [0, 1)$ is open
If $x$ is a limit ordinal and $y < x$ then $(y, x] = (y, x+1)$ is open and contains some $y < z < x$
It follows that $(y, x)$ is non-empty
If $U$ is any neighbourhood of $x$, then from definitions $U$ contains some $(y, x]$ for $y<x$
So $U\setminus \{x\}$ is non-empty
@onepotatotwopotato
one confusion on basic: If $\alpha<\beta$ then $\alpha\subset\beta$ but containing $\beta$ does not imply $\alpha$ is also contained?
14:10
I mean $\omega\in (\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)'$ but this does not imply natural numbers are also contained?
14:21
@onepotatotwopotato There is no reason to believe that the derived set is an ordinal
@leslietownes Thanks for the confirmation!
@onepotatotwopotato I'm not understanding you
@Jakobian you said the derived set is the set of all limit ordinals $\leq \omega^\alpha\cdot n$, in particular $\omega$. But containing $\omega$ does not imply natural number $n$ is also contained?
Why would it
$n\subset\omega$ isn't it? They are as sets but not as ordinal numbers?
14:25
$x\in y\in z\implies x\in z$ holds for transitive sets, but why would the derived set be transitive?
is there notation involving $\nabla$ which is used for the hessian of a function?
ive never really got what people mean by $\nabla^2$
@onepotatotwopotato but $\omega$ is not a subset of the derived set
@attack laplacian
$x\in y \implies x\subseteq y$ if $x, y$ are transitive
Why would the derived set be transitive or an ordinal?
@Jakobian so you're saying $(\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)' = \{\omega,\omega^2,\ldots\}\ni\omega$ and $\omega\supset n$ but this does not imply $n\in \{\omega,\omega^2,\ldots\}= (\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)'$?
14:42
@onepotatotwopotato Yes
$n\in\omega$, but $n\notin\{\omega\}$ for example
@Jakobian is there a way to write hessian using $\nabla$?
@attack $(\nabla f_1, ..., \nabla f_n)$?
@attack Some authors seem to write $\nabla^2$ for Hessian, see:
Del squared may refer to: Laplace operator, a differential operator often denoted by the symbol βˆ‡2 Hessian matrix, sometimes denoted by βˆ‡2 Aitken's delta-squared process, a numerical analysis technique used for accelerating the rate of convergence of a sequence == See also == DEL2, the second tier ice hockey league in Germany Del, a vector calculus differential operator Nabla symbol, the symbol used for the Del operator βˆ‚, the partial derivative operator symbol Del (disambiguation)
But there might be lots of confusion between Laplacian and Hessian then...
15:03
okok so thank you
Mad
Mad
15:49
Let $ M , N$ be Manifolds ,$ X,Y$ be vectorfields on those manifolds and $f$ some function between $M ,N$ we say the vectorfields are $f$ related if :
$ df \circ X= Y \circ f$
equivalently one reaches by applying some function $h$ on both sides for locally defined function on N that
$ X_p ( h\circ f) = Y_{f(p)}h $
i dont understand how the left side comes to place in the second definition.
16:05
Does anyone else find it kind of annoying when someone on Stack Exchange feels the need to include a title in their username? It seems to me that if you have to call yourself "Dr SuchAndSuch" on a silly internet website, you must be compensating for something. :/
16:16
I, BSc Thorgott, do not agree.
@Mad for $p\in M$, $(df\circ X)(p)=df_p(X_p)$ is the derivation that takes $h\mapsto X_p(h\circ f)$
Mad
Mad
should there be some sequence of steps and equalities between those two ? this is what i am struggling with
I proved that $\lim_{x \to 0^+} \frac{1}{x} \int_0^x \frac{\arctan t}{x+t^2}dt = 1/2$ using inequalities. However, I was curious about how Hopital's rule behaves when the integrand depends on $x$ as well as the upper limit of integration. Indeed, it doesn't work: it leads to the wrong result $0$. Why Hopital's rule fails when the integrand depends on $x$?
How did you take the derivative of the integral? Did you use Leibniz rule?
you also should check if you have an indeterminate form
@Mad This is by the definition of the differential that we discussed recently
16:52
xander: [hands up]
although, in some parts of the world and/or in some fields it may be more expected and less of the attempted flex that it definitely looks like in US math
@leslietownes Yes! That is the word. "Flex".
i'm feeling confident today, maybe i'll edit Dr. Leslie, Ph.D. into my profile
17:12
@leslietownes Maybe I should edit my user name to read "Dr Alexander M Henderson, BA MS PhD"?
HSD [or GED]
Licensed Motorist
Two-Time Prospective Juror
@leslietownes Oh, I should put my teacher license number on there, too!
Selective Service Registrant
 
1 hour later…
18:19
@XanderHenderson How dare you not refer to I as Dr. Ted!
@attack The notation for $\nabla^2$ as the Laplacian comes from classical physics/vector analysis (short for $\nabla\cdot\nabla f$). The notation for $\nabla^2$ as the Hessian comes from differential geometry (applying the connection $\nabla$ twice to a function or other things).
What's the most elegant proof of irrationality of pi?
"elegant" is in the eye of the beholder, there's one often attributed to niven that is pretty slick that you see in textbooks a lot. it's probably on wikipedia.
Yes, know of that one. Indeed, elegant is quite subjective.
a sufficiently slick proof will often give rise to people writing very meta discussions about why the slick proof isn't "slick" at all, but is actually something any fool could have thought of, or is at least motivated by other considerations. i'm not sure how convincing these are, they tend to be less convincing as their lengths grow.
i just found pims.math.ca/~hoek/notes/dvi01/nivenpi2.pdf which is a very short and self contained discussion of a few of the high level ideas that might have motivated niven's proof, or at least "explain" the role of the functions considered in that proof in terms of abstract properties.
18:36
Very interesting, thanks
kinda cool, on the second page they explain how a similar idea can establish the irrationality of log(n), n > 1. i'm not sure that i had seen that before
I am unable to solve the following double integral expression -
$$\int_{y_1}^{y_2}{
\int_{x_1}^{x_2}{\frac{2\pi\sqrt{
(X-x)^2 + (Y-y)^2 + Z^2
}}{\lambda}\space dx}
} \space dy$$
Can someone help?
I do not see an equation.
Ok, I fixed my vocabulary.
18:51
This is not going to be pleasant. First, get rid of irrelevant constants (like $2\pi$ and $\lambda$). Can you do the one-dimensional integral $\int \sqrt{(a-x)^2+b^2}\,dx$ first?
But then integrating again is going to be horrendously horrible.
Oh, I am sorry.
The equation is actually -
$$C_\text{total}=\int_{y_1}^{y_2}\int_{x_1}^{x_2}A\sin\left(\frac{
2\pi\sqrt{(X-x)^2 + (Y-y)^2 + Z^2}}{\lambda}\right) dx dy$$
where $x$ and $y$ are the variables and rest of the symbols are constants.
Actually, I am trying to create a simulation experiment (out of general interest).
Where I deduced that the magnitude at each pixel is given by the solution of this double integral equation.
Almost surely you need to do numerical integration. No way to do this explicitly.
I know enough about the theory of integrals to express myself through the equation, but, not enough to solve it. :(
Can you please elaborate?
18:59
I guarantee you need to solve it by having a computer do the integrals numerically.
Of course, you'll need to put in the constants as actual numbers.
Are the results precise in that case?
I can produce low precision images without integrals. I need integrals for high precision calculations.
Is there any known closed form for the sum $\sum_{n=1}^k \sin\left(\frac{x}{n}\right)$? Or perhaps some special cases such as $k=x$ etc.?
"Precise"? What does that mean?
@Sahaj What does $k=x$ even mean?
You mean $k=x=N$ for some integer $N$?
Yes of course
$k,x$ etc are positive integers
So you're asking for $\sin(N)+\sin(N/2)+\dots+\sin(1)$?
19:08
Yes, indeed
Unless $N$ is of the form $m!$ for some $m$, I'd be surprised if there's a formula.
But I'm not particularly clever about these things.
Right
Regardless it'd be a trouble to evaluate
@TedShifrin I need great precision in calculations. Upto the order of $10^{-10}$.
With the computation power I have, I can currently reach around $10^{-6}$
I don't know how accurately your computer can do numerical integration.
I suspect that Mathematica can do it with that much accuracy if you tell it to.
I am using a brute force algorithm now. Ideally, I can reach any precision, but, practically, there is a computation limit (amount of calculation I can do in a given time).
19:13
If a function is neither even nor odd, can we know whether or not the complex Fourier coefficients $c_n$ will be purely imaginary, purely real, or complex (i.e. having both an imaginary part and a real part)?
If that integral is solved, I will have an algorithm which is requires less computation.
Thats all.
psie: in general, the coefficient just is whatever it is, e.g. i don't know of any general condition that would be "simpler than," but equivalent to, a given c_n being real/imaginary/whatever
ok
@TedShifrin Anyway, thanks! I will try this too.
Programs like Matlab and Mathematica are very sophisticated in doing numerical integration. I don't know what you mean by "brute force."
@psie Purely real should be equivalent to even and purely imaginary should be equivalent to odd (if you're talking about real-valued functions), I believe.
19:21
@Grasshopper For an integral like that, I doubt that computation time is all that relevant---unless you are evaluating that integral billions of times, I suppose.
yeah
@XanderHenderson Yes, I plan to integrate it billions of times actually if possible. But, I will try the suggestions first on smaller scale first.
Probably on a 1000x1000 array.
Why? What is the application?
Also, 1000x1000 is not billions. Only millions.
Yes I am starting with that million.
@XanderHenderson Simulations related to light.
Well, that integral doesn't look like something that is going to be amenable to analytic approaches. However, you might be able to get some kind of "faster" expression out of it, e.g. some sort of local linearization, or a power series expansion, or something which can be computed faster.
But I don't see much reason to suspect that this integral itself will have a "nice" closed form, analytic representation.
19:33
ok
@Sahaj For the closed form, I think we need to consider divisors of $n$ first, via some number theory-like procedure
In mathematics, the n-th harmonic number is the sum of the reciprocals of the first n natural numbers: Starting from n = 1, the sequence of harmonic numbers begins: Harmonic numbers are related to the harmonic mean in that the n-th harmonic number is also n times the reciprocal of the harmonic mean of the first n positive integers. Harmonic numbers have been studied since antiquity and are important in various branches of number theory. They are sometimes loosely termed harmonic series, are closely related to the Riemann zeta function, and appear in the expressions of various special functions...
looking at harmonic numbers, there is a formula $H_n = \frac{1}{n!}\cdot {n+1 \brack 2}$
The proof most likely boils down to $(n+1)!H_{n+1} = (n+1)\cdot n!H_n + n!$ and noting that ${n+1 \brack 2}$ satisfies the same recursion as $n!H_n$
Here $A_n = \sum_{n=1}^k \exp(z/n)$ satisfies $A_{n+1} = A_n + \exp(z/(n+1))$. By replacing $\exp(z/(n+1))$ by $c/(n+1)^k$, we might be able to obtain something if we first solve $B_{n+1} = B_n + c/(n+1)^k$
i.e. if we obtain formula for the generalized harmonic numbers $H_{n, k}$ for a fixed integer $k$
wikipedia lists formula $H_{n, k} = \zeta(k, 1)-\zeta(k, n+1)$ were $\zeta$ is the Hurwitz zeta function
So we can obtain a formula for $A_n$ in terms of a series of Hurwitz zeta functions at least
19:58
galaxy brain meme where the first one is "i want a closed form," the next one is "there is no nice closed form," the next one is "there is a closed form in terms of a series of zeta functions," and the last one is "i no longer want a closed form"
I mean, it's not completely hopeless until we calculate it
but I don't want to volunteer
@Jakobian brackets meaning Stirling numbers?
Nvm, I looked at the Wikipedia article
yeah
I thought there might be similar formula for $A_n$ but I doubt it
@Jakobian there is some index-variable confusion in the definition of $A_n$
$A_k = \sum_{n=1}^k \exp(z/n)$
20:11
Yeah
Happy new year, @robjohn. Still a green spider, I see :P
My idea is to write $\exp$ in terms of its power series, solve each of the recursions, and put it back together
hmm the formula for $H_{n, k}$ follows from definitions though... maybe its better to be more direct
$\sum_{k=1}^n\exp(z/k) = \sum_{k=0}^\infty \frac{z^k}{k!}\cdot H_{n, k}$
So its the exponential generating function for the sequence $H_{n, 0}, H_{n, 1}, ...$
In mathematics, Borel summation is a summation method for divergent series, introduced by Émile Borel (1899). It is particularly useful for summing divergent asymptotic series, and in some sense gives the best possible sum for such series. There are several variations of this method that are also called Borel summation, and a generalization of it called Mittag-Leffler summation. == Definition == There are (at least) three slightly different methods called Borel summation. They differ in which series they can sum, but are consistent, meaning that if two of the methods sum the same series they give...
there is a formula here to write it as normal generating function
$A(z) = \sum_{k=0}^\infty H_{n, k}z^k = \int_0^\infty e^{-t}(\sum_{k=1}^n \exp(tz/k))\mathrm{d}t$
no wait
20:32
@TedShifrin Happy New Year! I’ll probably change back to the calendar when I get back home.
Guess you guys are getting a lot of rain up that way. We had some serious rain just when I was out for my ophthalmology appointment after yesterday's cataract surgery (#1).
20:46
I retract all my attempts of calculating this sum, they're all circular
We got about ⅙” this morning, but the forecast rain seems to have vanished. We got a bit over 4½β€ in December.
I hope your recovery goes well.
21:06
Distance is already great, but close-up will take time ….
21:20
Are there ocular calisthenics you need to do?
@robjohn We're supposed to get some of that rain from y'all, but it hasn't come yet. :(
21:48
@robjohn No, no heavy lifting or bending.
 
2 hours later…
23:21
Let $X$ be a compact Hausdorff space, and let $\mu$ be a Radon measure on $X$. I don't see why the above equality is true. Here $\Vert \mu\Vert=\vert \mu\vert(X)$, where $\vert\mu\vert$ is the total variation of $\mu$. I can show that $\Vert h\mu\Vert\leq \int\vert h\vert d\vert\mu\vert$ by using the triangle inequality for measures (and the definition of total variation). Not sure how to go about showing equality. Any reference for this result is also welcome
Btw, I was thinking of maybe showing those for indicator functions, and then approximate $h$ by simple functions, but I am not sure about it
For indicator functions it works I believe
and for scalars times indicators too, and for sums of these functions if the measure is positive

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