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00:50
@ShaVuklia answer should depend on how you define $|\mu|$
By Hahn decomposition theorem there exist disjoint positive and negative set $P, N$ for $\mu$ with $P\cup N = X$. Let $A = P\cap \{f\geq 0\}\cup N\cap \{f < 0\}$ and $B = X\setminus A$, then $|h\mu(A)|+|h\mu(B)| = \int |h|\mathrm{d}|\mu|$
@ShaVuklia
the justification for last equality might depend on how you defined integrals over signed measures
actually $\mu$ is complex
but I will first see if I understand your argument for signed $\mu$
Did you mean $h$ instead of $f$?
01:08
aha okay, that is smart
We can always refine our partition by intersecting with $A$ and $B$
the case where $\mu$ is positive is the most pressing case for me, so for now I'll consider myself content
thanks for your help!
now I feel less guilty to go sleep
Sleep well!
wait, actually... $h$ has complex values as well. I'll continue thinking about it tomorrow. thanks Ted
01:31
@ShaVuklia First write $\mu = \alpha\cdot |\mu|$ for some function $\alpha$ with $|\alpha| = 1$, $|\mu|$-a.e., then use Radon-Nikodym theorem
$\mu << |\mu|$ so that $\alpha = \frac{d\mu}{d|\mu|}$ exists
 
5 hours later…
06:14
21 hours ago, by one potato two potato
@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?
@Jakobian What if I change $=$ to $\cong$ (homeomorphic)? Still no?
07:02
If $\alpha = 1$ and $n = 1$, then $(\omega^\alpha\cdot n+1)'$ has one element, but $\omega^\beta\cdot n + 1$ has two
07:21
@Jakobian $(\omega+1)' =\{\omega\}$ so only one element but $1 = \{0,\{0\}\}$ so two right?
it should be $\emptyset,\{\emptyset\}$
@onepotatotwopotato You write two in a really weird way
First time I see someone write two with $1$
I mean $\beta = 0$ if $\alpha = 1$ so $\omega^\beta\cdot n +1 =1$
no, $\omega^\beta\cdot n + 1 = 1+1 = 2$
$2 = \{0, 1\}$
07:31
$2$ has two consists of $0$ and $1$
alright thanks
 
4 hours later…
11:20
@Jakobian If $\alpha\neq 1$ then no?
I guess $\alpha =1$ can be treated as a "singular" case
If $\alpha =2$ and $n=1$ then $(\omega^2+1)' = \{\omega^2,\omega,\omega\cdot 2,\ldots\}$ and $\beta=1$ so $\omega+1$
11:37
@Jakobian Ah, nice, thanks. I should really remember that result when working with complex measures and absolute values
 
2 hours later…
13:11
btw @Jakobian I've been struggling to finish the proof of $\Vert h\mu\Vert=\int\vert h\vert d\mu$ for complex $h$ (and positive $\mu$), because the square root in the modulus makes it not possible for me to use your initial argument for real $h$.
oh waitttt
nvm actually
oh, maybe I can write $h(x)=e^{i\theta(x)}r(x)$, and then absorb $e^{i\theta(x)}$ in the measure
I could partition the plane such that $\theta$ is well-defined (inclusion a block where $h=0$)
so that $\theta$ poses no problems (inclusing a block where $h=0$)*
I think this works!
13:46
oh huh, I realise now I should have been able to show the identity at once, since I know that $\vert f m\vert=\vert f\vert m$
So we have $\Vert fm\Vert=\vert f m\vert(X)=\int \vert f\vert dm$, since $\vert f\vert$ is the Radon-Nikodym derivative of $\vert f m\vert$
I hadn't properly realized what $\vert fm\vert=\vert f\vert m$ actually means. I guess I'm glad I've spent some time on this (and that you were there yesterday, Jacobian, that really helped), because my understanding of Radon-Nikodym is clearly not on a workable level yet
14:09
Let $M$ be a closed orientable 3-manifold and suppose there is a fibration $K\to M\xrightarrow{f}S^1$ and consider a closed 1-form $u = [f^*(d\theta)]\in H^1(M;\Bbb Z)\simeq Hom(H_1(M),\Bbb Z)$ such that $u(\pi_1(M)) = \pi_1(S^1)$. If $S_0$ is a component of $S\subset M$ in which represents $u$, then $\pi_1(S_0)\in\ker u$ @Thorgott ?
14:25
1. This seems to have nothing to do with fibrations. It is just a question about continuous maps $M\rightarrow S^1$.
2. Such a closed 1-form need not exist, for the record.
3. I find the notation here messy. The morphism $H_1(M)\rightarrow\mathbb{Z}$ induced by the 1-cohomology class $u$ that classifies $f$ is simply equal to $H_1(f)\colon H_1(M)\rightarrow H_1(S^1)=\mathbb{Z}$.
4. The Poincaré dual of $u$ is represented by a generic fiber of $f$ (after homotoping it to be a smooth map wlog), so $f$ restricted to this submanifold (or any component thereof) is constant, hence induces $0$ on
To clarify 2., you always have the cohomology class $u\in H^1(M;\mathbb{Z})$ classifying $f$ and what I said in 3. and 4. always holds, but the condition "$u(\pi_1(M))=\pi_1(S^1)$" as you put it is equivalent to saying that $H_1(f)$ is surjective, which simply may or may not be true.
Is 3. something straightforward?
Yeah, this is naturality of the Hurewicz homomorphism $H^1(-;\mathbb{Z})\rightarrow\mathrm{Hom}(H_1(-;\mathbb{Z}),\mathbb{Z})$ together with the fact that the canonical class in $H^1(S^1;\mathbb{Z})$ (the one you call $d\theta$) corresponds to the "identity" $H_1(S^1;\mathbb{Z})\rightarrow\mathbb{Z}$ (this is either tautological or easy to see, depending on how exactly you define that class)
Ah, yeah I was thinking that naturality. Is it true that every representative of $u$ can be realized as a fiber of $f$? I think you implicitly used this in 4.
14:49
ah no, I just assumed you were thinking about a generic fiber of $f$
certainly, not every smooth submanifold representing a Poincaré dual of $u$ is realized as a fiber of $f$ (you can always wiggle a bit), but I think $f$ restricted to such a representative should be nullhomotopic anyway
why that's true?
If $X\rightarrow Y$ is a fiber bundle, $X$ paracompact and $Y$ paracompact, is it a locally trivial fibration?
15:15
is $\vert P(\mathbb{N}) \vert=\vert \mathbb{R} \vert$
15:32
I upvoted a comment on accident yesterday and only saw now. Anyway I can remove it?
15:46
@onepotatotwopotato Hmm, I'm not so sure anymore. The claim is equivalent to $i^{\ast}(u)=0$, where $i\colon S\rightarrow M$ is the inclusion, and we can calculate $i_{\ast}(i^{\ast}(u)\cap [S])=u\cap i_{\ast}[S]=u\cap(u\cap [M])=u^2\cap [M]=0$ (geometrically: $S$ intersects a generic fiber $f^{-1}(x)$ transversely in $(fi)^{-1}(x)$, so this intersection is Poincaré dual to $i^{\ast}u$ in $S$ and Poincaré dual to $D[S]\cup D[f^{-1}(x)]=u^2$ in $M$), but $i_{\ast}$ need not be injective.
@nickbros123 yes
I recommend trying some examples and see what happens.
@monoidaltransform you only need $Y$ to be paracompact (Hausdorff included) and yes
16:18
Consider the Fourier series of a $2\pi$ periodic function $f$, that is $f(x)\sim\sum_{k=-\infty}^\infty c_k e^{ikx}$, and suppose it converges for some $x=t$. Does then $\sum_{k=-\infty}^\infty c_{-k} e^{-ikt}$ converge to the same value or is this considered to be a rearrangement?
16:32
@AlessandroCodenotti do you have a link to a proof? im not able to find material on thi
this
37
Q: The set of real numbers and power set of the natural numbers

user85798I have learnt that the cardinality of the power set of the natural numbers is equal to the cardinality of the real numbers. What is the function that gives the one-to-one correspondence between these two sets? I have also learnt that there exists no set whose cardinality is strictly between the ...

thankss
$Hom(H^1(M;\Bbb Z);\Bbb Z)\otimes\Bbb R$ is somehow isomorphic to a $Hom(H^1(M;\Bbb R);\Bbb R)$? ($M$ is just a manifold)
17:01
@psie I guess it is a rearrangement, but one that is guaranteed to exist, because the partial sums are equal...let me know if you think otherwise :)
I read a question this morning on snowflaked metric spaces. Snowflaking is a process which is near and dear to my heart, and I recognized most of the references in the question---indeed they are all on my bookshelf (or on my hard drive, in the case of one of the sets of cited lecture notes). I was kind of excited, and started compiling notes for an answer.
Only to realize, while Googling, that 99% of the question was an unattributed copy-paste of an answer I wrote a couple of years ago. The only new text was something to the effect of "Can this be made more rigorous?"
xander: well, can it?
17:17
What is the reduced row echelon form of $ \begin{bmatrix}
1 & 1 & 0 \\
1 & 0 & 1 \\
0 & 1 & 1
\end{bmatrix} $ where the entries are from a field of characteristic 2? I've tried row reduction but after a while it is just repeating. How can this be solved?
ephe: replace R2 with R2+R1 to get 110/011/011, replace R3 with R2+R3 to get 110/011/000, done?
bu isnt that just row echelon?
@leslietownes Sure. A lot of the answer is about how the details are in the cited papers. Though, honestly, the argument I quoted from Tyson and Wu seems really straightforward...
oh, that's not reduced. then replace R1 with R1+R2, 101/011/000.
(And is rigorous, if a bit lacunary.)
17:20
xander: when beginning to read your comment, i was expecting "then i realized the question was my own question" or "then i saw that i had answered this question," but fun twist in having someone else do that for you.
@leslietownes oooh wow i totally misunderstood reduced row echelon form. thank you so much
I'LL REDUCE YOUR ROW ECHELON FORM!
heheh
18:08
@onepotatotwopotato yes, cause $H^1(M;\mathbb{Z})\otimes\mathbb{R}=H^1(M;\mathbb{R})$
 
1 hour later…
19:12
@psie I think otherwise
We can call it a rearrangement, sure
But guaranteed to exist should really be, guaranteed to converge to same number
I don't think of writing the same thing backwards as a rearrangement, but technically it is. Indeed, the symmetric partial sums are identical.
19:33
If H and K are two Sylow p-subgroups of G prove that then HK is not subgroup of G
H \ne K
p is prime and G has finite order
I know that from second Sylow theorem we have that H and K are conjugated (gHg^-1 = K , g\in G)
Also, HK is subgroup of G iff HK = KH
but I am stuck with that
can someone help me please
20:26
think about the relation between normality, conjugacy and HK=KH
I am not sure what with that
Doesn't one of the subgroups need to be normal in order to get $HK=KH$?
 
1 hour later…
22:00
My new prediction for the election in November: Trump will not be on the ballot in Colorado or Maine (this is a current fact; I would put even money on SCOTUS upholding those rulings---Roberts and Kennedy, at least, are likely to be swayed by "states rights" arguments), and may not be able to run at all. Some other Republican will run on the platform of "TRUMP WAS ROBBED! PACK THE COURTS!", and win. American democracy will fall, and I will try to find a job in Scotland.
Are there community colleges in Scotland?
Will any of them hire me?
why politician can vote for themselves and we can't upvote our own posts?
@SineoftheTime The two things are in no way related?
🙄
@XanderHenderson LOL
22:50
$I_k=[4k-1,4k+1]$, $Q(x)=\sum_{k\ge 1}\chi_{I_k}(x)$, how to prove that $Q*Q$ is well defined ? I tried with Young inequality but $Q\notin L^1$
23:00
Gross.
@SineoftheTime $\int_{-\infty}^\infty Q(y)Q(x-y)dy = \int_0^x Q(y)Q(x-y)dy$
this is an integral on a finite interval
let me think about it
if $y\ge x$ then $x-y\le0$ and the integral is $0$
23:19
but then how to deal with the sum?
23:44
@SineoftheTime $Q$ is merely $\chi_{\bigcup_{k\geq 1} I_k}(x)$
since $I_k$ are disjoint

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