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03:05
Is there a notable equivalent condition to a fundamental group to be abelian?
 
6 hours later…
09:23
why all these messages are starred?
09:53
Hey there! I will be recently starting on multivariate calculus. Can someone suggest any good book of it? I mean a book that is good for beginners and provides good explanations.
@SineoftheTime Someone went star-happy. I have removed all of these stars.
10:54
can someone tell me if this is a typo and the last term should be $\mathbb{P}\big(G^1 \in \mathcal{G}^{-1}_{\Delta t,x_0}(S)\big)$? here $P_{\Delta t}(x^0,S)=\mathbb{P}\big(x^1 \in S | x^0\big)$
 
2 hours later…
12:49
hi
if we have a group-type algebra with closure, unique identity and unique inverses. does this imply associativity?
if we have the first three properties, then each row of the multiplication table is a permutation of elements
and permutations are associative
so do these three properties imply associativity??
then y do we hav associativity as a separate axiom??
What is a "group-type algebra"?
an algebra with the three properties i wrote
What is an "algebra"?
a bunch of elements and a multiplication
12:52
Usually, an algebra is a set over a field (or a ring) with scalar multiplication, addition of elements and multiplication of elements...
oh. maybe i just meant a set with a binary operator
if the operator has these three properties, is associativity implied?
No.
Consider exponentiation over the integers. Or multiplication in the octonians.
im considering discrete and finite grps.
with these properties, is each row of the multiplication table a permutation of elements? @XanderHenderson
let's consider a row
corresponding to element 'a'
ab=ac wud imply b=c
using the properties
so this means all of $ag_i$ are different for all $i$
How to reply to my own message in chat?
this means $a$ can be identified as a permutation of $g_i$
and permutations are associative
so i think the conclusion only holds for discrete and finite groups?
so this is y we need the associativity axiom?
12:59
@SoumikMukherjee write : followed by last digits in transcript
pls help
@SoumikMukherjee Ok it works
exponentiation over integers wud not be closed for finite sets
@Jakobian Thank you
@rogerroger this is a random set of notations
I'm not sure if you're expecting an answer
13:06
@RyderRude Why not? Consider exponentiation modulo $n$.
@RyderRude This is called a loop and loops don't have to be associative
3
Q: Existence of finite, non-associative group-like structures

GausslerDo there exist sets $G$ with a composition such that $G$ is finite. There is a two-sided identity element $e\in G$ such that $eg = ge = g$ for all $g\in G$. Each $g\in G$ has a unique two-sided inverse $g^{-1}$ with $gg^{-1} = g^{-1} g = e$. For all $g$ and $h$ in $G$ there exists a $k$ in $G$ ...

ok I drop some of the unnecessary notation: they say $\mathcal{G}(x)= y$, so that $\mathbb{P}(x\in S)= \mathbb{P} (y \in \mathcal{G}^{-1}(S))$
Then yeah some part is wrong. Not sure which one
In mathematics, especially in abstract algebra, a quasigroup is an algebraic structure resembling a group in the sense that "division" is always possible. Quasigroups differ from groups mainly in that the associative and identity element properties are optional. A quasigroup with an identity element is called a loop. == Definitions == There are at least two structurally equivalent formal definitions of quasigroup. One defines a quasigroup as a set with one binary operation, and the other, from universal algebra, defines a quasigroup as having three primitive operations. The homomorphic image of...
@RyderRude
@XanderHenderson algebra can also mean universal algebra, perphaps thats the intended meaning here
Perhaps, but someone asking such a basic question probably doesn't have that in mind.
But that is why I asked the question "What is an 'algebra'." :D
13:19
Its not as uncommon as you think
Its just a set with operations on it after all
Again, that is why I asked the question.
@SoumikMukherjee Any hint on this anyone?
does someone know about simply connectedness?
@user123234 Nope. Only complex connectedness.
this was a joke right? @XanderHenderson
I have namely a question. I have given a simply connected group $G$. And I could show that some property holds on $H\subset G$. Why can I then say that it holds for $G$ because of simply connectednes? @XanderHenderson
13:26
@ThomasFinley serge Lang I would say, for a gentle intro
@SoumikMukherjee Write $D$ as image of $\mathbb{R}^3$ using Vieta's formulas
@user123234 that depends very much on the property
and probably also the subgroup $H$
let me write it more explicitly
We have given two simply connected closed matrix groups $G_1,G_2$ and let $g_1:=\{X: \exp(tX)\in G_1~\forall t\in \Bbb{R}\},g_2$ be the corresponding lie algebras. Then we have shown that there exists two smooth group homomorphisms $\phi:G_1\rightarrow G_2$ and $\psi:G_2\rightarrow G_2$ s.t. $\phi\circ \psi=id$ on $\exp(g_1)$ and $\psi\circ \phi=id$ on $\exp(g_2)$. But then they wrote that by simply connectedness we know $\phi\circ \psi=id$ on $G_1$ and $\psi\circ \phi=id$ on $G_2$ @Thorgott
13:43
@XanderHenderson @Jakobian thankss
i cant understand something. if the multi table is like a sudoku, then each element can be identified with a permutation group element
and permutations associate??
Not true
permuatations dont associate?
Fixing $x$, $y\mapsto xy$ and $y\mapsto yx$ are permutations in a quasigroup. But there's no obvious way to identify $x$ with a permutation
Well, then it must be true...
What must be true
13:53
can the pre multi and post multi separately be identified with one permutation each?
i can create a permutation matrix
thats what i meant by identification
They are permutations
@ThomasFinley you seem to be quite well equipped with the math prerequisites, so you can skip serge lang and look into quite a lot of options: i personally liked $\text{hubbard}^2$. shifrin is also great (I proved a problem i had in the back of my head for a few months by an intuition developed by shifrin regarding block matrices. problems are great too) unfortunately, i havent really read much into the other general recommendations
@Jakobian ok so we can make permutation matrices for x, y and z. and these matrices associate
You can try to identify each element $x$ with pair $(\rho(x), \lambda(x))$ of right and left multiplication and that might give you some description similar to "groups are permutations" theorem, but it won't be a group in general, because it can't
if i identify them $x,y,z$ with matrices, then x(yz) g_i= (xy) z g_i for all g_i. does this part hold?
we can think of g_i as a list of grp elements and we r applying permutations from the left multiplication
13:58
Uh...
[g_i] is the list, then (xy) z [g_i]=x(yz) [g_i]
You're making no sense
and then we can right multiply by the inverse of g_i to get (xy)z=x(yz)
14:11
@user123234 I don't think that's needed. The sets $\exp(g_1)$ and $\exp(g_2)$ are neighborhoods of the respective identities, hence are generating sets (this needs only connectedness). But two group homomorphisms that agree on a generating set are equal.
@Thorgott I see that $\exp(g_i)$ are neigborhoods of the identities, but why are they generating sets? So what does this mean?
that's a general fact. take a symmetric neighborhood $U$ of the identity in a Lie group $G$ (symmetric meaning $U=U^{-1}$). try showing that the subgroup generated by $U$ is both open and closed in $G$, hence equal to $G$ if $G$ is connected.
ah okey perfect thanks a lot
ooh i think you r right. i may map each element to a permutation matrix. but the multiplication of these matrices does not correspond to the multiplication of the elements @Jakobian
so i have not really represented the group
thanks
14:35
@Jakobian okay so $(x,y,z) \mapsto (-x-y-z, xy+yz+zx, -xyz)$. If this map is surjective then $D$ is continuous image of a connected set, hence connected. But how to show surjectivity?
@SoumikMukherjee by definition
14:51
Oh right
Thank you @Jakobian
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cayley's_theorem in fact the proof of this theorem uses the associativity of the group as an assumption
after mapping the elements to permutations, we have to use associativity to show that the permutation matrix multiplication is a representation of the group
the book i was reading handwaved this proof by omitting this part @Jakobian
@RyderRude yeah. If you don't then you need to introduce additional factors in your multiplication
15:39
@nickbros123 Thanks a lot for your suggestions! They were indeed helpful.
16:10
what do u do in free time
16:35
free time? time is money!
@robjohn yeah. it's like a resource. do u try to use all of it in productivity?
16:52
I don't want to think of time as a resource
whats ur view
Basic question. Suppose I'm given a periodic function and the definition of the function is only given for some interval to the right of the origin, say $[0,1]$ with period $1$. How can I then determine whether or not the function is even or odd?
$f(x)=f(1-x)$ is even; $f(x)=-f(1-x)$ is odd (to spelll it out)
@psie What @robjohn said.
@psie @xander confirmed what @robjohn said
16:59
@psie what sine of the time said
jesus
said nothing
no, he was more into weeping
@robjohn I like spellling.
@XanderHenderson that may bee
psie so stepping back just slightly, the question is directly about a property of the [unique] periodic extension of f, not f itself. robjohn's formulas implicitly invoke what the formula for that extension would have to be on [-1,0] (if you call it g to preserve the distinction from f, g(t) for t in that range is forced by periodicity to be f(t+1))
its also very important that you said "with period 1" there, the extension would not be unique if you allowed for a different period. it's not unusual for fourier series treatments to also consider extending a function defined initially on [0,L] to a 2L-periodic function on [-L,L], where you suddenly have choices in how you do this, and some room to make "the" [now more appropriately "an"] extension either even or odd (or at least as close to odd as would matter for the fourier series)
17:10
good points
Dear all, I would appreciate some clarification regarding this notation in convex optimization. What is the mathematical meaning of "argmin" in this notation
$$
x = \text{argmin } f(x) \text{ subject to } Ax=b
$$
I'm familiar with this notation though
$$
\min_{x} f(x) \text{ subject to } Ax=b.
$$
it is a bad notational idea to denote both that argmin and the implicit variable on the RHS by the same letter "x"
the "min" is the smallest value of f subject to that constraint, the "argmin" is the value of x that realizes the smallest value of f subject to that constraint
neither of these notations making much sense when these things don't exist or aren't unique
croco as an example, replacing the linear constraint with a simpler constraint, if f(x) = (x - 2)^2 then min_{x in [0,10]} f(x) is 0, while argmin_{x in [0,10]} f(x) = 2, and f(2) = 0
17:26
@leslietownes thank you so much for this informative answer. In a paper I'm reading, this notation shows up
Note that the arg in argmin means argument (which is the input variable)
ooh, there it seems like they're maybe using argmin to denote the set of all places where the minimum is realized, to allow for some non uniqueness
It does seem.
where $u$ is the control input to the robot. My supervisor wasn't happy about it and he said why you're using this notation. Is the solution mulivalued?
I don't have proper answer for his question.
Well, the minimum can occur multiple times, unless you have some sort of convexity or something else to prohibit that.
17:29
if there's more than one potential minimizer, or at least no clear reason why there could only be only one minimizer, then "arg min" would indeed be (potentially) multivalued
people definitely abuse this notation all the time (e.g. writing "=" instead of "\in" when argmin is set valued)
Ugh, they do?
yes ted. i tried to stop them
@TedShifrin isn't the quadratic function convex?
the further you get from the math department, the less they care :(
Do you know $\beta>0$?
17:32
yes
Then you win.
what's the award?
@CroCo I assume the independent variable is $t$?
What are you offering, Sine?
3k rep points
That's a lot of winning.
17:34
In robotics, $t$ is time and yes it is independent
@TedShifrin What do you mean by "unless you have some sort of convexity"
Nonconvex functions can certainly have multiple minima.
My question why my supervisor raised this question "is the solution multivalued?"
Actually, being quadratic in this case will not make it strictly convex.
What if $\dot q=0$ on an interval, for example?
Usually we regard set union, intersection, difference and complement as set operations. Can we also say that "subset", "set equality" are operations?
17:37
No, those are not operations.
no, they're relations
An operation is a function from the set (perhaps two or more copies of the set) to itself.
there is a division between an $n$-ary relation and $n$-ary operation
Okay thanks a lot @TedShifrin and @Jakobian
But complement is an operation right?
an $n$-ary relation is a subset of $A^n$, and an $n$-ary operation is a function from $A^n$ to $A$
17:38
Yes. Check the definition I just gave you.
yes, complement is an unary operation, meaning $n = 1$
Or that Jakobian just gave you formally.
Oh wait.
Okay. Two or more copies means - product of sets?
to contrast with binary operations, meaning $n = 2$, that you gave examples of
@Hasini disjoint union?
Complement is a map from the subsets of $A$ to subsets of $A$.
That doesn't fit our definition.
17:39
@TedShifrin the control inputs must be zero then (i.e. $u=0$)
$A = \mathcal{P}(X)$ for a set $X$
But is that an operation on $X$?
complement is an unary operation on $A$
@Jakobian Disjoint union of copies?
But that is not an operation on the underlying set $X$.
17:40
@Hasini disjoint union of sets is a way to make copies of those sets
Be careful here.
I'm not saying that it is
the same thing applies to all the other operations Hasini mentioned
I think Hasini intended the set to be the set he started with.
Oh, right.
@Jakobian Okayy, thanks a lot again!!
Very confusing, actually.
So I did not respond right at all.
You have to specify that $A=\mathscr P(X)$ where $A$ is the set you started with.
17:42
Some relations are functions. Like one to one relation. then there can be instances where equality and subset can be operations too?
@Hasini disjoint union of sets $A_i$ can be realized as the set $\sqcup_i A_i = \bigcup_i A_i\times\{i\}$
How is equality or subset an operation? What operation are you performing?
You can check that $A_i\times \{i\}$ are all disjoint, even if $A_i$ themselves aren't
@TedShifrin no, relation
I was asking Hasini, not you.
17:43
ah
But thanks a lot @Jakobian
Pls forgive for not being able to answer at once @TedShifrin
But @Jakobian's response has been helpful as I couldn't answer at once
:)
@Hasini For a relation $R$ to be a function we need for all $x$ to exist unique $y$ such that $xRy$. For subset relation this means that each subset $y\subseteq X$ would have to have a unique subset $x\subseteq y$.
When can this happen?
Same question applies but for equality
Okayy, I think I get it now.
Thanks a million, both of you!!!
Have a nice day!
Writing $x$ for a subset of $X$ is unacceptable.
its acceptable in my mathematical circles
if we're thinking of $x, y$ as elements of $A$, then we might as well use lower case
17:50
When there is a set $X$, writing a subset as $x$ is unacceptable notation. It will confuse everyone (except you, of course).
@leslietownes could you please elaborate on "uniqueness" in this context?
Similarly, students who map $X\to Y$ and send $y\in X$ and $x\in Y$ are asking for trouble.
I don't think its confusing
@CroCo This response doesn't help me. How does that say you cannot have more than one minimizing value of $t$?
the latter, yes, the former, no
17:52
We will have to agree to disagree strongly.
This comes back to clarity when explaining things to others — i.e., teaching.
there's a difference between $y\in X$ and $x\in Y$ to using lower case for sets
honestly, I think that is less bad
lower case for sets in such a context is indeed unacceptable
everything is a set, doesn't matter
its a psychological obstruction
I'm fine with letting $x,y\in X$ when there is no underlying set $Y$ in the picture.
yes, it's a matter of clarity
17:55
My experience with students over 50 years indicates that choosing incompatible letters invariably makes them mess things up.
@Jakobian proper class left the chat
We're not talking about perfectly pedantic advanced thinkers like Jakobian. But in this room we do not always communicate with Jakobians.
set theory texts especially are careful with using lower/upper case, caligraphy, fraktur font, etc.
to distinguish at which "level" of containment one is operating
maybe the ones that allow atoms
But most humans struggle to write (some) Greek letters and (most of) fraktur :D
17:57
A function is $1$-periodic if $f(x) = f(x+1)$. It is odd if $f(x) = -f(-x)$. Combining these gives $f(x) = -f(-x) = -f(-x+1) = -f(-(x-1)) = f(x-1)$. So an odd, $1$-periodic function satisfies $f(x) = f(x-1)$. Or, if you prefer, $f(x) = -f(-x+1) = -f(1-x)$ (which is what @robjohn wrote).
no, no one does atoms
some people like to think of set theory that way, I met a few
Huh... I hit enter on that comment ages ago...
maybe they don't study them
Chat is borked.
@SoumikMukherjee This room has never had any class, anyway---proper or not.
@Jakobian You are clearly not the typical student.
18:00
@XanderHenderson Maybe gently press the comment instead of hitting
@XanderHenderson a typical student might think $x$ and $X$ denote the same object
I'm not really concerned
You seem to be someone who has excelled in mathematics throughout your academic career, thus it seems difficulty for you to empathize with those who struggle with these ideas. Writing $x \in Y$ and $y \in X$ is absolutely going to confuse people. Writing $x \subseteq X$ is bad notation for most purposes.
no they don't
@Thorgott Huh?
Oh, the thinking of set theory comment?
@TedShifrin Fraktur is the devil. Burn it.
Burn it to the ground.
18:03
the typical student does not think $x$ and $X$ might denote the same object*
A very old German person may erase you for that, @Xander.
Might think isn't the same as, does
Then bury the ashes at the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
I'm not sure that Jakobian has any idea what a "typical" mathematics student is or can grok.
In fact, I'm quite sure he hasn't.
@Thorgott Honestly, a lot of my students don't seem to understand that $a$ and $A$ are different symbols. That is usually one of the first discussions I have to have with them after grading their first written assignments.
18:05
@Thorgott "does" should be "might" and "might" should be "does"
well, I don't think "typical student" should mean "typical student in the first week of college"
They get really spooked when I show them the notational index of my thesis, which includes five or six different versions of the letter "D".
then you've said what I meant
$\mathfrak{\text{The Devil}}$
That makes the devil far more devilish.
18:07
If this is because of the question I asked, I apologize. Please don't argue
@Thorgott I don't know that "typical student" is a good standard, is all I'm saying. What is "typical" is going to depend a lot on experience, as well as how successful those experiences are. But my first year students here are significantly weaker (coming through the door) than my first year students in grad school.
Both @Jakobian's and @TedShifrin's comments have been useful
Thanks a lot!!!
@CroCo a good example might be min_{x in R} cos(x) = -1, but this minimum value is realized for many different values of x (any odd multiple of pi). so in a context the notation is only defined when there is a unique minimizer, "argmin_{x in R} cos(x)" is not defined, and in a context where "argmin" can be set-valued, it's the set of odd multiples of pi
Sorry about all the static for you, @Hasini. :)
@XanderHenderson are DX and XD included?
18:07
@Hasini Its just that people here seem to have an obsession with "not confusing the student"
and apparently what I wrote seems to fall into the category of "is confusing to a student"
Hmm, well it was the answer given to me
And I was not confused
And in fact I got very useful info
good enough for me
From both of you
So then I hope everything is alright?
:)
Oh, everything's fine, Hasini. Don't worry about it.
@CroCo and in the latter case it would not make sense to do arithmetic or perform any analysis on "argmin_{x in R} cos(x)" that potentially depended on which odd multiple of pi you were talking about
18:09
Hee hee :)
Okayyy :)
Oh, sh*t... I just noticed that there is fraktur in my thesis. What have I done?!
cool
I think @CroCo has a good question (from his adviser). Can we or can we not argue that there is a unique minimum point?
There are also a couple of commutative diagrams in there. They make me feel dirty.
There certainly was in mine, @Xander, cuz of Lie algebras.
18:11
$\mathfrak{M}$ is for Minkowski content. :/
Well, it's either that or $\mathscr M$.
@XanderHenderson Evil Thesis
Better burn it.
There's a particularly Chern-like page in my thesis which will make Xander faint or worse.
18:13
@TedShifrin depends on the function; did I miss the function?
@XanderHenderson Is there a typo? s instead of q?
@SoumikMukherjee Why $s$?
@robjohn This.
@TedShifrin the question was from a usage in a paper croco was reading. i think more context would be needed (the argmin was over "u" and the symbolic expression that the argmin was taken over didn't expressly involve u at all, but other variables)
Oh, yes. There is a typo. Damnit... another one.
18:15
In the "The $s$ dimensional Upper Minkowski content" line.
Oh, that's why I asked if $t$ was the independent variable, @leslie.
That's two that I've spotted in the last 10 minutes.
This is why I never look at this document... :(
YOU KNOW WHAT I MEANT!
well, i don't think it's possible to reverse engineer what the t-dependence is from that notation alone
we could probably say more with a link to the paper in question
One of FIVE commutative diagrams in my thesis.
I have more
18:18
Five is too many. More should earn jail time.
I have lots lots more. I'm trying to post the page for Xander. I'm having technical difficulties.
i was gonna say, your advisor kinda dropped the ball on "could we maybe do this without any commutative diagrams, we're so close"
@leslietownes Yeah, but I spent so much fckng time trying to read Tate's thesis and other related papers that it kind of seemed like a waste if I didn't get to discuss those constructions. :(
Expressly for Xander.
18:22
@TedShifrin ... lovely.
beauty
That page was done long, long before we had LaTeX ourselves. I think I even carefully proofread it when it was published in Transactions AMS.
@Thorgott BURN IT WITH FIRE!
ted: to think some people call that geometry. where's the triangles?
18:23
Yeah, there sure aren't triangles in that!
oh wait, this one was bigger
(Yes, there is a typo.)
@Thor For things like that Spivak invented LAMS-TeX. LaTeX can't do anything at all like that.
I use tikzcd for diagrams, works like a charm
Ah, I never learned tikzcd.
I think I won't ever have to, now.
18:25
I wish it was supported on MSE
@XanderHenderson You mean the missing $^2$?
@TedShifrin Yup.
any time you have to draw diagrams on MSE is a nightmare
Yup, it is.
xander: who drew the drum? you?
18:27
Surely he stole it.
@leslietownes My mother.
She is a freelance technical illustrator.
Oh wow.
(That's my sister on the cover.)
Very cool.
it looks great. could see it in a patent, if people were still patenting drums
18:36
Can the integral $\int_0^\pi \frac{\sin x}{x} dx$ be solved analytically? This integral times $2/ \pi$ appears as the limit of the partial sums of the Fourier series $S_n$, evaluated at the maximum, of an (odd) square wave function. I just want to see if I could possibly verify its value...
@psie What do you mean by "solved analytically"?
@psie Do you mean is there a closed form?
Typically, integrals can be evaluated, but not solved. I presume that you are asking for some closed form in terms of elementary functions?
yeah, not numerically.
In mathematics, trigonometric integrals are a family of nonelementary integrals involving trigonometric functions. == Sine integral == The different sine integral definitions are Note that the integrand sin ⁡ ( t ) t {\displaystyle {\frac {\sin(t)}{t}}} is the sinc function, and also the zeroth spherical Bessel function. Since sinc is an even entire function (holomorphic over the entire complex plane), Si is entire...
18:39
@psie It can be expressed in terms of the $\operatorname{Si}$ function, but, like, what do you mean by an "analytic" expression?
@psie I evaluate things like that in this answer where I look at the overshoot in Gibb's Phenomenon
@robjohn Where, in that answer, does the bass drop?
@leslietownes @TedShifrin this is the part of the paper that talks about the optimization I've mentioned earlier.
Since I'm using same controller in my work, my supervisor raised the question about "why $u \in arg min$ and he said is the solution multivalued?"
I don't have proper answer but I feel yes we have multiple minimizers since the robot is redundant (i.e. more degrees of freedom) and there are some control inputs that drive the robot to the desired configuration. I'm not sure about this answer.
I would like to prepare for the answer for our next meeting.
But I feel I'm lacking some fundamental knowledge in the optimization.
The same authors use $\min_u$ in their other papers for the same controller. :<
18:59
croco: i can't even guess at how the function being minimized depends on the "control vector," this must be implicit from context other than this excerpt. i note that for a moment (the use of "a" in "a control vector . .. that ensures . . ."), the author does not sound as though there is any claim made about uniqueness of the minimizer, although other language (the use of "the" in "the solution to (2)") is maybe suggestive that there is only one minimizer
and i would never infer anything about authorial intent from this kind of prose alone
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