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00:03
Let $X$ be a non-empty set and $\mathcal{F}$ be an upward closed family of non-empty subsets of $X$. I think that there always is a topology on $X$ for which $\mathcal{F}$ is the set of dense subsets
@SineoftheTime rate of change of volume under flow?
00:29
This is also related to the Divergence Theorem.
I never read a proper proof of Stokes theorem
 
2 hours later…
02:23
Imagine that you meet a question with two parts, where part 2 is harder than part 1 and is a slight generalization of part 1. Suppose further that you have solved part 1 but you have difficulty in solving the other. What should you do?
The question was inspired by math.stackexchange.com/questions/4848470 .
02:50
vague
 
2 hours later…
04:33
Hi I'm confused how to solve $\sum_{i=1}^5 \frac{1}{x^i} = 3.56$. Can anyone suggest any method?
05:04
@Utkarsh Use the formula for summing a geometric series.
Although that gives a tough equation. Where did this come from?
@TedShifrin Thanks. This is used to find Internal Rate of Return (IRR) often used in Financial Analysis.
You just have to use numerical methods, then. Let your calculator or computer solve it.
Actually there is no scientific calculator allowed in exam. So I just have to compute it manually.
There's no way.
Just a basic calculator with +,-, x, /, and sqrt() functions is allowed.
05:13
Then they must know some tricky math that I don't know.
Presumably you were taught this, if you're supposed to take an exam.
I'm a self learner and there is no calculator trick mentioned in my book. So I'm just looking at the internet for some help.
Oh, no, I take it back. You will still need a calculator with more functions.
The formula for $\sum_{i=1}^n r^i = \frac{r^{n+1}-1}{r-1}$ is something you need to know cold.
That's what I said in my first response.
It still turns into something you can't solve, though.
The book must show you how they expect you to solve such things.
Yeah.
You end up with the equation $2.56x^6-3.56x^5+1=0$. You need Newton's method or a fancier calculator.
The solution is 9/8, but I don't see any direct way to get there
05:20
@TedShifrin I think I can atleast find an approximate value by hit and trial method.
No way in hell.
My equation is wrong.
Then I think I should consult my friends who are also preparing for this exam.
Yes, precisely.
The equation is right. $x=1$ is an obvious root. We need to get rid of that one and then numerically find a root near $1$.
05:38
@TedShifrin if it is given that the value of $x$ lies between $1.1$ & $1.13$ then is it possible to solve it? Using interpolation method?
there are all sorts of numerical methods, but in a classroom context you would want to use exactly what they expect you to use, and not some internet thing.
finding IRR is one of the best examples of a problem that more or less instantly requires numerical methods. there are probably a handful of back of the envelope ones that business students use, but no universal standard.
which always raises the interesting question, what happens if you answer numerically with a result that is closer to the exact answer than the method you were expected to use. sometimes, nothing good comes from that
I saw there are annuity factors given on the back of the book. And they used them to approximate the value for $x$. Then probably I can use interpolation (I'm not aware about any other numerical methods). This is not a classroom test or a university exam BTW. They have given values 3.791 at 10% rate and 3.433 at 14% rate. And I want to calculate rate at which it will be 3.561.
So then do a graphing calculator or learn Newton’s method.
05:59
Or bisection.
06:16
Numerics needed one way or another …
07:11
Is $\text{cis} : \mathbb{Q} \to S^1$ an imbedding?
Like, $\text{cis}(x) = \exp (ix)$
Nvm, it's easy to see it's a continuous injection.
It's counterintuitive enough, tho.
Now I have a standard way of topologizing algebraic closure of prime fields.
07:40
Hi, after computing a faithful representation of a group, how can I show this is unique up to isomorphism?
For example, the group of quaternion
08:02
Show that there is an absolute constant $c$ such that for each $k>1$, every
tournament that satisfies $S_k$ has at least $c \,k2^k$ vertices.
Hint: Show that for every set $W$ of at most $k-1$ vertices, there are at least $k+1$
vertices that all point to each vertex of $W$.
Any hints on proving the hint, and any ideas on how the hint relates to the main proof.
Let $T \in End(\mathbb{R^3})$ be the linear operator such that $T(e_1) = e_2, T(e_2) = e_3, T(e_3) = e_1$.
Can you find a vector $v$ such that the cyclic subspace for $T$ generated by $v$ is not the whole space $\mathbb{R^3}$ and $v \neq e_1+e_2+e_3, 0$?
08:17
MX: any nonzero multiple of e_1 + e_2 + e_3 would also work, as would e.g. any nonzero multiple of v := e_1 - 2 e_2 + e_3 (note that T^2 v = -v - Tv)
08:43
@leslietownes So basically any vector with coordinates x, y, z that satisfies x + y + z = 0. Is that correct?
that is a way of describing my additional set of examples that maybe makes it clearer that they are examples, yes
09:18
Hello @robjohn , How are you doing?
10:15
can someone help me?
0
Q: How can I show that $y^2+y=x^3-x^2$ is elliptic over $\Bbb{Q}$?

Summerday I have given the curve $E: y^2+y=x^3-x^2$ over $\Bbb{Q}$ and I want to check this is elliptic. I first define $f(x,y)=y^2+y-x^3+x^2$ then the curve is given by $f(x,y)=0$. Now I need to show that all points on $E$ are smooth. But for this we first need to homogenize $f$, so $f(x,y,z)=y^2z+yz^2-...

10:41
What is $E_0^1(\Omega)$?
Any ideas?
11:11
@DannyuNDos continuous injections are not embeddings
You should be able to obtain a sequence $x_n\to 1$ in the image such that preimages diverge to infinity
Can anyone explain why $$\mathbb{P}(e\text{ is not rainbow})=4\,\left(\frac{\color{red}3}{4}\right)^k=\frac{{\color{red}{3^k}}}{4^{k-1}}\,.$$ in this answer math.stackexchange.com/questions/3758906/…
Just choose $x_n$ to be in $\mathbb{Q}\cap [2\pi n,2\pi(n+1)]$ with $|1-\exp(ix_n)|\leq 1/n$
11:32
@TedShifrin the sum should start at $i=0$ or the formula should be $\frac{r^{n+1}-r}{r-1}$
11:45
@robjohn Could you please explain this?
Why is $$\mathbb{P}(e\text{ is not rainbow})=4\,\left(\frac{\color{red}3}{4}\right)^k=\frac{{\color{red}{3^k}}}{4^{k-1}}\,.$$ in this answer math.stackexchange.com/…
 
2 hours later…
13:59
@Thorgott can you help me with my elliptic curve question?
 
1 hour later…
15:02
@robjohn Oops. Yup.
@Ted Raining there?
I’m delaying my dogs’ walk this morning, hoping it stops for a bit.
15:22
Raining here, too!
Yay!
Oh, no... I lied. The sun has come out in the last five minutes. Drat.
@XanderHenderson Wow! Is there a lot forecast there? Oh, sorry.
But it rained most of yesterday, too, so we did get some water.
Which is needed.
And the forecast is for scattered showers over the next couple of days, too. And snow in the mountains.
@Summerday no
15:39
@XanderHenderson we had no rain yesterday, but ½” Saturday. We’re expecting about 1” today.
@robjohn That is positively BIBLICAL. :D
We’ve had ⅚” overnight, and maybe ¾” more, so actually perhaps 1½”
(In the summer, we sometimes get an inch or two in half an hour, but we've apparently only managed about a tenth of an inch in the last two days).
It might be better to say that we have had "heavy fog" for the last two days. :D
The forecast keeps saying it will stop in 30 minutes or 1 hour, but they lie; it keeps going. My dogs are getting restive.
We may have to walk while it’s raining and then we have to dry them off after.
The dogs'll love it! Wetness! Water! Cold! Yay!
16:22
@robjohn indeed. Yesterday when I drove north to the farmers msrket there were 5 cars either off the road in the mud or backwards on the freeway. Idiots.
@robjohn They needed a bath anyway?
16:34
300+ AQI here. The smog is terrible.
16:53
The AQI here is... 12.
Oh, it's 2 in Heber (45 minutes south of here), and 8 in Winslow (30 minutes to the west).
xander you should hawk real estate down there. you know what they say, only three things matter in real estate, AQI, AQI, and AQI.
17:15
@XanderHenderson Holly doesn't mind water. Rosie prefers dryness.
@leslietownes What about location?
only matters to the extent it effects AQI
@TedShifrin Driving on the 138 at night (2 lane desert highway with no lights), I was changing lanes and did not realize that the road was flooded there. I ended up doing a 180 and ending up off the side of the road. Kind of scary as there was a big truck behind me in the road. Luckily, my car maintained speed until I was off the road.
I guess it was a 4 lane highway; 2 lanes in each direction
Hi. A set is a collection of well defined objects. Then when we have, A= even integers and B=beautiful singers, A is a set and B is not a set because B has no well defined definition. Is this right?
hasini: at the level of 'naive set theory' (without formal definitions and rules about what counts as a set), that could probably be either right or wrong. i could certainly see a textbook using that as example of the need for care in defining a set.
sometimes textbooks will use things like "the set of all people in the room" to illustrate aspects of sets in contexts where the elements have no mathematical interpretation that might distract from the point they are trying to make. that
's also an example of something that could go either way, but in that context, it would be understood that there is a particular room under discussion, and nobody is entering or exiting it for purposes of the discussion
similarly in your example i could imagine a situation where you did have, for purposes of some fixed discussion, some objective test of what a 'beautiful singer' was, and in that instance it would be a fine example of a set.
17:27
@leslietownes like a room with no doors or windows?
Hmm okay. @leslietownes if there is an objective test/ criteria by which we can determine the elements of the set, we can call it as a set?
@leslietownes Or even a subjective test---"singers the constructor of the set considers beautiful". At the level of English, what is a set and what is not a set can be very fuzzy.
(Which should not be confused with fuzzy sets---those are different).
yeah. the broader point is that to define a set means (one way or another) to be able to decide the question of whether something is or is not in the set, and merely intending to do that with some verbal formula is sometimes not enough.
the set of fuzzy things...
Hmm okayy
17:29
@robjohn Oh, that, again, is something else.
But it certainly includes kittens and tribbles.
If there is no objective test/ criteria, can we call it as the empty set rather than saying it is not a set?
watching kittens, one gets a feeling for fuzzy logic
@Hasini No---if there is no way of determining whether or not some object is an element of a set, then you have not defined a set. You should be able to point to a singer and answer the question "is this singer beautiful?" with either a "yes" or "no".
hasini: it would be unusual to use the terminology of set theory, even 'naive' set theory, to describe things that weren't clearly defined. you could do that, but it would be an unusual use of language, and it would maybe be a better practice to not use 'set' language
Though, funnily enough, the notion of a "fuzzy set" might be more appropriate to this kind of subjective definition, where membership can be... fuzzy.
17:32
Hmm okay Thanks a lot @leslietownes and @XanderHenderson and @robjohn
the set of all true scotsmen
@leslietownes T'ain't no such thing!
In the definition of a set, should I specifically say as "A set is a collection of well defined distinct objects" rather than "A set is a collection of well defined objects"? Or is the "distinct" part implied through the second version already?
I would say that your emphasis is in the wrong place: A set is a well-defined collection of objects.
And yes, the objects are distinct, so it might be helpful to add that in there.
Ahh okay :)
What is to be said that if someone says the empty set doen't have a collection of elements?
17:36
at some point you have to either stop doing naive set theory, or accept that a naive "definition" is not going to resolve every issue. the empty set puts a lot of pressure on intuition that people have even when they formalize stuff.
this thing about elements being "distinct" is already showing that. there's like a paragraph of explanation about what that word is attempting to capture. i'm not sure that someone unfamiliar with mathematical sets more generally would understand what it is doing.
Where can I see a paragraph of explanation?
which isn't to say that it isn't helpful to have it there, just... these word formulas aren't that helpful for understanding details of set theory.
sorry, i was speaking figuratively. i believe the point of the word "distinct" there is that as it is used in math, the set concept does not encode "repetition" of an element. the thing that captures the idea of "okay, i have a bag that includes 5 identical copies of the number 1" is not "the set with five 1s in it" but something like a "list" which in math is thought of as different from a set.
Okay. Thank you very very much again!!!
Have a nice day all of you!
which then gets into, okay, but many people conceptualize of lists and sets as being the same thing. or a set is a list "where order and repetition don't matter." and a whole lot of people internalize order in their mental "sets" even though the math concept forgets that.
put that together for a paragraph :)
@leslietownes A list is as set...
...of ordered pairs, where the first element is a natural number.
BUT WHAT IS A NATURAL NUMBER?!
IT'S SETS, ALL THE WAY DOWN! :(
17:43
"X is 'really' this specific set-theoretic encoding of X" is what people do before they learn category theory. it is a gateway drug to that.
@leslietownes Look, a "set" is just an object in the category of something something something... (gawd, I hate myself...)
I'm against gory cats
set or not
hasini has probably left now but the word "collection" in "a well-defined collection of [distinct] objects" is also doing a tiny amount of work in the naive set theory setting. books use it because it does not suggest any inherent order (like "group" or "bag of", but not like "list"). but again i'm not sure how clear that actually is to someone who isn't already familiar with mathy-math sets.
Why is the tool factordb totally overloaded during the last few weeks ?
set of ordered pairs is product of sets and not a list
17:51
@Jakobian It's a good thing that I didn't say that any set of ordered pairs is a list, then, isn't it? It's also a good thing that I was being totally serious and attempting to give a 100% pedantic definition, and not making a joke, eh?
jakobian didn't cotton on to what you were "really just" doing
Seems so. It happens a lot with him. He likes to tell me that I am wrong.
@robjohn We're turning into a lake near me now.
wait I'm wrong
a list is a set of ordered pairs
xander: just remember that you're not wrong, you're "just" right in the opposite category
17:52
@TedShifrin The rain has lightened here, but not stopped. On streets with no storm drains, the gutters are rivers.
My neighborhood in SD notoriously floods the worst. I had to go out to go to the chiropractor. I did make it back :)
@leslie You mean he is contraindicated.
@leslietownes Oh, golly, now I hate myself even more. :(
If people are abolishing things like law of excluded middle then they should abolish opposite categories as well. Opposite category? Which one?
munchkin got to see a few cool splashes as i hit deep puddles on the way to school this morning, but thankfully no flooding along that route. i did see someone almost plant themselves in a ditch
jakobian: reverse some of the arrows
there should be something called fuzzy category theory where there can be multiple different opposites
17:55
As I mentioned earlier, yesterday when I drove north to the farmers market, there were at least 5 cars off in the mud, some turned backwards on I5.
The Prius's low construction is not good in flooding situtations. My Honda is better, but not like a Ford pickup.
@TedShifrin Yeah, that is the biggest problem I have with Prii---they are too close to the ground. My next biggest complaint is that visibility is poor (the back window is a joke, and the A bar is in an annoying playce.
@TedShifrin I have a Lexus RX 450h, much better clearance than my son's Prius.
Yes, robjohn ... You drive a behemoth.
@TedShifrin Actually, it is small for an SUV. Much smaller than some of the behemoths
It fits in compact spots.
Hell, my Civic fits in compact spots, but then I can't get out of it.
Some of the parking lots have gotten ridiculous and the cars are too big.
18:00
the honda civic is the perfect car
My wife has a Lexus ES 300. I have a hard time getting in and out of it.
@leslietownes I like my little orange Prius-C.
Second favorite car I've ever owned.
@leslie My 2015 is the size of the Accords from 15 years ago.
xander: your favorite being the lifted f-350 with punisher and "thin blue line" decals all over it?
@leslietownes Oh, gosh, no. I've never had one of those. I had an older Tacoma for a while (it was my father's; I got it when he died).
18:03
ted: yeah, that's my one gripe with the civic (even toyota got rid of the prius c)
My favorite car was an early Nissan Leaf.
xander i have a prius c too (2015, in red). the other day i was taking an uber to pick it up from the mechanic, and the uber was a prius c (2014, in white).
@leslietownes Mine is also a 2015!
Whee!
But orange.
Hi, all
wow, balarka!
18:06
My 2002 Civic 5-speed was probably my favorite car amongst the ones I've owned.
Wow, it's a Balarka!!! I mentioned you a few days ago.
@TedShifrin You summoned him, it seems.
Hi, Leslie, Ted! Hope you're doing alright
@TedShifrin Huh, let me check.
It was all good, Balarka. Don't worry.
Jan 17 at 22:32, by Ted Shifrin
After I gave him enough comments, Balarka — whom we miss seeing — turned into a great teacher here!
Thanks, Dr Ted! That's a kind compliment.
(Unlike a kind complement)
18:07
balarka is a very slow-arriving demon. say his name once, and a few days later, look out
That was I, silly goose.
I thanked Xander for saving me the effort to namesearch :)
Too many people to thank
@TedShifrin I fixed it for you. :P
18:08
Have you finished your thesis yet? :D
Which one? It's only been a couple months since I officially signed up for a PhD! I finished my Masters' thesis, if that's what you meant.
Oh, no, I meant Ph.D.
I have some published results, trying to prove more things for my PhD.
Taking my time
So are you ending up doing topology/geometry?
Yep, I am thinking about symplectic/contact topology now.
18:10
Very cool. Mike might even be proud.
During my MSc days I thought about h-principles (which is what my published work is about), which is not too unrelated but I got bored with that.
Well, you were obsessed for a few years.
@TedShifrin I talk to Mike regularly! He's doing well, watching a lot of movies of late.
Hah, true!
Mike used to keep in touch a bit, but no longer.
I think he may finally have some time to get around to that.
But hard to tell
18:13
He used to bounce teaching ideas off me, but I think he realized my style doesn't fit his that well :D
I hope he's doing well.
Ah, well. He gets very involved with teaching and occasionally becomes gloomy when some (from what I can tell, only a handful) of his students don't do well. I tell him he can't help everyone, especially those not receptive to learning, but...
As I've said before, one of the reasons I retired early was that I was no longer motivating all my students to work hard — some, yes, but some not.
Right, it's stressful.
Speaking of teaching, today I gave a student seminar talk where I proved every closed oriented 3-manifold admits a contact structure.
Have you done any official teaching yet ... or just all your seminar talks? :)
Just talks, I am afraid.
18:17
Hmm, that's something I once knew how to prove.
No need to be afraid ... if you're doing an exemplary job :D
I did some origami to explain the "Thurston jiggling lemma": given a distribution on a 3-manifold and a triangulation, one can subdivide the simplices and C^0-perturb the new simplices a little bit so that the 1- and 2-simplices are transverse to the distribution.
It was fun, people seemed to like it.
a 2-d distribution
Right, I should have said that. Plane distribution.
In a month I have a 30 minute research talk in the department where I explain some stuff I have been working on to a general math audience. Slightly daunting.
Have to make slides and whatnot
The 30 minutes makes it dauntinger. An hour would be better.
18:25
@robjohn Just saw this. Lucky you weren't hurt!
@TedShifrin Yes, it was a dark and stormy night. My car needed realignment, but that was all that happened.
I'm too old for this much excitement.
this was 6 or 7 years ago
When I was in my 20s, I enjoyed driving in blizzards and through feet of snow. No longer.
what kind of shoes does one put on feet of snow?
snowshoes?
18:30
Feet of clay ...
@TedShifrin Nope, I've never enjoyed that. My first car (which I started driving when I was 14) was a terrible, terrible Mustang. One of my earliest memories of driving was coming to a stop sign, stopping, and then sliding backwards down a hill.
*shudder*
I learned on a 66 Dodge Coronet. But drove a Saab 96 from senior year of college until I finally gave up on it (repeated fuel pump issues, some on cross-country trek) in GA in 1983.
In Princeton, a friend was driving a few of us to a movie. He turned to go into the driveway, but we kept moving in the same direction, sliding on the black ice, completely out of control. Luckily, we came to a stop before hitting anything.
But with radial tires it was great in snow ... I even drove through serious snow in the Sierras with no chains (although I was afraid the cops would stop me).
Black ice is treacherous.
We actually had some here a few weeks ago, and I almost slipped on it. So did my dog.
18:35
Wow. It gets cold enough where you are?
I guess you forgot to put studded snow tires on your dog.
There was some on the walkway under the math building (Fine Hall). I remember saying hi to the department secretary, then having her staring down at me as I came to on the ground.
Slips like that (I had some in Athens wearing flip-flops after rain) lead to bad damage to back disks.
@TedShifrin It got to 32°, but horizontal surfaces can get lower than ambient due to heat loss to the sky. It was cloudless and water from the sprinklers had frozen on the sidewalk.
@robjohn Ah.
@TedShifrin I wear Tevas, they are really good flip-flops. I have hiked in them and have never slipped on wet sidewalks.
18:39
Never heard of those. Where do you find them?
Just googled. They be expensive.
Here are the ones I get.
@TedShifrin They are good and they last well
There are different ones on that page. You mean Mush II?
and there is a discound if you buy 5 or more.
yep
I won't live that long. :)
I hike in Mammoth with them.
18:42
@TedShifrin I had a Forrester for a while that did fine in the Sierras in snow. Huzzah for Subaru and all-wheel drive by default.
18:55
free admission to any indigo girls concert is also included in the base package
19:14
@TedShifrin Actually, now, it looks as if you get a discount for getting 2. Even better.
19:29
@robjohn Yes, I saw that. I’m hesitant to get 2 without being 100% sure of size/fit.
@BalarkaSen hii
I'm going to be doing this exercise because its used in the proof that $\text{SO}(3)$ and $\mathbb{R}\text{P}^3$ are homeomorphic
its like my worst nightmare
19:47
That exercise obscures the geometry.
you mean this? Yes its here too, its just not formal enough description for the proof
It’s easy to make it as formal as you need.
The starting point is that every non-trivial element is rotation about a unique axis.
yeah, I like this picture
this map is in fact induced by the Lie group exponential of $SO(3)$
and it's also linked to the description of RP^3 as Thom space of RP^2
I remember discussing this with Mike a couple years ago
20:18
also, even in linear algebra style, i think you can cut down the effort through realizing the universal cover $S^3\rightarrow SO(3)$ by thinking of $S^3$ as unit quaternions
20:41
@Jakobian I guess the relation with Alaoglu is as follows:
it agrees with the WOT?
on bounded sets it says
20:57
@TedShifrin My shoe size is 10.5-11. I get size 11. They feel very steady and the piece between the toes is comfortable.
21:07
@robjohn Thanks. That seems consistent with what the website recommends.
are these two definitions for continuity at a point equivalent?

1. $f : X \to Y$ is continuous at $x \in X$ iff for every open neighborhood $N$ of $f(x)$ in $Y$ there exists an open neighborhood $M$ of $x$ in $X$ such that $f(M) \subseteq N$

2. $f: X \to Y$ is continuous at $x \in X$ iff for every open neighborhood $N$ of $f(x)$ in $Y$, $f^{-1}(N)$ is an open neighborhood of $x$ in $X$

I understand they are both equivalent to the usual "global" notion of continuity when we consider continuity at *all* points in $X$, so I'm interested in the case of a fixed point $x \in X$.
I see how (2) implies (1) but not the other way around
I could only deduce that $M \subseteq f^{-1}(N)$, but not sure how this would imply that $f^{-1}(N)$ is itself open
The other way won’t work if continuity at other preimages of $f(x)$ fails.
You win only if $f$ is one-to-one.
ok this is what I suspected, so effectively they are the same notion only if we consider a function that is continuous at all points?
Or at least at all preimages of $f(x)$.
Good question, however!
right, thanks!
21:25
consider the operator $T_n:L^2\to L^p$, where $T_n f(x)=n^{3/4}\int_x^{x+1/n} f(t) dt$. For which $p\in [1,+\infty]$ $T_n$ is continuous ? Does anyone have an idea on how to procede?
Why is $T_n(f)$ in $L^p$?
It's a function of $x$
in the bounds of integration
I understand that.
$\|T_n f\|_p=n^{3/4} (\int_{\Bbb R} |\int_x^{x+1/n} f(t) dt|^p dx)^{1/p}$ right?
Yes.
Start with $p=\infty$, maybe.
21:35
I need $\| f \|_2$ so I tried with CS but did not conclude anything
In general, surely Hölder and not CS will be relevant.
with $p=\infty$, $\|T_n f \|_{\infty} \le \|f \|_2 n^{-1/4}$
the exponent of $n$ is wrong
But I don't think it's an issue
it should be $1/4$
OK, so you’ve answered the question for $p=\infty$.
Try $p=2$ and $p=1$?
21:44
let me try
21:54
I'm not making progress :(
is hyperbolic distance always greater than or equal to euclidean distance?
maybe an idea is to use MInkowsky's integral inequality
I mean on poincare disk
22:34
I'm currently working a problem where I want to apply the following result from measure theory;
> Suppose that $f: X\to \overline{\mathbb R}$ is an extended real-valued measurable function, then $\int |f|d\mu=0$ if and only if $f=0$ $\mu$-a.e.
In my problem, I have a non-negative integrand which is the product of a continuous function and a measurable function. I'm integrating over a compact set in $\mathbb R$, and I know the integral vanishes, but I'm a little unsure if I can apply the above theorem or not, since not all continuous functions are measurable. If we use the Borel $\sigma$-algebra, I guess the continuous function is measurable. On the other hand, the Borel $\sigma$-algebra is not complete under Lebesgue measure.
I do not really understand the consequences of incompleteness yet, and therefor I'm unsure if the theorem applies. If anyone understands this more concretely, I'd be grateful for a comment or two.
Incompleteness when talking about metric spaces seems pretty "bad", so I'm wondering if the word has the same status in measure theory...
22:49
Wait.. what?
What continuous function is not measurable?!
Well, I found this.
As I said, it depends on the $\sigma$-algebra I believe.
thats not what measurable means
we always equip the image with Borel sigma-algebra
when unspecified
and yes - all continuous functions are measurable
Time for a hot toddy. The weather is right.
@psie its significant but the relationship is a bit different
as you seen with Borel sigma-field, we want to allow incomplete measure spaces
not like for metric spaces where we fight incompleteness like fire
23:04
yeah
@psie here in this result we equip extended real line with Borel sigma-field anyway
true
the standard meaning of what it means to be measurable, measurability of $\{x : f(x) > a\}$ or $\{x : f(x) < a\}$ is the measurability into the Borel sigma-field

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