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00:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

00:12
@XanderHenderson Right beside Berkzerkeley. I think SoCal is a different state now, ever since they adopted lesliecoin.
today i realized for any norm $|\cdot|$ on a vector space, $|a + b| = |a| + |b|$ implies $|\cdot|$ is linear along the entire line connecting $a$ and $b$
Proof: $|a + b| = |ta + b + (1 - t)a| \leq |ta + b| + (1 - t)|a| \leq t|a| + |b| + (1 - t)|a| \leq |a| + |b|$, but this was an equality! Hence everything is an equality
$|ta + b| = t|a| + |b|$
 
1 hour later…
01:33
@copper.hat In that case, double yikes! You can't go 70 on San Pablo!
(I have an aunt who lives in Berkeley, about four blocks inland from San Pablo.)
02:14
no kidding. i still have been unable to find out what was happening. maybe on the news later, i can't imagine it ended well.
 
5 hours later…
06:58
We are down to a skeleton crew tonight.
πŸ’€πŸ’€
Mr Bones
 
1 hour later…
08:10
@Shaun finally got some more coding work :|
I'm quite jazzed
:D
08:44
Shaun, still interested in studying some group cohomology togeth?
My latest attempt on that famous problem has failed. Made a fatal algebric error
But that topology construction is still a topology. It just doesn't help prove what's needed. It's nice for framing it though. For example $0$ is a generic point for $Z/p_n\#$ in the topology.
The point is to prove that in the subspace $I=$ a large enugh interval, that $0$ is still a generic point, but I'm thinking no topological proof exists unless you delve further in but it has to be combined with the algebra in some way no matter what. We can't form the smallest topology making it a topological monoid under $\cdot$ I don't think if I recall correctly, because you lose some important properties that are needed to make the proof work.
For example the Furstenberg arithmetic progression topology is much too fine to use (too many open sets).
@Shaun
 
3 hours later…
12:03
β€œWhat is the largest surface of revolution embedded in the unit cube?” Can this be considered a packing problem?
@JohnZimmerman Typically, a "packing problem" is "what is the largest number of $n$-balls I can fit into an $n$-dimensional volume?" Your question is not that.
So I wouldn't call it a "packing problem".
12:45
I think better to call it a maximization problem
It is certainly a kind of optimization problem.
Maximize the volume with the constraint that the surface is a surface of revolution
Maximizing revolution...Hmm you should read Marx for that.
I want to prove some things about an extension of this problem in $N$ dimensions. Like is the sequence of volumes increasing
13:05
the elements $\sum n_i x_i$ form a subgroup, $x_i \in G, n_i \in Z$
the above result is only for Abelian groups $G$, right? (with summation being the group operation)
$x_i$ runs over some subset of $G$
@RyderRude what does that mean
Missing context or other details
Are $x_i$ fixed elements
The sum notation often doesn't make sense in commutative settings but this result stays true for any group, with proper interpretation
@RyderRude if $g_i\in S\subseteq G$ then $\{g_1^{n_1}...g_m^{n_m} : m\in\mathbb{N}_0, n_i\in\mathbb{Z}, g_i\in S\}$ is the subgroup of $G$ generated by $S$
That is, its the smallest subgroup in the sense of inclusion that contains $S$
13:27
Hello everyone, I want to find the power series expansion of $\frac{1}{1-2D^2+D^3}$ so I assume the power series to be $a_1+a_2D+a_3D^2+a_4D^3+a_5D^4......$, I call this summation P. These two are equal so, $P(1-2D^2+D^3)$ should be 1, I get the power series to be $1 + 2D + 4D^2 + 8D^3.....$
I don't understand where I am going wrong, Can someone correct?
@Shashaank what are you doing before saying you get 1+2D+4D^2+...?
The product of P and $(1-2D^2+D^3)$ is 1
I read that, but what are you doing to obtain 1+2D+...
I actually get the product as $a_1 + (a_2-2a_1)D + (a_3-2a_2)D^2......$ also $a_1$ is 1 and the other coefficients $(a_n-2a_(n-1))$ (n not 1) are zero
Well thats wrong, but you should be able to obtain recursion of some kind from this
13:35
So my product is wrong?
Was the original problem about solving a recursion?
The original problem was to find the power series of $\frac{1}{1-2D^2+D^3}$ and I thought of this method
@Shashaank yes you multiplied it wrong. For example coefficient next to D is a_1, its one next to D^2 thats a_3-2a_1
@Shashaank I see. Then its the wrong way to go about this.
Oh
How should I go about it? and why is it wrong?
You see, usually you are given a recursive sequence, which you want to solve explicitly so you obtain some formal series P which you then obtain explicit formula for
And to do this you expand it. You did this but backwards
13:39
I don't get you, Can you please explain
I mean the method is not really necessarily wrong but you will go through a lot more steps than necessary, while there is a simple solution
What is the simple way?
To expand your function into formal power series what you need to do is simple fraction decomposition, and then expand into geometric series
Also how can 1/(Something) be 1+.......
Oh
so D<1 to find the power series?
Not necessarily
13:43
oh
You don't need any bounds on $D$, treat it like formal variables, and forget about analysis for now
Oh, Btw I am learning this for solving differential equations using operators
By expanding into geometric series I mean to write your simple fractions as a/(1-bD) where a, b are some constants
Can I use this for complex numbers too?
Like I have $\frac{1}{(D-i)(D+1)}$
Can I write the power series?
14:02
@Jakobian my personal experience with LA, with even well regarded books like hoffman kunze is that a lot of proofs are vibes
i think the subject is like that. idk how to put this in correct words, its a bit mechanical
So suppose $Z$ is a path-connected space with $\pi_1(Z) = \pi_2(Z) = 0$. Let $\Sigma$ be a surface. Let $f:\Sigma\to Z$ be a map. Then $f|_{\Sigma^{(1)}}:\Sigma^{(1)}\to Z$ is a map which is nulhomotopic as $\pi_1(Z) = 0$ (Here, $\Sigma^{(1)}$ is the $1$-skeleton of $\Sigma$ with a standard CW structure).
Using homotopy extension property on $\Sigma^{(1)}\times I\cup \Sigma\times\{0\}\xrightarrow{H\cup f}Z$ with $H$: nulhomotopy of $f$, I get a map $\tilde{H}:\Sigma\times I\to Z$ such that $\tilde{H}_1$ is a point. Hence, $\tilde{H}_1 = \Sigma/\Sigma^{(1)}\cong S^2\to Z$ which is nulhomotopic by assumption, so $f$ is nulhomotopic. Ta-da
Inspired by a low-quality question I saw on Math SE this morning, I am putting the following on my next calculus exam:
(In the section of more difficult questions which I expect only around (maybe) half the class to make real progress on. Though I think the hint makes it kind of trivial.)
Hello, this is an example of binary variable called as logical NOT https://www.fico.com/fico-xpress-optimization/docs/latest/mipform/dhtml/chap2s1.html?scroll=sseclognot

and this is the complement rule of probability https://brilliant.org/wiki/probability-by-complement/#:~:text=For%20two%20events%20to%20be,must%20always%20total%20to%201.&text=Equivalently%2C%20P%20(%20A%20c%20),1%E2%88%92P(A).
Are those things the same
@onepotatotwopotato correct, this also follows from general principle
what is that general principle?
14:13
$\{\ast\}\rightarrow Z$ is a $2$-connected map, so the pushforward $\{\ast\}=[X,\{\ast\}]\rightarrow[X,Z]$ is surjective for any $\le2$-dim. CW-complex
I don't know what that is
check 11.11.-11.13. in ch VII of Bredon
very foundational stuff
@Thorgott Oof. That book.
Things like that are what make me an analyst.
one of my favorite books
I have a copy right next to me
I also have a copy on my shelf. And, to be fair, it is better than a lot of books in the area. But... oof. I don't want to work in that area.
14:19
@Thorgott Oh it's 2-equivalence in Bredon
I also have a copy...somewhere in my room
@Jakobian oh. so it's for general groups . thanks
Interesting... I forgot many homotopy theories. But the point of the problem is to use HEP
why is closure guaranteed $(a^nb^m)(a^pb^q)=a^rb^s$
@Shashaank yeah
@Jakobian Thank you
14:31
@RyderRude huh?
$(a^nb^m)(a^pb^q) = a^nb^ma^pb^q$
@Jakobian i can see why this would be a subgroup if G is abelian, but i dont see how closure is satisfied if G is non abelian
So its in the desired form
@Jakobian oooh it already satisfies the form
@onepotatotwopotato right, it's different terminology for the same thing
so for general groups $G$, we cant say that $n_1 g_1+n2g_2$ , $n_i\in Z$ forms a subgroup, becuz it doesnt include elements like $n_1g_1+n_2g_2+n_3g_3+n_4g_4$? @Jakobian
but we can say that the set $g_k ^n$, $n\in Z$ span a subgroup, $g_k \subset G$
14:40
@RyderRude we usually don't use additive notation for non-commutative groups
yeah. this book is using the additive notation becuz theyre setting up homology group
it says theyre abelian
Homology group is commutative
yeah. so for these, we can say that $\sum n_i g_i$ , $g_i\subset G$ form a subgroup, where the same $g_i$ is not allowed to repeat in the sum
There is a difference between given indexed set $(g_i), i\in I$ and a set of elements $S$
Can you please slow down
@Jakobian yeah. in the latter, we r allowed to repeat
@Jakobian sorry
Mad
Mad
14:44
What does a "maximally" abelian Sub lie algebra mean? "spesifically refering to the maximality"
If $S$ is just a set, what I wrote works for non-commutative groups
Mad
Mad
IE all other abelian sub algebras are subalgebras of that? is that how you understand maximality in this context?
But if we are given an indexed set, $(g_i)$, then indeed this is somewhat specific to commutative groups
The reason being as you noticed, there is no reason for a product of elements of the form a^n b^m to be of the same form
This fails e.g. for the free group on two elements
14:47
thanks
@RyderRude I'm not exactly sure what you meant here but hopefully something like I just said
On this post (math.stackexchange.com/questions/4695733/…): How can someone prove (1)=>(3)?
@Jakobian i just meant to write this there. the set of these products form a subgroup becuz repetition of the same $g_i$ is allowed in the product
@sharon_puthuparambil Ugh... that question is gross. I don't like the typesetting---makes it very hard to read. :(
i got confused becuz the book is using an indexed set but the statement they wrote isnt qualified by "abelian"
they have written just "group"
14:50
@Mad yup
About slowing down - I didn't mean to be rude but its slightly overwhelming, and additionally, I think slow ingesting of stuff means no mistakes in reasoning. But I get that you just want to, I am assuming here, learn this stuff as fast as possible.
Mad
Mad
@Thorgott Alright thanks
@XanderHenderson One needs to prove that if f is sequentially lower semicontinuous, then f(π‘₯)=supπ‘Ÿ>0infπ‘¦βˆˆπ΅(π‘₯,π‘Ÿ)f(𝑦)
@Jakobian i just have this annoying habit to reply fast. i will work on it
the inequality >= is trivial. I don't know how to prove the converse
14:52
it clouds the discussion
@RyderRude perhaps they meant what I wrote before then, without indexing the set $S$, then.
Or they decided it doesn't matter since homology groups are commutative
no, this is what they write : Take r elements x1,..., xr of G. The elements of G of the form
n1x1 +···+ nr xr (n_i ∈ Z , 1 ≀ i ≀ r) (3.7)
form a subgroup of G
Mad
Mad
@Thorgott i know you are well in lie theory, can you help me with my confusion about these two statements:
3. If g is semisimple, then any Cartan sub lie algebra h is maximally abelian. The converse is not true,however:
4. If h is abelian, and maximal among the Abelian subalgebras for which all ad_H are simultaneously diagonalizable, then h is cartan


But isnt being maximally abelian of ALL possible Abelian lie algebras a much stronger requirement than being maximally abelian of those sub lie algebras that fullfill the attribute that adh is diagonalizable, so shouldnt the converse be True
@Jakobian yeah. i think they are somewhat careless about qualifying sentences by "abelian"
maybe becuz the general topic is about Abelians
@Mad sorry, I wasn't paying proper attention. this is wrong.
maximal just means there is no larger one
Mad
Mad
14:59
@Thorgott What do you mean larger?
Dimension wise?
with respect to inclusion
@RyderRude yeah. Not true in general
Mad
Mad
Thats the same as saying every other one is inside. isnt it not?
Brian C hall defines it like this: any X out of g such that [g,h]=0 then X is in h
@Mad no, consider the non-trivial 2-dimensional Lie algebra with basis x, y s.t. [x,y] = x
then x and y each span a 1-dimensional subalgebra that is maximally abelian, but neither is contained in the other
Mad
Mad
So can we define it like this: h is maximally abelian if there is no h' which is abelian and h \in h'? that would allow multiple "maximals"
Also my statement regarding Brian c hall is wrong i just noticed he is spesifically talking about Cartan sub algebras.
15:06
@Mad $h\in h^{\prime}$ doesn't make a lot of sense, it should be $h\subsetneq h^{\prime}$
What is (1/D)x = ? where D is the differential operator D := d/dx
and yes, there can be many maximally abelian subalgebras
Mad
Mad
yea i mean that. :D
So is that like completly a subset ? or can i have some elements of h be in h' but not all of them? these inclusion signs have always been amibgious. probably the latter
@Shashaank In what context are you asking this? Do you know anything about the spectral theorem or the functional calculus?
I am learning to solve differential equations using operators
I need relevant information to understand (1/D)x..
15:09
@Mad subset, but not equal
@Shashaank That only kind of answers the first question I asked...
or, put differently, any abelian subalgebra containing h is equal to it
@XanderHenderson functional calculus if that deals with solving differential equations..
Mad
Mad
@Thorgott Yes but i mean "completly" containing h right?
thats what "subset" means
Mad
Mad
15:11
I guess so. Thanks
@Shashaank (1) In what context are you asking the question? (Are you taking a class on functional analysis? an intro class on differential equations? What is your background?) Explain, in detail, where the question comes from. Give us some context.
(2) Are you familiar with the spectral theorem?
(3) Are you familiar with the functional calculus?
@XanderHenderson I am taking a class on solving differential equations ( intro ) also I am not aware of the spectral theorem or functional calculus, My prof just defined the Differential operator and I am solving some questions and I have come across (1/D)x which I am unable to understand
Mad
Mad
@Thorgott but that still doesnt really clear up the confusion, i mean even under this definition, i dont see how a lie algebra could be Maximally abelian and still not cartan.
@Thorgott wouldnt this imply that it is also maximally abelian under those that satisfy ad_h being diagonalizable and thus the other theorem would apply.
@Shashaank Perhaps you could provide the entire problem statement you have been given.
yeah
$(D^2 βˆ’ 3D+2)y=xe^x$
15:17
Can someone help me prove this?
If f is sequentially lower semicontinuous, then f(𝑥)=sup𝑟>0inf𝑦∈𝐵(𝑥,𝑟)f(𝑦)
I had to use exponential shift rule to solve this problem
@Mad consider the previous example. the subalgebra generated by x is maximally abelian, but not Cartan
@Mad well, you could be maximally abelian without every element h satisfying that ad_h is diagonalizable
Mad
Mad
@Thorgott Oh, so the condition of diagonalization is actually the stronger condition.
i dont think either is stronger a priori
15:44
@sharon_puthuparambil one inequality you havve for free
So the issue is to use definition of semicontinuity to prove the other inequality
16:13
@Shashaank $(1/D)x$ doesn't really make sense, but if you're looking for solution to Dy = x, then you can obtain one, modulo constant, by integrating
16:26
@Jakobian Oh
so is it x^2/2 ?
Dy = x solution?
+C for some C
A constant
Yeah Thank you, I got it @Jakobian
16:59
hello!
@Thorgott context. I agree that the functor that assigns to a space its Alexandroff extension is important, but I don't fully agree with calling it a one point compactification of a space... just call it Alexandroff extension
I think it's fine
I've called non-compact spaces compactifications in some places
the meaning of that term is as contextual as anything else
but I do like Alexandroff extension
cause it also helps emphasize that the construction makes perfect sense in the non-locally compact setting when properly defined
well sure I wouldn't scrutinize someone for naming stuff, but I feel like this person is trying to force the name a bit too much when there are better alternatives
whereas people saying "compactification" usually subscribe to the idea that compact spaces are Hausdorff by deifnition
yes thats another reason why Alexandroff extension is a better name
Its odd that this is the only construction that I know of, that compactifies a space by one point
(in the sense that would be Hausdorff, and so unique, for Tychonoff spaces)
17:15
@Jakobian I have mixed feelings. On the one hand, I agree that simply calling something the "one point compactification" can cause problems, I also generally don't like to name things after people if a pithy descriptive name can be found. People-names can become obfuscatory. :/
you can always add a point whose only nbhd is the entire space to get a terrible "one-point compactification"
@Thorgott Right. And the one-point extension of a space that the Alexandroff extension provides needn't be compact.
no, the Alexandroff extension is always compact
it's not always Hausdorff
Alexandroff extension is always compact, I concur
Oh, sure.
It has been way too long since I've thought about basic topology.
Hausdorff. I live in a world where everything is Hausdorff.
I knew there was something that the Alexandroff extension didn't guarantee. But it is never relevant in any of the cases I care about.
17:19
the trick is that, in the non-Hausdorff case, the open neighborhoods of the point at infinity are not the complements of compact subspaces of the original space, but the complements of compact, closed subspaces of the original space
I think its better to live in a world where everything is Tychonoff. That way, everything has a Hausdorff compactification
I've recently been forced into taking a liking to weakly Hausdorff spaces
Other reasons to like Tychonoff spaces are 1. There is no loss of generality in considering rings of continuous functions from Tychonoff space to $\mathbb{R}$. And 2. regularity is very nice to have.
The application $f_A : A \to T$ tells us that
$$f_A(x) = f (x) \quadβˆ€x ∈ A$$ is called the restriction of f to the set A.

Is the restriction unique? Is the extension unique?
17:26
Well, suppose that there is another function $g : A \to T$ such that $g(x) = f_{A}(x)$ for all $x \in A$. Is it possible for $g$ to be distinct from $f_A$?
@XanderHenderson wait with "distinct" you mean different?
ok my answer is no
@Thorgott whats your favorite non-LC hausdorff space
right?
17:33
@Jakobian where did you find my videos !?
@BalarkaSen $S^{\infty}$
whats its one point compactification
>:)
quite ugly, I suppose
whats the one point compactification of $\Bbb Q$
easier question
not this space again
it haunted me just yesterday
17:35
lmao
how to correctly write statements like "$P(x)$ is true for utmost finite number of $x \in \mathbb{N}$", is that something like $P(x) \implies x \in F \ \text{where} \ \text{cardinality}(F) \in \mathbb{N} \cup \{0\}$
it's a compact space that is not the continuous image of any compact Hausdorff space
but what does it look like
also, its square is weakly Hausdorff, but not KC
@Sahaj you have some sick moves
17:37
@XanderHenderson if the function $g(x)$ is always equal to $f_A(x)$, how can $g$ be different from $f_A(x)$?
so my answer is no
So what does that say about the uniqueness of the restriction?
the topology on $\mathbb{Q}^+$ is pretty awkward
$\mathbb{Q}^+$ is positive rationals?
no, Alexandroff extension
I'm not sure what exactly closed, compact subspaces of $\mathbb{Q}$ look like, probably all constructed (transfinitely?) from convergent sequences
in particular, all neighborhoods of the point at infinity should be dense
@XanderHenderson it's unique
17:43
@Thorgott closed iff compact for $\mathbb{Q}^+$
3
A: Subspace closed iff compact implies Hausdorff?

JakobianHere's a counter-example. Let $X = \hat{\mathbb{Q}}$ be the one-point compactification of $\mathbb{Q}$. It's well-known that such compactification is Hausdorff iff the underlying space is locally compact and Hausdorff, so $X$ is not Hausdorff. If $Y\subseteq X$ is closed then it's compact as a cl...

In fact I've proved that this holds for Alexandroff extension of any metrizable space
yeah, it's a KC space, but its square is not lol
@Pizza Well, there you go.
of $\mathbb{Q}$... ah
they have empty interior for sure, they are countable
I can imagine if they all look sort of like $\{0\}\cup \{1/n : n\in\mathbb{N}\}$ iterated arbitrary (finite) many times
I think you can have a countable union of convergent sequences that's not expressable as a finite union of convergent sequences
You know, how I'd construct a set whose $n$th derived power is a point
17:48
but not every countable union of convergent sequences will be compact closed
@Jakobian $\mathbb{Z}\cap\mathbb{Q}^+$
sure, $\{0\}\cup \{1/n : n\in\mathbb{Z}\cap \mathbb{Q}^+\}$
oh wait
@Thorgott can you link me your question?
if you have one
(maybe you're just wondering about this)
If $g : A \to T$ is a map of $A$ in $T$, every map $f : S \to T$ such that
$$f(x) = g(x) \quad \forall x \in A$$
it is called a prolongation of $g$ on $S$
Is the extension unique?
I forgot to write a part, sorry
this is it, anyway
17:56
@Pizza Think about it for a minute.
Work a concrete example.
ok
For instance, suppose that $A = [0,1]$, $S = T = \mathbb{R}$, and that $g(x) = 47$.
I don't have a question, was just trying to respond to Balarka's comment
@XanderHenderson ok ill try wait
@Thorgott I've actually never encounter this result in a book, the only time I ever seen it is when I figured out this could be a counter-example to that "compact iff closed" conjecture. So that's why maybe I take a little too much pride in it. Its not a new result so I shouldn't be
I guess this sort of thing appears in algebraic topology?
18:12
I've only ever seen it stated for $\mathbb{Q}$ either, it's nice tho
@Jakobian not really, I just happened to look for this counter-example yesterday
oh I see
it looks like one of those things that Patrick and people from pi-base would be interested in exploring (though knowing them its already there, along with 5 different variations)
Brian Scott has a lot of decent answers on the topic of topology, a lot canonical ones
@Thorgott The proof that product of $\mathbb{Q}^+$ with itself is not KC seems to just be this: Alexandroff extension of a metric space $X$ is Hausdorff iff $X$ is locally compact
So this actually has a quicker proof than what Brian proposes there
yeah PatrickR mentioned that too
So 1) Alexandroff extension of metrizable space is KC and 2) Alexandroff extension of $X$ is Hausdorff iff $X$ is Hausdorff and locally compact
If $X$ is not locally compact, then $X^+$ is not Hausdorff, so the diagonal $\Delta_{X^+}\subseteq X^+\times X^+$ is not closed.
so 2') Square of Alexandroff extension of a non-locally compact space is not KC
In particular taking any non-locally compact metrizable space $X$, $X^+$ is KC but $X^+\times X^+$ is not
18:35
@Thorgott whats a one-point compactification of a non-LC hausdorff space that you can see
maybe there is some connection to be drawn with compact-open topology as well, that would be nice
@BalarkaSen is there such a thing?
@alessandro if not that should be a theorem
then one can put one-point compactifications of non-LC hausdorff spaces in the dustbin :P
@Jakobian nice
What's the one-point compactification of $\ell^2$? I want to say it should be some kind of infinite dimensional sphere but that's probably wrong
18:46
that would be interesting
@BalarkaSen I don't have any, but that doesn't matter
it's a construction you make to have a certain property, not because it fulfills a geometric task
@Thorgott consider the set of twin primes, and define p + p' = (least twin prime occuring after p + p')
@AlessandroCodenotti You certainly can't connect it with vector spaces
this is a monoid, consider its grothendieck completion
that has a certain property
some constructions are inherently "meaningless"
even if they have a certain property
the Grothendieck construction certainly isn't meaningless
your monoid may be
18:49
same thing; one point compactification isnt meaningless
that of non-LC spaces may be
@AlessandroCodenotti I suppose if you take an injection $\ell^2\to S$ into the sphere $S = \{x\in \ell^2 : \|x\| = 1\}$ and replace topology of $S$ from subspace topology?
Then you would have some kind of picture of it
and by comparising topologies of $S$ and one-point compactification of $\ell^2$ you might understand this better
I think they're nice cause they allow us to make precise that a "sequence/net converging to infinity" is actually sequence/net that literally converges to a point called "infinity" in a larger space
this topology definitely won't be homogeneous though
a non-symmetric sphere
@XanderHenderson the extension would be that if I compute f in the domain of g (f is different from the function g), do I find that the values ​​of f are equal to those of g (the output values)?
Ok, sanity check. I have a norm on a vector space $V$ and three points $x, y, z$ such that the norm is linear along the segments $[x, y], [x, z], [y, z]$. Then its linear along the 2-simplex filling the triangle, yes?
18:58
OK the axiom of choice just HAS to be true, it just has to (tongue in cheek)
it might not be a problem with compactifying it using one point, it might be a problem with the definition of compactification not being symmetric with respect to all points in some sense, which turns out to be more intuitive in the non-locally compact space
I need AC to prove (b)!
@BalarkaSen sorry, what does it mean for the norm to be linear along a subspace?
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