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00:09
Apparently $|[\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^{n + 1}, S^n]| = 2$ for all $n \geq 3$
Also holds if you replace $\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^{n + 1}$ by an $(n + 1)$-dimensional $p$-lens space, or any quotient of $S^{n + 1}$ by a nice action of a finite group.
...or I might have gotten my sequences mixed up and this might not be true at all, gah
@zetaspace mathfrak?! Nope. I'm out. Nothing good ever comes from mathfrak.
00:24
@XanderHenderson So commutative algebra is "nothing good"? ;)
 
1 hour later…
01:27
@BenSteffan can't quite figure the computation myself, but seems plausible
I also suppose they both become null-homotopic after suspension
01:43
@Thorgott the best I could do, after correcting the nonsense I wrote down, is the Puppe sequence $\cdots [\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^{n + 1} / \mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^n, S^n] \to [\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^{n + 1}, S^n] \to [\mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^n, S^n]$. At the left you have $\mathbb{Z} / 2$ and at the right you have either $\mathbb{Z} / 2$ or $\mathbb{Z}$, depending on parity. But this is an exact sequence of pointed sets, not of groups, so this doesn't allow you to say much about the middle term :(
the sequence extends one more term to the right as $\rightarrow[S^n,S^n]$ (since $S^n\rightarrow\mathbb{R}P^n\rightarrow\mathbb{R}P^{n+1}$ is also a cofiber sequence), so you do get that the $\pi_{n+1}(S^n)$ acts transitively on the fibers of the restriction map $[\mathbb{R}P^{n+1},S^n]\rightarrow[\mathbb{R}P^n,S^n]$
but I'm too tired to see what the action is lol
@BenSteffan I believe that's what I just said, yes.
boo, Xander
I'll have to read up on that action; I don't see where it's supposed to come from.
But not tonight, it's way too late
01:53
Xander always has such good takes
yeah, same, I'm gonna go to bed now
let's continue this conversation tomorrow
 
3 hours later…
04:27
How can we say there exists a_1 in A with e'(a)=e'(a_1)?
04:53
If I have a finite dimension vector space V, then the following is trivial: "let $T:V \to W$ be a linear tansformation, then there exists a subspace $U$ of $V$ so that $null(T) \cap U=\{0\}$ and $T(U)=range(T)$" but for the general case, can this be shown without assuming a basis / axiom of choice ?
Intuition tells me I have to draw an isomorphism from the quotient of V and null, and this subspace I'm looking for
Not sure if it'll work tho
@SoumikMukherjee epimorphisms aren't surjective in general
you need to share more context
05:41
@Jakobian We are in the category of sets
I forgot to mention that
 
2 hours later…
08:11
@SineoftheTime In analysis 1 we didn't do them, so I'll see them myself
08:40
@Pizza that's strange
if $f$ is defined on $[a,b[$, then $\int_a^bf(x)dx:=\lim_{z\to b^-}\int_a^zf(x)dx$
if $f$ is defined on $]a,b]$, then $\int_a^bf(x)dx:=\lim_{z\to a^+}\int_z^bf(x)dx$
if the limit exist and it's finite, the it's said that the integral is convergent
you give the same defn for integrals of a function over an unbounded interval
if $f$ is defined on $[a,+\infty[$, then $\int_a^{+\infty}f(x)dx:=\lim_{z\to +\infty}\int_a^zf(x)dx$
09:23
@SineoftheTime Hi, are you free ?
@SineoftheTime I know what happened, our analysis 2 prof did them in analysis 1, while our analysis 1 prof didn't...
So it's like we have to know them
it should not have an impact on your exam, just use the fact that when the function is not defined, you take the limit
certainly, there will not be exercises asking to determine the convergence of an improper integral
Yes, luckily I got this case where this thing happens
yes, plus the double integral in your exam will be all convergent
09:27
I got a new book in which I will write down all these things that can happen
$\lim(x,y)\to(1,1) \frac{(x-1)^5 -(x-1)^2 -3(y-1)^2}{x^2+3y^ 2-2(x+3y-3)}=-1$
I will make a section for each topic
@SineoftheTime Yes
I need to verify that the limit is -1
using the definition?
Yes, but I can also do it by transforming the fraction with the polar coordinates
But here it is not convenient to use polar coordinates
09:36
isn't the limit $0$?
I wrote a number wrong
$\lim(x,y)\to(1,1) \frac{(x-1)^5 -(x-1)^2 -3(y-1)^2}{x^2+3y^ 2-2(x+3y-2)}=-1$
first of all, shift the limit to $(0,0)$
Mmm
Isn't there another way?
I wouldn't want to change the limit
09:44
the limit does not change
I've never done this thing
ok
note that $x^2+3y^2-2(x+3y-2)=x^2-2x+1+3y^2-6y+3$
now you just have to show that $\lim_{(x,y)\to(1,1)}\frac{(x-1)^5}{(x-1)^2+3(y-1)^2}=0$
Let me see
here you can use polar coordinates if you want
I'll try for a moment
$\frac{(x-1)^3\cdot[(x-1)^2+3(y-1)^2]}{(x-1)^2+3(y-1)^2}$
I made this increase to simplify the numerator and denominator
So $(x-1)^3$
Its correct?
@Gian'sPizzeria this way the numerator is not $(x-1)^5$
@RyderRude hi
10:00
@SineoftheTime i know
But in theory shouldn't I make some additions to obtain the distance between two points?
I'm not following you
you can use polar coordinates centered in $(1,1)$
Do you find that to prove the limit you have to make some additions, like x^2≤x^2+y^2????
I've seen this only to find $\delta=\delta(\epsilon)$
but your inequality is not correct because $(x-1)^3$ can be negative
you can note that when $|\frac{(x-1)^5}{(x-1)^2+3(y-1)^2}|\le |\frac{(x-1)^5}{(x-1)^2}|$
if $x=1$, the limit is $0$
10:10
So = |$(x-1)^3$|
$\omega = \frac{y}{\sqrt{xy}} dx + \frac{x}{\sqrt{xy}} dy$,the form is closed since the two partial derivatives match, initially $A$ is not simply connected so I have divided it into simply connected components so $A_1 = \{(x,y) \in \Bbb R^2 : x > 0 , y > 0 \}$ , $A_2 = \{(x,y) \in \Bbb R^2 : x < 0 , y < 0 \}$, so in each component the differential form is exact
Right ?
≤$(x-1)^4$≤$(x-1)^4 +(y-1)^4$
@Pizza correct
I don't know how to proceed with the exercise
10:19
10 mins ago, by Sine of the Time
you can note that when $|\frac{(x-1)^5}{(x-1)^2+3(y-1)^2}|\le |\frac{(x-1)^5}{(x-1)^2}|$
@SineoftheTime what are u learning these days
@SineoftheTime yes
$=|(x-1)^3|\to 0$
@RyderRude I'm revising some theorems of real analysis
@SineoftheTime nice
what about you?
10:21
im learning formal logic... predicate, propositional and zfc. and also infinite cardinals
never studied it deeply
do you enjoy it?
yeah... ive only studied some basics rn
i like it
it has Godel's theorems and notions of truth
also some multi valued logics, which have a Undefined type, in addition to True and False
Interesting
but these are not that useful in math. somehow, the True/False scheme has been the most useful
it is also the simplest
I know only the basics
I'm not that interested in logic tho
10:28
i too am not sure if ill stay interested in the advanced stuff
lets see...
it is more like philosophy of math
one would think that the concept of truth requires nuance. it does in real life. things arent 100% True or False
but in math, things are either true or false. if both, contradiction
and this scheme gets u light years ahead :P
maybe it's the best scheme after all
good old Aristotle
yeah.. it's all inspired by his stuff
recently, some other schemes have been made which are more useful in fields other than math
there is fuzzy logic
it is useful in electronics
 
3 hours later…
13:40
@user20458579510081670432 huh?
We all know that a metric space is a topological space. I generally use the definition of a topological space that involves "open sets".
@SoumikMukherjee what they are proving is that $\phi$ is well-defined. Such $a_1$ always exist since you can take $a_1 = a$ but that's not the point. They just wrote it wrong
But I wanna know, "Let X be a metric space and let $x\in X.$ Suppose $x$ is an interior point in some topology $T$on $X.$ This means, $X$ is an interior point of the topological space $(X,T).$ Will $x$ also be an interior point of the metric space $X$ ?
@ThomasFinley Yes.
Well, if the topologies agree that is.
@ThomasFinley interior point of a topological space? There's no such thing
13:51
@Jakobian I'm really sorry, I meant an interior point of a subset $A$ of $X.$
Then no in general
If the topology generated by the metric is the same as $T$, however, then this will be the same
We know if $W$ is a d-dim subspace of n-dim $V$, then there exists $f_{d+1},f_{d+2} \cdots f_{n} \in \mathfrak{L}(V,\mathbb{F})$, (i.e, the dual space) so that $ker(f_{d+1})\cap ker(f_{d+2}) \cap \cdots \cap ker(f_{n})=W$, and, we find these same functionals form the basis for the annihilator of $W$, $W^0$. But I ask the reverse, it neednt be true that, given a basis of $W^0$ ($f'_{d+1} \cdots f'_n$), we can say that $ker(f'_{d+1})\cap ker(f'_{d+2}) \cap \cdots \cap ker(f'_{n})=W$?
"Let X be a metric space and let $x\in X.$ Suppose $x$ is an interior point of some subset A (of $X$) when we consider a topology say, $T$ on $X.$ This means, $x$ is an interior point of $A$ if we are considering the topological space as $(X,T).$ Will $x$ also be an interior point of $A$ when we consider $(X,d)$ as a metric space ?
@Jakobian I've framed my question accurately.
Ok, u say that it's not the case in general.
Well I agree with you.
Here's my reasoning:
If there's no connection between the metric and the topology then we don't really have anything to go off of. The choices here are pretty arbitrary
@user20458579510081670432 What absolute twaddle.
@ThomasFinley Let me rephrase your question: let $X$ be a set, and let $T$ and $T'$ be two topologies on that set. If $U$ is open in $(X,T)$, must $U$ be open in $(X, T')$?
14:02
Let $X=\Bbb R^2$ be the metric space with the Euclidean metric. Let A be the ' "inside" of the unit circle centered at the origin O.' Let $T$ be a topology on $X$ such that $T=\{(6,0),(7,0),\Bbb R^2,\emptyset\}.$ Then, there does not exist an open set $U$ (,i.e. a member $U$ of $T$ since, memebers of $T$ are called open sets...) such that, $(0,0)\in U$ satisfying $U\subseteq A.$ So, this means, $(0,0)=O$ is not an interior point of $A.$
However, if we consider $(X,d)$ as a metric space then obviously, $O$ is an interior point of $A.$
@ThomasFinley Your $T$ is not a topology. It is not closed under unions.
you're missing an element
@XanderHenderson I am using the defn involving open sets of a topology
@SineoftheTime you're right
@XanderHenderson I get it.
@nickbros123 if $f'_i(v) = 0$, then $f_i(v) = 0$ as well, so $v\in W$
@ThomasFinley Okay, fine. That set isn't a topology.
It isn't closed under unions.
14:05
I missed the element $\{6,0),(7,0)\}$ in $T.$ Ok, so, please consider my $T$ with this missing element.
@XanderHenderson I get it. The element $\{6,0),(7,0)\}$ was missed.
Too complicated for me. Just take discrete and usual topology on R and consider any singleton
Here's a corrected version of my argument:
@Jakobian thanks, now I understand the proof
Let $X=\Bbb R^2$ be the metric space with the Euclidean metric. Let A be the ' "inside" of the unit circle centered at the origin O.' Let $T$ be a topology on $X$ such that $T=\{\{(6,0)\},\{(7,0)\},\{(6,0),(7,0),\Bbb R^2,\emptyset\}.$ Then, there does not exist an open set $U$ (,i.e. a member $U$ of $T$ since, memebers of $T$ are called open sets...) such that, $(0,0)\in U$ satisfying $U\subseteq A.$ So, this means, $(0,0)=O$ is not an interior point of $A.$
However, if we consider $(X,d)$ as a metric space then obviously, $O$ is an interior point of $A.$
@ThomasFinley I genuinely do not understand what it is that you are trying to show, here.
14:10
Phew! Finally it seems perfect to me.
@XanderHenderson I am trying to show:
A point $a\in A$ may or may not be an interior point of $a$ if we consider $X$ as a metric space or a topological space with some arbitrary topology $T$ on $X.$
That's what I wanted to show.
There is no reason for this example to be so complicated
@Jakobian Actually, it came naturally in my head :?). It just popped out of nowhere. But won't you agree with my argument?
@ThomasFinley Again, what you seem to want to show is that a space can have multiple topologies defined on it. Why make the argument so very complicated?
What is the end goal?
@XanderHenderson A point $a\in A$ may or may not be an interior point of $a$ if we consider $X$ as a metric space or a topological space with some arbitrary topology $T$ on $X.$
That's my end goal.
Yes, and?
Why?
Why do you care about that statement?
14:15
@XanderHenderson I was having a confusion regarding it's validity. So, I went on showing it.
@ThomasFinley Whether a subset is open or not depends on what topology you give to the whole set
But I hope my arguments are accurate, right? I tried to make my arguments as precise as possible.
@SoumikMukherjee yes.. That's what it seems to me.
@ThomasFinley This is not about how it "seems to you". It is a fact: whether a set is open or not is entirely dependent upon what topology you have endowed the set with.
One can endow a set with many different topologies, and these different topologies will have different properties.
This should not be surprising...
@XanderHenderson I understand.
But one question is: I know that my arguments seems complicated. But does it seem "valid" to you?
It does to me. But is it really is? Or did I miss anything?
@ThomasFinley I don't understand what your actual end goal is. If all you you want to do is show that a point can be in the interior of some set in one topology, and not another---you've done that. But this is hardly a surprising or interesting result, and there are likely much more minimal examples.
At the very least, why construct an example in $\mathbb{R}^2$, when $\mathbb{R}$ would work? Why consider the indiscrete topology with two extra singleton points thrown in, when adding a single point would do the job?
You've made the argument overly complicated.
And I still don't understand why you want to show that a point can be in the interior of a set with respect to one topology, but not another.
14:31
@Ben In general, if you have a (pointed) map $f\colon X\rightarrow Y$ and consider the the Barratt-Puppe sequence $X\rightarrow Y\rightarrow C_f\rightarrow\Sigma X\rightarrow\dotsc$, there is also a coaction $C_f\rightarrow\Sigma X\vee C_f$ obtained by collapsing a horizontal copy of $X$ in $C_f$ to a point.
If you now consider (pointed) maps into a space $T$, you obtain the usual LES of pointed sets, but also a map $[\Sigma X,T]\times[C_f,T]\rightarrow[C_f,T]$, which turns out to be a group action. You can check that the orbits of this action are precisely the fibers of the restriction map
That said, we still need more input to actually finish the computation...
@XanderHenderson I get your point. Also, you've improved my concept of this "whole" thing, as usual. Thanks a lot! I think I have mentioned it before, but just in case if I hadn't: Having a conversation with you is always meaningful and a delight for me!
@Thorgott Thank you! I've found this in More Concise as well.
ah, neat that it's in there
this fact is slightly under-appreciated imo
yeah
perhaps more interesting is the case for fibrations
yeah, that recovers monodromy
14:44
not just that, but stuff like "the l.e.s on homotopy groups associated to a fibration is a sequence of $\pi_1 E$-groups"
you can define a bunch of actions, all of which turn out to be compatible
14:57
I have a question, I evaluated the integral $\int 2x \sin x dx = -2x \cos(x) + 2\sin(x) + C$ , now I have to evaluate $\int \frac{2x\sin x}{e^x} dx$, Is there any way to use the fact that I already know the numerator? Or does the integral change completely?
Otherwise I can write $2 \int x \cdot e^{-x} \sin(x)$ and integrate by parts where $f = x$ and $g' = e^{-x} \sin(x)$
do you have an argument that the composition $\mathbb{R}P^{2n+1}\rightarrow S^{2n+1}\rightarrow S^{2n}$ of the collapse and the suspended Hopf fibration is non-trivial?
I don't think knowing an antiderivative of $2x\sin x$ helps, since then if you integrate by parts you get $\int x\cos x e^{-x}dx$ and $\int \sin x e^{-x}dx$
cheat and use wolfram :)
@Thorgott The composition $S^{2n + 1} \to \mathbb{R}\mathrm{P}^{2n + 1} \to S^{2n + 1}$ where the first map is the covering induces multiplication by 2 on $H_{2n + 1}({{-}})$, I think?
@SineoftheTime This integral seems quite long and complicated to me
Because just to find g' i have to integrate by parts
yeah I know
did this appear in an exam?
15:07
yeah, but the suspended Hopf map is $2$-torsion
@SineoftheTime Actually I'm doing a differential equation that I've already done with the similarity method, I wanted to see what came out with the variation of the parameters
ok
since you already know the procedure, I think you can use Wolfram
Yes, but I think that when there is a sin and cos i must proceed by similarity
in this case it was a little different
Because it is $y'' - y = 2x \sin x$
So I was in the case of $Q(x) \sin(\beta x)$
Then I checked whether $i\beta$ was a solution of $\lambda^2 - 1 =0$, where $i^2 = -1$
And since it was not a solution then I was in the case $(A_0 + A_1 x) \cdot \cos(x) + (B_0 + B_1 x) \cdot \sin(x)$
15:22
looks good to me
15:59
@Jakobian could you elaborate? I m not sure I am following
16:09
@Thorgott I can't think of anything that works.
@SineoftheTime 👍
what problem are you working on?
yeah, me neither
this question determines if $[\mathbb{R}P^{n+1},S^n]$ contains $1$ or $2$ elements for odd $n$
for even $n$, it contains between $2$ and $4$ elements and the situation is even less clear to me
this might be a good question to post on main
Do you want to do the honors? You've definitely gotten farther than me (I don't even quite see how you get to that case distinction for odd $n$).
16:39
ok, I'll do it in a bit
16:51
just don't use math frak
@SineoftheTime I just finished this exercise: Study the following differential form $\omega(x,y) = \left(\ln(x+y) + \frac{x}{x+y}\right) dx + \frac{x}{x+y} dy$, and calculate the work along the parabola arc $y=x^2$ in the interval $(1, 3)$
mathfrak was invented by Satan himself!
I used it for one letter
It smells of brimstone, and tastes of fire.
one letter!
16:53
@XanderHenderson it looks beautiful, what do you mean
$\mathfrak{L}(V,W)$ wow thats beauty
@nickbros123 THE POWER OF MATHSCR COMPELS YOU!
just testing: $\mathscr{L}(V,W)$
damn this also looks beautiful
I found that the partial derivatives match, $D = \{(x,y) \in \Bbb R^2 : x + y > 0\}$ , so it should be a simply connected set, so I calculated the work as $W = \int_{\gamma} \omega = \phi(3,9) - \phi(1,1)$
theoretically so because if $x \in [1,3]$ then when $x=1 \Rightarrow y =1$ , when $x=3 \Rightarrow y= 9$
$\gamma(t)=(t,t^2)$, $\gamma(1)=(1,1)$ and $\gamma(3)=(3,9)$
@Pizza yep, I checked and the p.d. indeed match
So I started calculating $\int \ln(x+y) dx + \int \frac{x}{x+y} dx$
17:02
to see if the result matches?
@Pizza what you wrote here does not make sense
Why? $\omega = d\phi$
$\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial x} = \ln(x + y) + \frac{x}{x + y}$
Shouldn't I start by integrating this?
It's better to start with $\phi_y$
I just posted a non math frak question 🤭
let's compare statistically
17:09
@SineoftheTime But is it wrong as I did? I don't understand :(
@Pizza yes, I misinterpreted your previous message
@Pizza no, it's ok
yes maybe I should have specified what I meant
I gotta farm now
not a farm with cows or pigs
@SineoftheTime Because it's easier if I start like this ?
yes :)
try to belive
17:12
But in this case because the integral is simpler, it's not always like this, right?
in the sense that if the integral was simpler on $\phi_x$ it was better to start from there
@Debug $$\sum_{p ~\mathrm{prime}}(\log p^2)~ K_1 ~(\log p^2) \le1.$$
prove this
Anyway I'll try now
I'm a big strict upper bound guy
My course forcing me to let go of the love of my life Hoffman & Kunze- Linear algebra to pick up Sheldon Axler -Linear Algebra. At my lowest rn :'(
woww $p^2$ implies primes squared...
17:15
@Pizza correct
@SineoftheTime however from the integral $\int \frac{x}{x+y} dy$ I get $x+y-y\cdot \ln(x+y) + C$ so I can also "cancel" that $x$ because it would be contained in $C$
how do you get that expression?
I get $x\log(x+y)$
wait ....
I got confused with the previous one
To be precise, it should be $x\log(x+y)+c(x)$
I corrected it
@SineoftheTime yes
17:26
@nickbros123 I can. But what on
@SineoftheTime $\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial y} = \frac{\partial }{\partial y}x\log(x+y)+c(x)$
If $f'_i$ is a basis of $W^0$ then you can write $f_j = \sum a_i f'_i$. So $f_j(v) = \sum a_i f'_i(v) = 0$
@Pizza that's correct, but does not add new infos
since $\phi=x\log(x+y)+c(x)$, now compute $\phi_x$ and let it equal to $\omega_1$
@SineoftheTime I need to calculate the partial derivative of xlog(...) + c(x), right?
yes, but wrt $x$
17:34
Yes, so it was $\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial x} = \frac{\partial }{\partial x}x\log(x+y)+c(x)$
@Jakobian are you saying that since $\{f'\}$ functionals can be represented as linear combinations of $\{ f\}$, if $\alpha$ is in the kernel of every $f_j \in \{f_j\}$, then $\alpha$ is in the kernel of the particular $f'_i$ we are writing as a linear combination?
$\ln(x+y) + \frac{x}{x+y} + c'(x) = \ln(x+y) + \frac{x}{x+y}$
@Jakobian so if $\alpha \in ker(f_{d+1})\cap ker(f_{d+2}) \cdots \cap ker(f_{n})$, then $\alpha \in ker(f'_{d+1}) \cap ker(f'_{d+2}) \cdots ker(f'_{n})$, and the same procedure can be done by treating $\{ f'_j \}$ as the primary basis and representing $\{f_i\}$ as a linear combo to get the reverse result, so the kernel intersections must be one and the same
$c'(x) = 0$
17:38
is this what u were saying?
so I get $x \ln(x+y) + 0$
one primitive is $x\log(x+y)$
In general $\phi=x\log(x+y)+k$ with $k\in \Bbb R$
oh no, there's still one step missing
Sorry
@SineoftheTime Nonsense! $\phi = \frac{1}{2}(1 + \sqrt{5})$. Silly goose!
$\int c'(x) dx$ = $\int 0 dx$, so $c(x) = k$
@nickbros123 not exactly but what you have is good too
:(
@Pizza you can choose $k=0$
There's so much integration in the chat that I've stopped paying attention
@XanderHenderson what is the best letter to make the substitution?
@Jakobian sorry for flooding the chat with my computation :(
17:46
same
I'm not complaining or anything
It's nice to see the chat active, even if I totally ignore whatever is happening
I just wouldn't be able to keep up with it unless I'd dedicate myself to it
@SineoftheTime Anyway I got $3 \log(12) - \log(2)$
honestly my best question ever
has 1 upvote
@Jakobian 👍
my worst has like 33
strange
17:52
@Pizza ggs
1
Q: Does there exist a harmonic map $F: (S,g_0)\to T^2 $ for which $F(\alpha_u(t))$ and $F(\beta_v(t))$ are all geodesics?

zeta spaceLet $S=[0,1]^2$. Ignoring issues having to do with boundaries and corners, a chart is a diffeomorphism $\varphi \colon S \to S$. Let $g_0$ denote the flat (euclidean) metric. Given a chart $\varphi \colon (S, g_0) \to (S, g_0)$, which need not be an isometry, consider the curves $\alpha_u(t)=\var...

my best question of all time
actually i should ask that on Mathoverflow because the answer is only a reformulation
🍟🍔🍕🍫🥐🥯🌮🥪🌭🍩🍪🍎🍓🥝🍐🌽🥦🧅🥕🥦🥒🍅🌶️
where are the fruits and veggies?
@Gian'sPizzeria Can I buy something?
17:59
I want pizza and chips
ok!
🚛💨💨💨
I sent the products
🍔🍫🥐🥯🌮🥪🌭🍩🍪🍎🍓🥝🍐🌽🥦🧅🥕🥦🥒🍅🌶️
Now i have this
18:46
I'm high on math right now
I proved the pythagorean theorem^
PWOW (proof without words)
$$I(s)=2\sum_{n\in \Bbb N} \int_{J=(0,n^{-s/2})} e^{\frac{\log^2({n^{s/2}})}{\log t}}~dt$$
19:27
@Gian'sPizzeria No such animal. All of math is overloaded. I was making a dumb joke.
I meant the best letter to use when substituting in integrals, for example wolfram uses u, but others use t.
@Gian'sPizzeria It doesn't matter.
@zetaspace I'm high (on math?) right now
20:02
It's very funny that one of the ways Lurie recommends to deal with size issues in HTT is to simply ignore them
There's no problem as long as you don't acknowledge there's a problem, right
and size issues are for chumps anyways
The field $\mathbb F_2(x)$ has no roots of unity (other than $1$). For $y\in\mathbb F_2(x)$, can an extension $\mathbb F_2(x)(\sqrt y)$ contain a root of unity?
@mr_e_man is the answer not immediately "no" for degree reasons?
I don't see it.
20:28
I may be wrong.
21:11
I have a basic doubt. Does an outer measure satisfy continuity from above and below? The reason I am asking is because I am reading a solution to an exercise in Folland's (exercise 18b in section 1.4); we have a sequence of sets such that $\mu^\ast(A_k)\leq 1/k$, where $\mu^\ast$ is an outer measure. Then we put $A=\bigcap_1^\infty A_k$, and it is claimed that $\mu^\ast(A)=0$.
@psie not in general
ok
Note that an outer measure is always monotone, so $\mu^*(A)\leq \mu^*(A_k)\leq 1/k$
ah, hence the claim, I see. Thanks.
@psie to elaborate, I think it does assume continuity from one side, but not the other
but, measures don't even have continuity from above and below in general so...
probability measures do, but that's different
21:19
that is awesome
@Jakobian do you have an example of a measure that doesn't? I thought that it is a simple consequence of countable additivity of measure that if $(A_i)$ is an increasing sequence of sets, then $\mu\left(\bigcup_1^\infty A_i\right)=\lim_{i\to\infty} \mu(A_i)$ (and similarly for decreasing sequence of sets).
@psie Lebesgue measure
psie you at least have stuff like e.g. the decreasing sequence of sets [n, infty) in R, n = 1, 2, 3, ..., where the measure of each set is infinite but the measure of the intersection is 0
@BenSteffan yet he loves talking about regular cardinals when it comes to accessibility
@leslietownes true, for decreasing sequence of sets we need to add the condition that $\mu(A_n)<\infty$ for some $n\in\mathbb N$.
21:28
@Thorgott Nice, I'll look at it in a sec
To be entirely fair, he does offer it as one of three options
@psie the one for decreasing sequences should still be false for outer measures, I think, because outer measures act badly with respect to the set differences, even finite outer measures
@psie yeah it's false
ah, ok
22:28
So, we start with the RHS and try to simplify it somehow to end up with trace, right? But what can we simplify there..?
22:58
Let $\mathcal A\subset\mathcal P(X)$ be an algebra, $\mathcal A_\sigma$ the collection of countable unions of sets in $\mathcal A$, and $\mathcal A_{\sigma\delta}$ the collection of countable intersections of sets in $\mathcal A_\sigma$. Let $\mu_0$ be a premeasure on $\mathcal A$ and $\mu^\ast$ the induced outer measure.
Is it true that if $B\in\mathcal A_{\sigma\delta}$, then $B$ is $\mu^\ast$-measurable?
Background behind my question; this is from an exercise in Folland's book (Exercise 1.18), and I think I have a solution if the above is true, but I'm not sure about.
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