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00:00
i also have one of istvan fary's books, although he is less famous because he didn't write a famous textbook
ben: you should appropriate it and sell it online for big bux
@Thorgott I think so. Say $M$ is $n$-dimensional. Consider $(M \times I) \#_p X$ for some $(n+1)$-manifold $X$, where $p \in M \times I$ is an interior point. Consider the map $(M \times I) \#_p X \to M \times I \to M$, where the first map is $(M \times I) \#_p X \to (M \times I) \vee_p X \to M \times I$, where the first map is crushing the connect sum sphere to a point and the second map is projection to first factor, and the second map is projection to first factor
I hope you don't mind my recursive writing
@leslietownes I can just get things signed by Peter Scholze for the same effect
although I'm not sure anybody outside of bonn really cares
I could sell Scholze fan merch to the new undergrads, hmm
maybe more money in just stealing his stuff and collecting a "reward" for locating the lost property
I smell a capitalism
Hello people, I come from the physics site but I have a math related question
00:04
yes, we got to "selling someone's stuff back to them" very quickly because markets are efficient
I think a lot of people are into algebraic geometry and what not, the novel things, and in particular they are Scholze fans (be it if they understand his work or not)
it's at least true here locally
@BalarkaSen ah you're right, I was somehow looking at a picture of taking connected sum of a cylinder and a torus and it (surprisingly) isn't immediately clear, but it does work out
I recently got stood up on a study date and instead attended a talk where I learnt what a solid abelian group is
the opposite of a liquid abelian group, duh
00:06
I think its true everywhere, to a lesser extent. A weird phenomena
@Thorgott ...I'm not entirely sure whether that's actually a thing or not :)
liquid vector spaces are a thing
what is a liquid vector space?
right now I think things are either liquid, solid, or condensed
if liquid vector spaces are a thing, surely liquid abelian groups are too
is there also a gaseous vector space
00:07
has Scholze invented gas yet?
@BalarkaSen haven't the faintest. you can read about them in Scholze's papers :)))
@Thorgott people have been joking about this here for a while
and what about plasmic groups, while we're at it
when we consider a function f and a small perturbation, which would be a small added term in mathematical language, one write:
$f(x+\epsilon)=f(x)+\epsilon f'(x)$.

Now for a functional the expression is:
$J[f(x)+\epsilon\delta(x-y)]=J[f(x)]+ \epsilon \delta(x-y)$. Can someone help me understand this expression and the logic behind it?
what's a bose-einstein condensate ring
solid, liquid (as in states of matter)
condensed (as in milk)
just Scholze things
@imbAF calculus of variations
00:08
but why delta?
I imagine they are trying to get you through Euler-Lagrange formula
Of course, I am through, but I was looking at some functionals
I like and want to have a clean mathematical writing of stuff
I don't like half-assed writings, which plagues physics
But I cannot find the correct one
@Thorgott you shouldn't feel too safe: a lot of this is happening in $\infty$-category land and may crash somewhere near you not too far in the future
although I guess I'm more prone to it
well, I read about this from Gelfand and I don't think he provides the appropriate mathematical setting in which to make sense of such expressions
what with people talking about "animation" of rings and stuff
00:10
@BenSteffan i pass
I'm a fan of animation as an art form, can't wait to learn how to do it myself :)
@BenSteffan near 0K boson "gas" shaped as a ring because of topological monopole defects
@imbAF words conjured up by the utterly deranged
why?
people here also care about Scholze's work, but moreso the actual algebra
00:12
@BalarkaSen wise choice (but for how long)
@BalarkaSen that's just physics
You perform an experiment at near 0K temperature, you consider a bosonic gas, because paulis principle doesn't apply, which means all the bosons are in the same state=same energy
he apparently has this idea of turning a number field into a condensed stack over Berkovich space with an $\mathbb{R}_+$-action whose length $p$ orbits correspond to primes over $p$ or something
and then because of defects in the structure, the physical configuration is similar to a ring
what is a topological monopole
00:13
@Thorgott I dare you to look me straight in the eye while saying this and not burst out laughing
@Thorgott still saner than Alain Connes
@Balarka but the result is nonsense, no? assume $N$ has stably trivial normal bundle, then you're asking for a normal map $f$ to simply mean $TM$ is stably trivial, right?
@BalarkaSen simply said, its a framework where one associates a field (magnetic) configuration with a particle-like system
so take a manifold with stably trivial normal bundle, the trivial cobordism and take connected sum with something really ugly, the resulting space surely does not have stably trivial tangent bundle
topology in itself applied in condensed matter physics is crazy enough
00:16
@BalarkaSen lol
@BenSteffan tough challenge, but I think I can do it
I've spent an entire day at an AG in Heidelberg once, you learn to persevere
Can someone help me with my question?
Or even better , can someone write it in a more rigorous way and explain to me
how can one, make the proper jump from how we express f(x+\delta\epsilon)
to J[f(x)+\delta(x-y)]
I'm not equipped to explain this right now, but the keyword you should look up is "calculus of variations"
@Thorgott Hm, let's see. Normality of $f$ says $f^* \nu(M) \oplus T((M \times I) \#_p X)$ must be stably trivial. Already true along $M \times I$
Also true along $X$, because the retract map $f$ collapses $X$ to a point
@Thorgott ok
Oh, guess not. I need $X$ to be stably trivial?
00:19
@imbAF if you want something rigorous then try Calculus of variations I by Giaquinta and Hildrebrandt
yeah, I think so, you should be left with $TX$
the textbook seems to derive everything formally, in a precise way
@Jakobian wtf, I thought that was just a concept, that's a whole branch of math?
Well thanks anyway
if every topic that had a textbook written on it was a branch, there would be a lot of branches
trees in math should really be called bushes
00:23
@Thorgott Thanks! You're right, this is nonsense
it's so painful to do physics, and in every step of the way
2 or 3 whole new maths are added
to the list of books that one needs to read to have an understanding
@imbAF I don't know, it might be a sub-branch of PDE/ODE theory/analysis, but I don't know much about it to tell you
ok
And in virtue of this I also understood what the sensible thing should be. That helped a lot!
@imbAF minus the mathematics, that goes for every piece of science/knowledge
00:26
no problem, glad to have helped in spite of not really having geometric insight :)
yeah but like, I mean in physics we take things at face value sometimes, since stuff are proven by mathematicians, but still
the more I read the less I know and the more I need to read
which is like filling a glass of water with a hole in the bottom
you can't know everything
thats why people specialize
Well you need to know A LOT for QFT and idk how to do it
as for Euler-Lagrange, you need to ask yourself if you really need to have a proper derivation of the formula
or can you settle for hand-waving
of course you can settle for hand-waving
But I find it quite a good thing to have a proper, rigorous, only once, derivation of the definition
and that is it
00:29
I remember the derivation not actually being that difficult, but, at the same time, I've also forgotten it, so who knows
@Thorgott did you read a formal derivation? I only read the one in Gelfand and Fomin and I remember the proof was a little bit of hand-waving
they only give you idea for why it holds iirc
perhaps the thing I remember doing is actually not whatever general statement that is meant here
Actually apart from $\delta(....)$
my suspicion was correct, as in there is a correspondence
I just remember doing some basic calculus of variations in Riemannian geometry to characterize geodesics
yeah I need Riemannian geometry in physics
differential geometry, Riemann geometry, group theory, complex analysis
linear algebra of course too
01:11
Way to transport multigraph $\mathcal I_{\Gamma} \to \Bbb R^3$ enriched with line bundle to $\Bbb C$? Can derive meromorphic function (rational in fact) by forming $\zeta_{\mathcal I_{\Gamma}}(u)$ (Ihara zeta function for regular multigraph). Know how to associate multigraph (w/o embedding) to meromorphic function on $\Bbb C$, but can do complexification of line bundle in $\Bbb R^3$ to $\Bbb C$?
which will sit in $\Bbb C^3$ ideally
It will probably take a few months to read Hatcher and figure out how to complexify the line bundle. The more time consuming part is to verify whether $\mathrm{Hol}(\mathcal V_{\mathcal I_{\Gamma}})$ is dual to the poles/zeros of $\zeta_{\mathcal I_{\Gamma}}$
I know probably not a popular opinion
Whether the fixed points of the holonomy group of the line bundle are dual to the... etc.
and this is very clearly not about the Riemann zeta function
in fact the analogous riemann hypothesis for Ihara zeta function for k-regular graphs is already proven
 
6 hours later…
07:21
Apparently as of 2023 its still unknown if the box product of countably many real numbers can be proven to be $T_4$ in ZFC (it's $T_4$ by a theorem of Rudin if CH holds)
08:13
Consider the definition of the integral of a real-valued measurable function $f:E\to\mathbb R$, namely if $\int |f|\,\mathrm{d}\mu<\infty$, then $$\int f\,\mathrm{d}\mu=\int f^+\,\mathrm{d}\mu-\int f^-\,\mathrm{d}\mu.$$The author of my book claims this definition is consistent with the one for nonnegative functions. How? For nonnegative functions, we take the supremum of integrals of simple functions $\phi$ that are $\leq f$. How can these definitions coincide?
perhaps it would help if you thought about this
08:33
psie please note that this isn't "the" definition of the integral, it's "a" definition of the integral, under a presumption that one has already defined int [blah] dmu for nonnegative [blah], and this "definition" is only a definition of one in terms of the other, i.e. it assumes that int [blah] dmu has an understood meaning for nonnegative [blah], as a kind of black box
if f happens to be nonnegative, see jakobian's remark
 
1 hour later…
09:46
A Malament–Hogarth (M-H) spacetime, named after David B. Malament and Mark Hogarth, is a relativistic spacetime that possesses the following property: there exists a worldline λ {\displaystyle \lambda } and an event p such that all events along λ {\displaystyle \lambda } are a finite interval in the past of p, but the proper time along λ {\displaystyle \lambda } is infinite. The event p is known as an M-H event. The boundary between events with the M-H property and...
i think, if spacetime were like this, one could explicitly verify things like the twin prime conjecture without having to prove it from axioms
 
2 hours later…
11:44
@RyderRude and all that is required is that you cross the event horizon of a black hole and then survive beyond the heat death of the universe!
@XanderHenderson is this one of those "back in my days, to get to school I had to..." bits
3
12:17
lol
@RyderRude this seems interesting
time to reinvigorate my interest in physics
before that let me see the definition of reinvigorate
12:59
@XanderHenderson lolol
@Thorgott xD
@nickbros123 one must be careful with rigor
i think Turing's initial idea assumed infinite time computations couldn't be done and that there was no true randomness
but the former seems to be ruled out by Relativity and the latter by Quantum Mechanics
so it seems the physical world is more than a computer. it is a hypercomputer
14:03
@RyderRude I don't think that it is unreasonable to assume that infinite computations can't be done. There is no practical or reasonable way of doing them.
@XanderHenderson it is not unreasonable, yes
but with our understanding of time modified, we should look out for potential changes in our understanding of computability
time was a big part of the notion of computability
@RyderRude From a mathematical point of view, this doesn't matter. Turing already could have assumed infinite time---the mathematical tools for that have existed for centuries.
He didn't, because that doesn't match any practical part of the real world.
Again, what you are proposing send to require crossing the event horizon of a black hole and surviving the heat death of the universe. And Hawking decay would have to stop being a thing.
14:30
@XanderHenderson i just think that hypotheses like Church Turing theses are about physics as much as they r about math. e.g. this paper sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0096300305008398
like, these hypotheses deal with physical limitations
@XanderHenderson it is fantasy for now. but I think the relevant part is that our understanding of time has been modified. this is one of the things that could lead to hypercomputability. physics does not have to stay computable. i think future quantum gravity theories could offer something beyond
there also seems to be true randomness in the universe which is non computable
@XanderHenderson i agree. it remains a reasonable assumption
15:15
What are some math jobs that make heavy use of calculus?
Besides any programming profession
(I quit programming after 10 years)
michael: other than teaching calculus? :)
15:46
What are some math jobs
teaching math. And?
if you do it right, even teaching calculus doesn't make 'heavy use' of calculus
algorithmic trader
quantitative analyst
but on second thought those probably use more of markov chains and statistical analysis
@leslietownes wdym
Calculus Artist - someone who uses heavy calculus to make artwork?
mathematical artwork is a big thing
think: i am mostly being facetious but in my experience calculus is one of the easiest classes to prepare for because anyone qualified to teach it has seen literally everything that can come up in the class
and the only people filling page after page with calculus are students who are about to maybe get a D in it
the non facetious version of my comment is that people who are good at calculus are often able to use less paper than people who aren't, hence, the more you know, the less 'heavy use' you make of the techniques
experience makes you more efficient at seeing what is necessary and what isn't
sure, it builds upon itself
can you transport a holonomy group of a line bundle to complex space?
Its possible to complexify a line bundle (say its embedded in R^3) to a $\Bbb C$ one, which should be sitting in C^3
I think that it is kind of weird to expect there to be jobs which "make heavy use of calculus". Everything that is taught in an undergraduate calculus class is done pretty well by computers. Professionals rarely get their hands dirty with those tools directly. The goal is to be "good enough" to check the inputs and outputs.
No one "does calculus" in the professional world.
I mean, I'm an analyst, and I try to avoid "doing calculus" whenever I can.
But how does the jibe with Hol(line bundle) extension?
If we assume it is so - the question becomes how do we interpret the complexified holonomy group of the bundle and what conditions ensure an embedding of the bundle into complex space?
16:12
there's some calculus in ML like maybe Lagrange multipliers etc, basic stuff (ML can, however, go higher than calculus , like topology, geometry etc), but the money is in the tensorflow, scikitlearn, keras, etc, so while many algorithms use calculus for proofs / derivations, no one is paid to do that.

Either you're paid to be good at programming- aforementioned scikitlearn, pytorch stuff etc, or you're paid (as an academic) to research new algorithms, and the math used here can go way higher than calculus (usually does). But also, idk what heavy use means
Any physicists in the house?
unfortunately
damn jakobian didnt know u were a physicist
because its not true
say you have a piecewise defined connection, that fails to be gauge equivalent because the connections fail to coincide, and are loosely speaking 'undefined'
but otoh the line bundle with that connection vanishes the points where the connection(s) are undefined
are these compatible?
and is it physical?
16:31
hi
16:42
If $f:E\to\mathbb R$, then we have $\left|\int f\,\mathrm{d}\mu\right|\leq\int |f|\,\mathrm{d}\mu$. If $f$ is complex-valued, my book argues that $$\left|\int f\,\mathrm{d}\mu\right|=\sup_{a\in\mathbb C,|a|=1}a\cdot \int f\,\mathrm{d}\mu=\sup_{a\in\mathbb C,|a|=1}\int a\cdot f\,\mathrm{d}\mu,$$where $a\cdot z$ denotes the Euclidean scalar product on $\mathbb C$ identified with $\mathbb R^2$.
I wonder
1) What is the author using in the first equality? Why does the second equality hold?
2) Is the final expression on the right simply $\int |f|\,\mathrm{d}\mu$?
what book is this? what does "sup" mean for complex numbers?
if mu is a probability measure and f is identically 1 this is an assertion that 1 = sup_{a in C, |a| = 1} a, but what is "sup" independently of this assertion
@leslietownes it's this book. Previously it was established that $f\mapsto\int f\,\mathrm{d}\mu$ is a linear functional on $\mathcal L^1(E,\mathcal A,\mu)$, the space of all real-valued integrable functions. I don't know what $\sup$ means here, but we are taking the $\sup$ of a set of real numbers. It reminds me of the operator norm, but I'm not sure.
you can't just say "we are taking the sup of a set of real numbers" if int f dmu is 1
i'd junk the book
there's a proof in rudin's PMA about |int f| <= int |f| that starts by picking a unimodular scalar so that c int f = |int f|
i suggest reading that for whatever it is worth and not reading this
i'm assuming that whatever this person means by their stuff they are just using the fact that given any complex number w there is a unimodular c so that cw = |w|
you should be focusing on concepts (which are eternal and unchanging) and not the particulars of textbooks (which are always subject to errata and revision)
16:58
nothing is eternal :(
17:31
Consider the vector space $\mathbb{R}^3$ and the following subspaces:
$V = \{(x, y, z) \in \mathbb{R}^3 : x - 2y = 0 \text{ and } y + 2z = 0\}, \quad
W = \{(x, y, z) \in \mathbb{R}^3 : x + y - z = 0\}$
Determine the dimension and a basis for $V + W$.
mo: have you done anything? e.g. computed dimensions of V and W? do you know the possible dimensions of V+W?
yes, im having problem typing
wait
the trickiest part of this type of exercise is maybe that there isn't just one way to do it, but a lot of ways to do it
$x - 2y = 0 \implies x = 2y, \quad y + 2z = 0 \implies y = -2z, \quad x = -4z$
$(x, y, z) = (-4z, -2z, z) = z(-4, -2, 1)$
Basis of V : $\{(-4, -2, 1)\}, \quad (\dim V = 1)$
if ted were here he'd say to think geometrically. V is a line through the origin. W is a plane through the origin. V+W contains both V and W and for geometric understanding reasons will therefore be either W (if V is contained in W) or all of R^3 (if V is not contained in W)
17:37
$x + y - z = 0 \implies x = z - y$
$(x, y, z) = t(-1, 1, 0) + s(1, 0, 1), \quad t, s \in \mathbb{R}$
Basis of $W$: $\{(-1, 1, 0), (1, 0, 1)\}$, $\quad (\dim W = 2).$
I've reached this point (if I've done it right)
the dimensions sound right to me (i haven't done any calculations) and the (assumed but checkable) fact that (-4, -2, 1) is in V and not in W would then imply that V+W = R^3
if you were to feed an exercise of this type into a machine, one way of framing it would be to taking as inputs two matrices A and B with the same number of columns (whose nullspaces define V and W respectively) and returning a basis for V + W by e.g. using some recipe for computing a basis for the nullspace of a matrix as a black box, putting those basis elements as rows [or columns], and then using some recipe for computing a basis for the row (or column) space of a matrix as a black box
@leslietownes so I just need to join the bases of V and W
sure, in this case you can get a basis for V+W by separately computing bases for V and W and just putting those two lists of vectors together
in general, "a basis for V together with a basis for W" will only be a spanning set for V + W, i.e. it might be linearly dependent, and you may need to do calculations to identify how you can remove vectors from that list (or otherwise modify it) without changing the span
so I have to check if the union is linearly independent?
$a(-4, -2, 1) + b(-1, 1, 0) + c(1, 0, 1) = (0, 0, 0)$
$\begin{cases}
-4a - b + c = 0 \\
-2a + b = 0 \\
a + c = 0
\end{cases} $
yes i get a = 0, b = 0, c = 0
The union $\{(-4, -2, 1), (-1, 1, 0), (1, 0, 1)\}$ is linearly independent. So it is a basis for $V + W$
@leslietownes right?
17:54
i haven't double checked the calculations but if they are correct that is a right answer
note that (1,0,0), (0,1,0), (0,0,1) or literally any other basis of R^3 would also be a right answer
i'm not sure if you 'have to' check that the union is linearly independent, there are surrounding facts that make this redundant (e.g. the fact that V intersect W is {0}, which is geometrically clear from the fact that V is a line through the origin that does not lie in W, guarantees this without calculation)
but that "without calculation" is leaning on a geometric understanding of subspaces of R^3
your calculations (if they are correct) are a more concrete verification of the algebraic fact
oh okay, thanks!
18:49
Is it true that for $v\in\mathbb R^2$, $$|v| = \sup_{\substack{u \in \mathbb{R}^2 \\ |u| = 1}} \left\langle u, v \right\rangle$$where $\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle$ is the Euclidean dot product? By Cauchy-Schwarz, we have $\left< u, v \right> \leq |v|$ for any $u\in\mathbb R^2$ with $|u|=1$, and equality holds for $u=v/|v|$. I just don't see why one would take the $\sup$ in the expression above for $|v|$?
its true\
psie: are you distressed about the sup not being a max? or what is the issue exactly
the sup literally is in this instance a max, but there's no reason why i would indicate one instead of the other
ok, that's what I was suspecting, that the sup is a max.
its a statement about the linear functional $f_x:X\to \mathbb{R}$ given by $y\mapsto \langle x, y\rangle $ having norm $1$, which holds for any inner product space
the sup formula has meaning for any hilbert space, including hilbert spaces in which the closed unit ball is not necessarily compact
i would not expect formulas in analysis textbooks to be 'maximally specialized' to tell you as much as possible, usually they are written only to tell you whatever needs to be true to allow for what the author is using
18:57
alright, the sup's more general then (as always)
@Jakobian norm $|x|$
its a statement about the map $x\mapsto f_x$ being an isometry
thus establishing an embedding of an inner product space into its dual
in particular i would not interpret a "sup" in an analysis textbook to be "a sup that is not a max," this is the exact opposite of the way you should read an analysis textbook
if your inner product space is a Hilbert space, then so called Riesz theorem gives you a converse, that this isometry is surjective
19:32
is Tom Dieck's proof of Proposition 5.1.10 incomplete? I could not work out why $k$ is a h-equivalece. But I found another proof which I think make more sense though.
20:21
it's part of the statement of Theorem 5.1.9
if you cobase change two homotopic maps along a cofibration, you get two homotopy-equivalent spaces under the new base
20:53
Hi
Has anyone heard of the Workshops at Oberwolfach?
...yes?
Are those hard to get into?
Well, you can't "get into" them, really
you have to be invited
almost every mathematician knows of these
@Thorgott What's the sigma algebra?
And measure?
20:56
counting measure :)
Then I don't think that your statement is correct.
@BenSteffan and how does that work? What should one do to get invited?
I mean, there has to be at least one mathematician who doesn't...
@Huibong be an expert in your field, or a promising student, or..
things like that
@Huibong Are you a superstar?
20:57
basically be very good at what you do
So it's not for upcoming researchers, and I'm no superstar, I'm a pseudomathematician
I claim to understand math
yeah fat chance lol
@Huibong The workshops are for acknowledged experts in a field. People with many highly cited publications.
they have no business in inviting people who claim to understand math, and certainly not pseudomathematicians
understood
21:04
yeah, invitations are handled by the director personally
is there any website that has links to math workshops for upcoming researchers? Where do first-timers publish their work typically?
@Huibong These are questions which would be appropriate for an advisor.
Generally, if you want to publish, you should be reading a lot of papers, too, and getting a sense of which journals publish papers in the area you are working in.
For example, there are about half a dozen good journals which publish the kind of fractal analysis, fractal geometry, and analysis on fractals results that I am interested in, as well as a few very good generalist journals that have published this kind of work (the only paper that I have published in mathematics, for example, is in Advances, which is a very good generalist journal).
@XanderHenderson I did find some journals, but I thought workshops would be first place to start? I am from a Computer Science background and rely on workshops, conferences usually
@Huibong There are workshops in mathematics, but conference proceedings and workshops don't have the same status in mathematics as they do in CS.
But you can also look for conferences and/or workshops in your specific field.
For example, when I have time, I attend the One World Fractals meetings (this is a virtual lecture series).
@XanderHenderson I see. That makes sense. I was looking to target a few workshops in topology specifically, without the interlacings of CS/Engineering
21:46
$$ f(x)=\frac{-1}{\log\big({1-e^{-\frac{1}{x}}}\big)}$$
and take $\int_2^t f(x)dx$
Is this easier to integrate from the standpoint of computational time than $\int_2^t 1/{\ln(t)} dt$
same computational time - nvm
basically the same integral
except f(x) is an involution
and 1/ln(t) aint
22:12
@Ben I just proved something I don't understand
suppose we have two towers $\dotsc\rightarrow\mathcal{C}_{n+1}\rightarrow\mathcal{C}_n\rightarrow\dotsc\rightarrow\mathcal{C}_0$ and $\dotsc\rightarrow\mathcal{D}_{n+1}\rightarrow\mathcal{D}_n\rightarrow\dotsc\rightarrow\mathcal{D}_0$ of $\infty$-categories whose transfer maps are limit-preserving and with sequential limits $\mathcal{C}$ and $\mathcal{D}$ respectively.
if we have a natural transformation $L_{\bullet}\colon\mathcal{C}_{\bullet}\rightarrow\mathcal{D}_{\bullet}$ that consists of object-wise left adjoints, then the induced functor $L_{\bullet}\colon\mathcal{C}\rightarrow\mathca
(no assumption on compatibility between the right adjoints and transfer maps!)
22:37
and I have no clue whatsoever whether this generalizes to diagrams of more complicated shape
wdym by transfer map?
the maps in the diagrams
perhaps that's a nonstandard choice of words
hm, that's really interesting
no further assumptions on the categories involved, e.g. presentability?
none, I construct the right adjoint by hand
the idea is actually not that complicated
notation: $p_n\colon\mathcal{C}_{n+1}\rightarrow\mathcal{C}_n$ and $q_n\colon\mathcal{D}_{n+1}\rightarrow\mathcal{D}_n$ are the transfer maps, $R_n\colon\mathcal{D}_n\rightarrow\mathcal{C}_n$ the right adjoints
you get a natural transformation $p_nR_{n+1}\rightarrow R_nL_np_nR_{n+1}\simeq R_nq_nL_{n+1}R_{n+1}\rightarrow R_nq_n$, where the first trafo comes from the unit transformation for $L_n\dashv R_n$ and the last trafo comes from the counit transformation for $L_{n+1}\dashv R_{n+1}$.
now, if you have an object $d=(d_n)_n\in\mathcal{D}$, you do this for all $m\ge n$ and project down via
22:56
Yeah, but where is the epsilon?
I mean, it isn't real math if there is no epsilon...
:P
there is an epsilon, it's just not spelled out
see the words "counit transformation" :)
indeed, the epsilons are in my handwritten notes
I guess ultimately this makes sense: having a right adjoint is a pointwise condition
@BenSteffan Lies.
@Thorgott there's no reason to expect the right adjoints to commute with the transfer maps automatically, is there?
23:04
they absolutely will not, in general, in fact I wanna apply this to such a scenario
where $\mathcal{C}_n=\mathcal{D}_n=\mathbf{Cat}_{(\infty,n)}$ and the left adjoints are product functors
so the point is the core functors don't preserve exponentials
you can already see that for $n=1$, the map $\mathrm{Fun}(\mathcal{C},\mathcal{D})^{\simeq}\rightarrow\mathrm{Fun}(\mathcal{C}^{\simeq},\mathcal{D}^{\simeq})$ is typically not an equivalence
yeah, alright
@BenSteffan so something weird happens, it suffices to check $\mathcal{C}_{/d}=\mathcal{C}\times_{\mathcal{D}}\mathcal{D}_{/d}$ has a terminal object and this is the limit of the $\mathcal{C_n}_{/d_n}$ via the induced transfer maps...
but these induced transfer maps need not preserve limits anymore and it's not true in general that a sequential limit of categories with terminal objects has a terminal object
(these transfer maps don't even preserve the terminal object in general; cause that would be equivalent to being compatible with the right adjoints)
anyway, I'm trying to look for an example right now, but I think the analogous result for pullbacks should not be true
perhaps it's a cofiltered limits type beat
2
coffeeltered
I have something interesting to think about
5
Q: Is $\ell^\infty$ with box topology connected?

JakobianLet $X = \ell^\infty$ be all bounded real sequences and equip $X$ with subspace topology $X\subseteq \square_{n=1}^\infty \mathbb{R}$ where $\square_{n=1}^\infty \mathbb{R}$ is box product of countable amount of copies of $\mathbb{R}$, that is the basis for its topology is $\prod_{n=1}^\infty U_n...

It seems that $A(x)$ are connected components of $X$
23:30
Are there definite integrals that have visual proofs but not analytical proofs? I mean that their closed forms can be verified but not with analytical techniques, only visual and geometric reasoning.
and what would that mean for mathematics?
You cannot verify anything visually so no
Few people consider visual proofs valid
23:44
@BenSteffan I guess that is reasonable. Given a surface L of positive gaussian curvature embedded in R^3 is it always possible to slice L with a plane to get a quartic variety?
sorry with cone points ,2
I haven't the faintest idea so I'll just say "yes" :^)
sphere doesn't work that is why i changed it lol
do carmo says that we essentially have two cases here: no cone points, and cone points.
apparently $c_0$ is even written on wikipedia. I was basically outed for not reading my sources
(or at least wikipedia, I did read my sources)
Given a surface of revolution, $L$ of positive constant gaussian curvature embedded in $\Bbb R^3$, with two cone points, is it always possible to slice $L$ with a plane to get a quartic variety?
(that is the correct statement)
if that were true, what would you do with it
23:52
Should probably say "does there exist a slice" yielding a quartic variety
where is any of this stuff headed
Theorem. Let X be a [surface with whatever hypotheses]. Then __ <- what goes here

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