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00:22
@Jakobian I can't think of anything, but the suggestion about every closed set being the closure of a singleton is very restrictive. it implies every closed subset is irreducible, so the collection of closed subsets is totally ordered. since intersections of closed subsets are closed, it is well-ordered. if your space is T_0, this should yield that it's an ordinal space.
00:43
@Thorgott why would it imply it's well-ordered?
But the observation about being totally ordered is good for me because this is already something I don't really want
it's totally ordered and every non-empty subset has a minimum (given by the intersection of its element)
@Thorgott that'd be infimum wouldn't it
errr
right, I'm being silly
So it shows it's Dedekind-complete
it should still be fairly restrictive
00:50
Yeah, way too restrictive
@leslietownes Pinal County is a sh*t show. :/
Maybe one can obtain something nice if they assume that the space is well-based or something
01:17
Maybe not
Maybe its actually not that bad if its Alexandrov
 
7 hours later…
08:14
@Jakobian did u type this up, or is this from a textbook
@nickbros123 textbook
08:33
which one
08:45
@nickbros123 Introduction to cardinal arithmetic by Holz, Steffens and Weitz
09:09
@SineoftheTime I thought that using $k \to 2\pi k$ I was solving it but no
Yet the integral I evaluated seems correct
Maybe I'll see better after
@nickbros123 ask if you have questions about definition of an ordinal, cardinal etc.
I assume you are studying from a book which doesn't define cardinals explicitly
09:49
@Jakobian Thank you very much; I will have to start reading on these things seriously, when I find the time. Thus far, i am not studying from a book (on set theory) right now, I am just trying to prove random results I come across, that make use of AC (cuz they seem like cool questions).
Like eg: I came across the theorem $| S \times S |=|S|$ and the theorem $|S|=|\text{ set of all finite subsets of }S|$. There are others, like $|\text{Any linearly independent set}| \leq |\text{Any spanning set}|$ which I showed yesterday, and another one that I had was "$dim(V) \leq dim(\mathscr{L}(V,F))$ with equality iff finite dimension".
Another one I had was every set can be equipped with group structure, havent given this one much thought. These are just random problems that I give a go when I find some free time, or if im really bored with my other studies
there seems to be a million statements equivalent to AC, each in different contexts- analysis, topology, algebra etc
which is also a cool thing ig
ofc now I can see to attack these problems one might need more knowledge
 
1 hour later…
11:09
@Pizza I think I've found your mistake. Using the convention $F(f)=\int f(u)\exp(-2\pi i u k ) du$, for the properties of the FT you can compute $\int u^2e^{-|u|} \exp (-2\pi i u k) du$
denote by $a=2\pi i k$, and split the region of integration: $\int_0^{+\infty} u^2 e^{-u}e^{-au} du=\int_0^{+\infty} u^2 e^{(-1-a)u} du=\int_0^{+\infty} u^2 e^{-b u} du =\frac 2{b^3}$
where $b=1+a$
$\int_{-\infty}^0 u^2 e^u e^{au}du =\int_{-\infty}^0 u^2 e^{c u} du=\frac 2{c^3}$ where $c=1-a$
I didn't understand where I made the mistake
Hence FT=$\frac{2}{(1+a)^3}+\frac{2}{(1-a)^3}$
is what I did wrong?
@Pizza Here $I_2$ should have a + sign
ah
so I just need to correct that sign
I read carefully what you wrote for a moment
11:18
yes, but double check because I might be wrong
Hi guys
Hi
@Binky are you preparing JEE ?
No
This ?
@mo-_-
its not only math
@SineoftheTime are you doing the JEE?
11:28
why did you ask this question?
@Binky just to know
@SineoftheTime ok
@mo-_- are you doing the JEE?
yes
Ok
11:30
@Pizza maybe it's correct, I'm making confusion with sings
@Pizza
So you know how to do this: $\int_0^{+\infty} \sin^2(x) dx$?
@SineoftheTime using $\frac1{(a+1)^3}+\frac1{(1-a)^3}=-\frac{2(1+3a^2)}{(a^2-1)^3}$ with $a=2\pi i k$, you get $\frac{2(1-12\pi^2 k^2)}{(1+4\pi^2 k^2)^3}$
Multiplying by $2\exp(-10 \pi i k)$, $\mathcal F(f)= \frac{4-48\pi^2 k^2}{(1+4\pi^2 k^2)^3}e^{-10 \pi i k}$
@Binky the integral does not converge
you meant $\int \sin(x^2) dx$ ?
Is it the Fresnel integral?
Anyway yes
8
Q: Trig Fresnel Integral

please delete me$$\int_{0}^{\infty }\sin(x^{2})dx$$ I'm confused with this integral because the square is on the x, not the whole function. How can I integrate it? Thank you. I have not done complex analysis (only real analysis as I am a high school student) so how can I evaluate it using elementary functions ...

11:52
@SineoftheTime but in the second integral I realized that when I go to do the limit of infinity I get infinite
I don't get 0
$\lim u\to\infty \quad u^2 \frac{e^{tu}}{t} \to \infty$
what is $t$ ?
t = -1 -ik
note that $|u^2 e^{t u}|=|u^2 e^{-u}e^{-uik}|=|u^2 e^{-u}|=u^2 e^{-u}\to 0$
oh right
$e^{-5ik} \left(\frac{2}{(1-ik)^3} - \frac{2}{(-1-ik)^3}\right)$
I get this
ok, $(-1-ik)^3=-(1+ik)^3$
so you get a + sign
51 mins ago, by Sine of the Time
Hence FT=$\frac{2}{(1+a)^3}+\frac{2}{(1-a)^3}$
same as me
12:07
$e^{-5ik} \left(\frac{2}{(1-ik)^3} + \frac{2}{(1+ik)^3}\right)$
right
but how did you do it to evaluate the integral?
which one?
the first one
that is, you immediately wrote 2/b^3
How did you know?
I've used the Gamma function: $\int_0^{+\infty} u^2 e^{-bu} du\overset{ bu = y}{=} \frac1b \int_0^{+\infty} \frac{y^2}{b^2} e^{-y} dy =\frac1{b^3}\Gamma(3)=\frac 1{b^3}2!$
19 hours ago, by Binky
$\begin{cases} \frac{1}{2} x + z = 0 \\ x + 2y = 0 \\ x + y + hz = 0 \end{cases}$
dim Im(f)=2
How do I find a base pls (h=1)
@SineoftheTime ah interesting
12:16
$\Gamma(z)=\int_0^{+\infty} u^{z-1}e^{-u} du$ and for $n\in \Bbb N$, $\Gamma(n+1)=n!$
but when I evaluated the first by parts I then noticed that the second integral was the same only that this changed: instead of having the exponent (1-ik) I had (-1-ik)
I evaluated both because thet had different extremes, but perhaps there are some shortcuts
$u\mapsto -u$ leads to the same bounds as the first one
oh ok I didn't know that
that is, these are things I don't think about while doing the exercise
but they would save me time
the hard part in these kind of exams is that you should have 0 doubts on topics studied in analysis and algebra
your right
@Binky $\mathrm{Im}(f) = \mathrm{span} \left\{ \text{columns of the matrix} \right\}$
12:29
@SineoftheTime
where are you stuck?
$\mathbf{c}_1 = \begin{pmatrix} 1/2 \\ 1 \\ 1 \end{pmatrix}, \quad
\mathbf{c}_2 = \begin{pmatrix} 0 \\ 2 \\ 1 \end{pmatrix}, \quad
\mathbf{c}_3 = \begin{pmatrix} 1 \\ 0 \\ 1 \end{pmatrix}$
what should I do now?
didn't you already solved a similar exercise in the past?
do the system
Mmm
Yes
@mo-_- Meaning what ?
12:42
To check that they are linearly independent, impose that a zero linear combination is possible only if all coefficients are zero
I don't have to see if they are linearly independent
29 mins ago, by Binky
How do I find a base pls (h=1)
@SineoftheTime yes
but most likely since you found dim Im f = 2 then you will get 2 linearly independent columns and therefore the base is given by the two vectors
@SineoftheTime right?
Are you sure?
I'm doing exercises similar to yours, I think this is the case but I ask for confirmation to be sure...
@SineoftheTime
12:51
I think it's not here, stop @ him
@mo-_- .
$$
\text{Base}(\text{Im}(f)) = \left\{ \mathbf{a}_j \cdot \cos(\pi j) + \int_0^1 \delta(j - i) \, \mathrm{d}x \, \middle| \, j = \frac{n}{m}, \, n, m \in \mathbb{Z} \setminus \{0\} \right\}
$$
This ?
I don't know what is this
:(
Sorry
 
2 hours later…
pie
pie
15:20
user image
4
My 2025 goals, I am sure I will be able to do 16% of them.
15:32
@pie nice
new year new me
new year: d/dx
me: e^x
16:46
New Year: $\int$ , New Me: $C$
No matter how much I change, I’m still the same.
 
3 hours later…
19:32
I'm reading a proof concerning the statement that $L^p(E,\mathcal A,\mu)$ is a Banach space. In proving completeness, there's this one bound I simply do not understand. We have a sequence of functions $(g_n)$ for which $$\|g_{n+1}-g_n\|_p\leq 2^{-n}.\tag1$$Then the author uses the following bound for $m>n$; $$\|g_{m}-g_n\|_p\leq \|g_{n+1}-g_n\|_p+\cdots +\|g_{m}-g_{m-1}\|_p\leq 2^{n-1}.\tag2$$I really don't understand $(2)$, especially the last inequality.
Any clarification would be very appreciated.
Meeh. I have a typo. The $2^{n-1}$ in $(2)$ should be $2^{-n+1}$. Sorry.
19:55
Ok, I think I see what's going on. We have that $\|g_m-g_n\|_p\leq \sum_{i=n}^{m-1}2^{-i}$, which in turn is bounded by $\sum_{i=n}^{\infty}2^{-i}=2^{-n+1}$.
 
1 hour later…
21:11
I'm reading a proof about the fact that $L^\infty(E,\mathcal A,\mu)$ is a Banach space. I'm paraphrasing. First we establish that $\|\cdot\|_\infty$ is a norm and then we look at a Cauchy sequence $(f_n)$ in $L^\infty(E,\mathcal A,\mu)$. We show that $|f_n(x)-f_m(x)|\leq\|f_n-f_m\|_\infty$ for every $m>n\geq 1$ and $x\in E\setminus N$, where $N$ is null. We realize that $(f_n(x))$ is Cauchy in $\mathbb R$ and converges to $g(x)$ (for $x\in N$, we simply put $g(x)=0$).
Then $g(x)$ is measurable and if we take the limit as $m\to\infty$ in $|f_n(x)-f_m(x)|\leq\|f_n-f_m\|_\infty$, we obtain $$\sup_{x\in E\setminus N}|f_n(x)-f_m(x)|\leq\sup_{m\in\{n+1,n+2,\ldots\}}\|f_n-f_m\|_\infty.\tag{1}$$
I just don't understand how $(1)$ was obtained. Is someone well-versed in this proof? Any clarification would be appreciated.
22:05
0
Q: $L^\infty$ is a Banach space; Le Gall

psieI'm reading a proof about the fact that $L^\infty(E,\mathcal A,\mu)$ is a Banach space in Le Gall's Measure theory, Probability and Stochastic processes. I'm paraphrasing the proof. First we establish that $\|\cdot\|_\infty$ is a norm and then we look at a Cauchy sequence $(f_n)$ in $L^\infty(E,\...

I fixed an important error there; $(1)$ above should read $$\sup_{x\in E\setminus N}|f_n(x)-g(x)|\leq\sup_{m\in\{n+1,n+2,\ldots\}}\|f_n-f_m\|_\infty.$$
22:31
Ok, someone kindly answered. You can ignore the above. Merry Christmas! :)
22:44
@Binky Did you solve the problem then?
@psie it was fine as it was
not an error

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