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01:10
@Thorgott Well, that rules out anything interesting. :P
01:38
i feel like it ought to be possible to do something like this just fiddling with geodesic coordinates around a point that contains both points of A and points of A complement. but intuitively i find myself needing to know 'how' the relevant piece of A sits inside even a ball in these coordinates.
of course the fractal guy would say that :)
oh, does Xander not have Hausdorff dimension 3 like the rest of us? :/
anyway the question was closed (as expected). it would be nice if the OP amended the question. i think a lot of people interpret closure as some kind of "this is not wanted" message instead of what it actually is. despite all of the documentation around what closure is
02:01
@BenSteffan G-d, I hope not. Lungs work better in a slightly lower dimension.
@leslietownes what question?
02:52
the most recently linked question in this chat
0
Q: A special diffeomorphism

Stefano SavianiLet $A$ be an open subset of $(M,g)$ closed riemannian manifold. Given $\varepsilon>0$, is it true that there exists a diffeomorphism $\phi:M\to M$ such that $$ \phi^{-1}(A) = Vol(M)-\varepsilon \qquad? $$

 
5 hours later…
08:16
@leslietownes yeah, that's essentially my boundary worry
 
2 hours later…
09:50
anyone free to chat about KD-trees?
$\mathbb Z$ is closed in $\mathbb R$ because $\mathbb{R}\setminus\mathbb{Z}=\bigcup_{n\in\mathbb{Z}}(n,n+1)$. Now, the sets $(n,n+1)$ regarded as subsets of $\mathbb R^2$ are not open. So is $\mathbb Z$ closed in $\mathbb R^2$?
You should figure this out on your own.
 
3 hours later…
13:04
It seems Basse book on Einstien manifolds is telling the truth but most of the proofs say "follows easily".
I just checked one formula and the full calculation requires one full page.
@psie The complement of $\Bbb{Z}\times\{0\}$ in $\Bbb{R}^2$ is very much different from the complement of $\Bbb{Z}$ in $\Bbb{R}$. So the sets $(n,n+1)$ are not of much help in here.
13:35
@onepotatotwopotato physics.jpeg
my motivation for differential geometry is in physics, unfortunately.
14:31
@SoumikMukherjee yes, so I guess arguing from saying that the complement is open is more cumbersome than simply saying $\mathbb Z$ has no limit points, and thus is vacuously closed.
$(1+i)^{2z}=n$
How can I solve it in the complex field?
@Binky how did you define $w^z$?
where is this exercise from?
14:51
@psie it's not cumbersome, prove that the complement is open by using open balls
do you have to show the complement is open?
It's just one of the ways
the point is that it should be evident that Z is closed
@SineoftheTime $e^{zln(w)}$
you have to move on from trivialities at some point
14:59
@Binky ok, where are you stuck?
@SoumikMukherjee yes; I was wondering if psie is required to show it's closed using the definition
@SineoftheTime at the start
hi
@Binky maybe you have to write $(1+i)^2 = 2i$
@Binky huh?
so $(2i)^z = n$
@SineoftheTime Im blocked at the pizza point
15:12
just use the definition
$e^{z\ln{2i}}=n$
@Pizza you have to be careful since the rules of exponents does not always hold in $\Bbb C$
...
@SineoftheTime I haven't practiced these types of exercises yet :(
sorry if I said something wrong
keep in mind that $a^{bc}$ is not always equal to $(a^b)^c$
15:16
$e^{2z\ln{1+i}}=n$
$n$ is a natural number?
Yes
$2z\ln(1+i)=\ln(n)$
$z=\frac{\ln(n)}{\ln((1+i)^2)}$
@SineoftheTime How do I understand if I could do it now or not?
$z=\frac{\ln(n)}{\ln(2i)}$
👍
@Pizza when $a>0$ and $a,b,c$ are real
15:28
@SineoftheTime yes but only if I put | 1 + i | i can do this
that is, if I only write 1 + i, I cannot tell if it is > 0 because it only applies to real numbers
yeah that's why when you have $w^z$ you usually rewrite it as $\exp(z\operatorname{Log}(w)))$ and you specify which branch of the log are you using
@SineoftheTime Does the uppercase in 'Log' clearly indicate the principal argument of the logarithm?
I used it to indicate the complex log
In mathematics, a complex logarithm is a generalization of the natural logarithm to nonzero complex numbers. The term refers to one of the following, which are strongly related: A complex logarithm of a nonzero complex number z {\displaystyle z} , defined to be any complex number w {\displaystyle w} for which e w = z {\displaystyle e^{w}=z} . Such a number w...
$$\underbrace{f(x + h) - f(x)}_{\Delta f(x)} + o(h) = d f(x)[h] =f'(x) d x[h] = f'(x)\underbrace{((x + h)- x)}_{\Delta x}$$
$\operatorname{Log}(w) = \ln|w| + i \arg(w)$
yes ?
What does the $[h]$ mean?
19 mins ago, by Binky
$z=\frac{\ln(n)}{\ln(2i)}$
@SineoftheTime So it's correct, right?
16:30
@SohamSaha Heya!
@Z.G. Hi!
Oh you are into logic
Anything interesting
Cool
Will see you around!
Where are you from btw?
16:36
Haha... This is a public place
@Z.G. yep. You can ping me anytime in here
@Z.G. oh leave it then
@SohamSaha check aops
Oh
What are you interested in? Like which topics
Algebra, number theory and I hope to learn some logic before uni.
@Z.G. Now aops is rate limiting my messages
16:42
Yeah that's annoying.
AOPS chats are private I guess?
Yeah I guess so
So you're in 12th grade this year or took a gap year? (If you don't mind)
This year
Hmm, you did stuff like PSS by Engel or no?
Just had a look. Most are too much time taking
Did you give jee mains this year?
16:49
@SohamSaha That is so.
@SohamSaha I'm in 11th this year.
Oh
Gave RMO?
But I don't think I'll sit for that, I mean I suck at chemistry.
@SohamSaha haha, I don't like sitting for exams unless absolutely necessary.
Free pass to ISI/CMI if you qualify INMO, after going through IOQM and RMO
Sorry, gotta go now. Again, ping here anytime if needed.
Bye
16:53
The entrance route is fine, how did INMO go btw?
@SohamSaha Good Night
@Z.G. Good night
17:32
@Binky I did not check your computation
18:05
Someone needs to put the Riemann hypothesis up as a question, see if anyone solves it:)
@DaPlumer No.
 
1 hour later…
19:22
Question 1.2. Polynomial $P(x) \in \mathbb{Z}[x]$ takes values $\pm 1$ at three different integer points. Prove that it has no integer zeros.
[Hint : Divisibility condition of polynomials over $\mathbb{Z}$]
My work: $P(x)^2-1$ has three integer zeros, hence $P(x)^2-1=(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)Q(x)$ for some $a,b,c \in \mathbb{Z}$ and $Q(x) \in \mathbb{Z}[x]$. Now, $P(x)^2-1=(P(x)-1)(P(x)+1)=(x-a)(x-b)(x-c)Q(x)$. Now, $P(x)-1$ and $P(x)+1$ are coprime, then what can I do?
@hbghlyj if it had an integer zero (say at k) then -1=(k-a)(k-b)(k-c)Q(k)
then at least two of the factors among (k-a),(k-b),(k-c) will be same(+1 or -1), a contradiction
I see. Thanks.

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