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01:46
The deficiency of a finite presentation $\langle S | R \rangle$ is $|S| - |R|$.
The deficiency of a finitely presented group $G$ is the maximum of the deficiency over all presentations of $G$.
https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/478841/finitely-presented-group-with-fewer-relations-than-generators proved that a finitely presented group with positive deficiency has to be infinite. I wonder if there exists an infinite finitely presented group with negative deficiency.
01:58
surely the answer should be yes
I would assume GL(2,Z) is an example, though I can't prove it
I have a bit of a strange observation regarding postfix and prefix notation. Aren't spaces a necessary part of the notation? For example given postfix 153- isn't it ambiguous if this would be 15-3 or 1-53?
But 15 3 - would remove the ambiguity.
 
7 hours later…
08:44
Does there exist a closed 3-manifold with fundamental group $\mathbb Z^2$?
09:36
Are convex topological spaces necessarily path connected? I am wondering whether the line joining any two points will be continuous with respect to the underlying topology.
In topological vector spaces this is true.
09:59
@Anacardium How do you define convex in a space which is not a TVS?
 
1 hour later…
11:01
@hbghlyj no
16
A: Closed 3-manifolds with free abelian fundamental groups

Lennart Meier(I assume all occuring 3-manifolds to be orientable and closed) A manifold with a free abelian fundamental group cannot be a connected sum of non-trivial 3-manifolds since its fundamental group is not a free product. A prime manifold is either $S^1\times S^2$ or irreducible (Hatcher's notes on 3...

 
2 hours later…
12:52
if a civilisation has an oracle to solve the Halting problem, can they know all truths about the natural numbers? or can they know more truths than we can know, but not all?
can this civilisation breach some fundamental limitations that we have, or is the Halting problem irrelevant here
suppose the civilisation can perform countably infinitely many computations in a finite time (which solves the Halting problem)
13:33
If I have to draw the Borromean rings in my 3-folds exam I will fail
13:53
what is a 3-fold exam?
an exam that consists of three parts, duh :)
...an exam about 3-manifolds
Which 3?
:)
@BenSteffan more importantly, can you calculate their link group
@BenSteffan Who is the instructor?
@SoumikMukherjee probably $S^3$, $L_{7, 1}$ and, uhh, the Poincare homology sphere
@Thorgott I don't know what that is so I'm going to say yes and hope you don't test me on it :)
@onepotatotwopotato Paula Truöl
14:06
it's just the fundamental group of the complement
she's a (visiting?) postdoc at the MPI here
@Thorgott ah, well I can tell you its abelianization :)
and mumble something about wirtinger presentations
as far as I know, Ben is interested in high dimensional manifold, dimension at least 4.
@BenSteffan yes!
Wirtinger presentations are so cool
@onepotatotwopotato "high dimensions, such as 4"
as the joke goes, homotopy theorists are interested in smooth manifolds ($=$ spaces $M$ with a preferred map $M \to \mathrm{BO}$)
high starts at 5 and/or 7, depending on whom you ask
14:12
on unstable days you may also demand that $M$ is a Poincare complex
@Thorgott we don't talk about dimension 6
I've also seen people refer to things up to dimension 8 as low-dim
maybe we should strike a compromise and call manifolds of dimension 5 through 8 "medium-dimensional"
someone told me once that people count low up to dim 4 because after that, the theory can be formalized algebraically completely.
"algebraically completely" sounds like a way too strong statement for anything remotely true
@BenSteffan why??
don't ask me
it's about 3 or 4 years ago so my memory could be distorted
actually, I may have been wrong about 7
14:30
https://topospaces.subwiki.org/wiki/Fundamental_group_determines_homology_groups_for_compact_connected_orientable_3-manifold : For a compact connected orientable manifold of dimension 3, the fundamental group is sufficient to determine the isomorphism classes of all the homology groups.

I wonder if the fundamental group is sufficient to determine orientability
for a compact connected manifold of dimension 3.
well by looking at the top dimensional homology?
14:45
@onepotatotwopotato what do you have in mind?
Hmmm maybe I should assume closed 3-manifolds
you probably should, but I'm still failing to see how this would follow from homology alone
btw I recently learned that some people study 3-manifolds with infinitely generated fundamental group
sure, in one case $H_3$ is $\mathbb{Z}$ and in the other its 0, but for the nonorientable case you only have PD with $\mathbb{F}_2$-coeffs., so...
It's $\Bbb Z$ or $0$ depending on orientability.
14:52
@onepotatotwopotato yes, but how does that help? :^)
Oh I didn't know the usual PD assume orientability.
well stay in orientable world
@onepotatotwopotato sure, if you assumed your manifolds were orientable to begin with then the fundamental group does determine orientability, vacuously :^)
Yes, the usual PD with $\mathbb{Z}$ coefficients assumes orientability
15:11
do you get something from F_2-Poincaré and UCT
I don't think so
15:35
not sure whether I actually believe this is true or not, but I know too little about non-orientable 3folds to say
here's a partial result: all non-orientable closed 3-folds have infinite fundamental group
in fact, have infinite $H_1$
Ah, it's false: There is a non-orientable 3-fold $M$ with $\pi_1 M \cong \mathbb{Z}$
oh duh
 
2 hours later…
Avv
Avv
17:41
Hello Guys
there used to be a professor at Princton with famous youtube course
He does not come here anymore?
I forgot his name :/
the only professor with a course on youtube that used to frequent this chat was Ted Shifrin
but Ted was at UGA, not Princeton
 
2 hours later…
19:28
Hello everyone. Is it true that for $n>2$ the shape $D^n\setminus \{0\}$ is not deformation retractable onto its boundary $S^{n-1}$. Any book suggestions where I could read further about it?
It's false.
yeah can't you just write down the map
or a map, not to imply uniqueness
You very much can, and should.
It's true for $D^2\setminus \{0\}$ though, right?
19:31
i don't see where 2 would come up as a dividing point, for the kinds of maps i would be thinking about writing down
Sorry, I meant to say: You can deformation retract $D^2\setminus \{0\}$ to $S^1$ !
Thank you. And for $n>2$ is the retraction map similar - you map every point non-injectively to the boundary through a straight line which crosses the origin of $D^n$ and $\partial D^n?$
Your description is a bit sketchy but I think you mean the right thing
19:37
$D^n \setminus \{0\} \cong S^{n - 1} \times (0, 1]$, and then the retraction is given by sending $(x, t)$ to $(x, 1)$.
oh nice!
thank you :)
Welcome.
Hey @BenSteffan, do you have alg. topo. book recomendations besides Hatcher's?
Ah, the dreaded question :) Tom Dieck is pretty good; it's certainly very different from Hatcher. May's "A concise course" is very helpful, but more as a reference than for a first read. The lecture notes by Davis & Kirk have the benefit of covering more advanced topics than most other books, but I've only used them for references purposes.
(the question is dreaded because there is no single great book I feel I can endorse wholeheartedly)
I think if I had to choose a book nowadays I would probably choose tom Dieck, but it's definitely a good idea to have a few books available to cross-reference things.
Ah makes sense, thanks. I'm looking to mainly strengthen my understanding of concepts I've seen during graduate studies of the course
19:45
Well, one of the benefits of Hatcher is that the book has a lot of exercises
True. I feel it's a bit all over the place though and each chapter is very packed
Actually Hatcher does not cover a lot of material for the length of the book; or rather, he covers the expected breadth, but he's often rather superficial and doesn't bother too much with the details
But everybody seems to dislike Hatcher in their own way, somehow :)
his book, not the man himself, in case that wasn't clear
oh is he? I felt I need to dedicate lots of time and dig from different sources to understand him
:)
well, yes, that's common
but I think that's indicative of what I said, no? You have to do this because he is often superficial
yeah I guess you're right..I felt I spend lots of work with that book
19:56
anyways, if you dislike Hatcher I recommend checking out tom Dieck, or maybe May
Thanks a lot
You're welcome, again :)
is alg topo your research area btw?
my future research area, I guess
I'm in my masters' right now
oh awesome. Good luck!
19:59
Thanks!
I love tom Dieck, but I always feel awkward recommending it cause most people looking for an alg top textbook don't want to learn about cofibrations before, like, almost anything else
yeah
but if you read hatcher you basically won't learn what a cofibration is at all...
you do, but he refuses to name them that lol
well yeah, :)
Well he does define them, in section 4.H...
putting your discussion of cofibrations into the Eckmann-Hilton duality bonus section few people ever look at seems a littlle... strange
Hatcher really doesn't prepare you too well for reading actual papers
20:24
To show that $\Bbb R^n\setminus \{0\}$ deformation retracts to the unit sphere S^{n-1}, is homotopy $H(x,t):= x(1-t) + \frac{x}{x}t$ sufficient?
I assume you forgot a norm there
20:50
thank you
...but yes, then that will work
X4J
X4J
What’s an intuition to find $f:\mathbb{R^2} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ and $x \in \mathbb{R^2}$ s.t for any sequence $(v_n)$ which approaches zero, the limit $\frac{f(x+v_n)-f(x)}{||v_n||}$ exists but $f$ is not differentiable at x?
@BenSteffan he defines the HEP all the way in chapter 0, to be fair, but the actual role and structure of cofibrations never gets quite made clear
yes, of course
and something important like the Barratt-Puppe sequence is introduced too little too late
21:01
the whole homotopy theory section feels rather superficial to me
the section in tom Dieck on all this material is great, but I think the right audience for that section is one that has already experienced homology theories and the like
@BenSteffan nah I do think there is a bunch of good stuff in there
all the big theorems are there
it's just that everything feels trimmed down to just that
the bonus sections are nice though
especially in chapter 4
X4J
X4J
@leslietownes i guess you know the answer
the appendices are like half of chapter 4
but yeah, that's where the real good stuff is

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