Start with $$\int_0^{2\pi}\exp\big(inx+in\cdot f(\sin(mx))\big)dx$$
Split it up into $m$ integrals in the form $$\int_{2\pi k/m}^{2\pi (k+1)/m}\exp\big(inx+in\cdot f(\sin(mx))\big)dx$$ where $k$ is an integer between $0$ and $m-1$, inclusive
Each one is also equal to the following, by making the substitution $x\to x+2\pi k/m$: $$\int_{0}^{2\pi /m}\exp\big(inx+\frac{2\pi i n k}{m}+in\cdot f(\sin(mx))\big)dx$$
Note that $f(\sin(mx))$ is unchanged
Factor out $e^{2\pi i n k/m}$
and then sum up the terms
That's a sum of roots of unity. It's equal to zero unless $m$ divides $n$.
Or something like that. XD
All good?
Cool corollary: $$\int_0^{2\pi} \cos^{2n}(x+\lambda \sin(mx))dx=\frac{\pi}{2^{2n-2}}\binom{2n-1}{n}$$ if $m$ divides none of the numbers $2,4,...,2n$
In ZFC, for what $\kappa$ is there a partition $P$ of $\Bbb R^+$ such that $|P|=\kappa$ and if $x\in P$ then $x$ is closed under addition? What about ZF?
Find an uncountable cardinal $\kappa$ such that for every binary relation $R$ mapping cardinals to $\{0,1\}$, there is a set of $A$ of cardinals less than $\kappa$ such that $|A|=\kappa$ and $xRy=0$ for all $x,y\in A$ or $xRy=1$ for all $x,y\in A$.
Wait, if $k$ is a set of cardinals, then $|k|\le \sup k$, denote $\sup k=A$, now assume that every ordinal till $A$ is in $k'$, then $k'\cup \{A\}=A+1$, so $|k'\cup \{A\}|=|A+1|=|A|=A$, and $|k|\le |k'|$ sp $|k|\le A$
@SimplyBeautifulArt are you sure this is the question?
Sigh, there is no way in hell I could answer this question alone... Well can you tell me the full solution, how do you prove that accessible cardinals can't have this?
κ is defined to be weakly compact if it is uncountable and for every function f: [κ] 2 → {0, 1} there is a set of cardinality κ that is homogeneous for f. In this context, [κ] 2 means the set of 2-element subsets of κ, and a subset S of κ is homogeneous for f if and only if either all of [S]2 maps to 0 or all of it maps to 1.
For example, $\Bbb N=\bigcup_{n\in\Bbb N}\{2n,2n+1\}$
Or $[6]=\{0,1\}\cup \{2,3\}\cup \{4,5\}$
If you want: $A$ is weakly even if there exists partition of $A$ such that all of its elements are of size $2$, and weakly odd if there is partition of $A$ such that all of its elements apart from one are of size $2$ and the one other element is of size $1$
In set theory, an amorphous set is an infinite set which is not the disjoint union of two infinite subsets.
== Existence ==
Amorphous sets cannot exist if the axiom of choice is assumed. Fraenkel constructed a permutation model of Zermelo–Fraenkel with Atoms in which the set of atoms is an amorphous set. After Cohen's initial work on forcing in 1963, proofs of the consistency of amorphous sets with Zermelo–Fraenkel were obtained.
== Additional properties ==
Every amorphous set is Dedekind-finite, meaning that it has no bijection to a proper subset of itself. To see this, suppose that S is a set...