I am unfamiliar with moduli spaces and ergodic theory which appear to be essential in Maryam Mirzakhani's math contributions which won her the Fields Medal. However, I am well conversant in essential topology, general relativity, Hamilton–Jacobi equation, and see why in integrable systems the mot...
I briefly wondered what question you meant. Then I clicked on it and I had already voted it up. It's probably really that only very few people could currently answer that.
Mumble mumble...phase space...flows...mumble...measure-preserving...I've honestly no idea what it precisely encompasses, it has something to do with situations, where there is a measure of some kind on your phase space, and then you study only the morphisms that preserve the measure, but I don't really know what you do with it.
@ACuriousMind well, that was a simplification. My real sentence is: "There exists $c>0$ such that all rational numbers $x\in\Q\cap[0,c)$ have a purely periodic $\beta$-expansion."
@tohecz Now that sound alright. I'd probably keep it that way if the $\beta$-expansions are unique, but if the are many, and not a canonical choice of one of them, "...have purely periodic $\beta$-expansions" would sound a bit better
I've noticed some other SE sites have a canonical "what's you're favorite joke" question in them:
Math Overflow's "Do good math jokes exist?"
Cross Validated's "What is your favorite data analysis cartoon?"
Cross Validated's "Statistics Jokes"
Stack Overflow's "What's your best programmer jok...
@tohecz I think that the first version would be better as "Every element of set A has an F-extension", and then it's a toss up to use the (corrected) first version or the second version.