« first day (28 days earlier)      last day (1555 days later) » 
00:00 - 12:0014:00 - 00:00

14:07
@Mathei are you here?
I have a doubt about some category theory stuff
It's proposition 9.3.2 in tom Dieck's book if you have a pdf available
okay, what about it?
14:12
I want to consider those $\eta_\bullet^t$ as natural transformations between functors. Those functors are the functors TOP->ABEL associated to $S_\bullet(X)$ and $S_\bullet(X\times I)$, right?
I think they should go from TOP to the category of chain complexes of Abelian groups
Hmm, I was thinking about the functors $S_q$ sending $X$ to $S_q(X)$ (the q-th group of chains) and $f:X\to Y$ to the induced map $S_q(X)\to S_q(Y)$
What you mean is instead the functor that sends $X$ to $S_\bullet(X)$ and $f:X\to Y$ to the associated chain map $S_\bullet(X)\to S_\bullet(Y)$, right?
yeah
but maybe you're confusion is caused by something else. The $\eta_\bullet^t$ are not used in the proof of 9.3.2
9.3.2 just follows from the cone construction that is discussed before that
he showed that the identity map is chain-homotopic to $\varepsilon$ and notes that $\varepsilon$ induces the zero map on $H_n(X)$ for $n>0$
but the only abelian group where the identity map is the zero map is the trivial group
note that he put a square right after the statement of 9.3.2 which means that it is clear from the above discussion
Oh, lol, I didn't notice the square and was like "but doesn't it just follow from the cone construction? I guess those $\eta_\bullet^t$ must be useful for something!" feels dumb
the $\eta_\bullet^t$ are used in the theorem after that
14:23
Ok, that's very nice as far as 9.3.2 is concerned then! However I don't see why the $\eta_\bullet^t$ are natural transformations (probably because my experience with natural transformation is limited to our conversation from the other day)
So you have two functors from TOP to chain complexes of abelian groups, one sends $X$ to $S_\bullet(X)$ and the other one sends $X$ to $S_\bullet(X \times I)$
Right, and they send a continuous map $f:X\to Y$ maps between topological spaces to the induced chain maps $f_\bullet:S_\bullet(X)\to S_\bullet(Y)$ and $(f\times \mathrm{Id})_\bullet:S_\bullet(X\times I)\to S_\bullet(Y\times I)$
and tom Dieck claims that the $\eta_\bullet^t$ are natural transformations, the reason for naturality is basically just that the square $\require{AMScd} \begin{CD}
X @>>{\eta^t_X}> X \times I\\
@V{f}VV @VV{f \times \mathrm{Id}}V\\
Y @>>{\eta^t_Y}> Y \times I
\end{CD}$ commutes
Hmm, let me think about it for a moment
I'm writing $\eta^t_X$ to keep track of which space where're considering the map $\eta$
So this diagram above says that $\eta^t$ (without going to the induced map on singular chains) is a natural transformation between the identity functor on TOP and the functor which sends $X \mapsto X \times I$ and $f:X \to Y$ to $f \times \mathrm{id}:X \times I \to Y \times I$
you have to check that it commutes, but that's basically obvious
14:33
@MatheinBoulomenos Ok I see that
and then you apply the functor $S_\bullet$ to that diagram
Oh, of course, functors preserve any diagram
and then you get that $\eta_\bullet^t$ is a natural transformation from the functor $X \mapsto S_\bullet(X)$ to the functor $X \mapsto S_\bullet(X \times I)$
that's a general principle: if $\eta: F \Rightarrow G$ is a natural transformation between parallel functors $F,G: \mathcal{C} \to \mathcal{D}$ and $H$ is any functor $H: \mathcal{D} \to \mathcal{E}$, then you can apply $H$ to each morphism in $\eta$ (since $\eta$ is a collection of morphisms satisfying some conditions) and you get that $H(\eta)$ is a natural transformation $H \circ F \Rightarrow H \circ G$
and the reason for this very abstract thing is just that functors preserve commutative diagrams, as you said
Parallel functors just means that they are both $\mathcal C\to\mathcal D$ or is there something more?
yeah that's the only thing parallel means here
So in our example $\mathcal{C}=\mathcal{D}=\mathbf{TOP}$ and $\mathcal{E}=\mathbf{CH}(\Bbb Z)$, the category of chain complexes of abelian groups and $F=\mathrm{Id}_{\mathbf{Top}}$ and $G: X \mapsto X \times I, (f:X \to Y) \mapsto (f \times \mathrm{Id}: X \times I \to Y \times I)$ and $H: \mathbf{Top} \to \mathbf{CH}(\Bbb Z), X \mapsto S_\bullet(X)$
and $\eta=\eta^t$
that was quite an abstract explanation, but I think it's in line with tom Dieck's style :P
the important thing to remember is that functors respect diagrams, the rest is just an obvservation that follows from that
To be fair he does prove 9.3.3 without abstract nonsense as well after the first proof
I like that he formulates acyclic models as a precise theorem
in my course, I just learned it as a vague principle for how some proofs work
From skimming it looks like the point of 9.3.3 is that homotopic maps induce chain homotopic maps on the chain complexes and we'll use that to conclude that homotopic maps induce the same homomorphisms of homology groups, seems promising! I'll read the details now, thanks a lot for your help
@MatheinBoulomenos I'm afraid I don't know what those are but I'll reach them eventually
@AlessandroCodenotti oh that's just a name for 11.5.1 which he uses in the abstract proof
but we learned it as a vaguely-defined proof technique
so it was nice to see a precise statement
14:45
Ah, I see
I'm kinda blackboxing the results he cites from Ch11 at the moment and postponing them for later
I looked up some of them from here, especially the snake lemma, because tom Dieck doesn't explain the connecting homomorphism when constructing the homology exact sequence in Ch9
Hi @Balarka, welcome back, this is the category theory chat room now
@AlessandroCodenotti yeah, showing that homotopic maps induce the same homomorphism has two parts: the algebraic part about chain complexes which is very easy. the more difficult part is that a continuous homotopy induces a chain homotopy but that's a consequence of 9.3.3
@AlessandroCodenotti tbf tom Dieck probably learned the snake lemma in the Kindergarden
Prism operator my dudes
@MatheinBoulomenos lol seems legit
@BalarkaSen that's what Tom Dieck does, too, he just calls it "cone construction"
You don't need the snake lemma to construct the homology long exact sequence in singular homology.
It's just taking boundary of singular pseudomanifolds-with-boundary
:D
14:50
@BalarkaSen I also read the proof from Hatcher with prisms and liked it, but I'd like to see what tom Dieck does as well
He would do the same thing.
In a more fancier terminology that's of no real use to anybody :P
(/s)
he defines a map $\Delta^{n-1} \times I \to \Delta^n$
the LHS is a prism
@BalarkaSen so you're saying nobody needs acyclic models except for that proof? Tom Dieck just formulates acyclic models as a precise theorem instead of doing the same arguments every time
I'm saying I have a "/s" tag right below what I said :P
sure, just defending Tom Dieck anyway
LOL
I am being very facetious. I realize tom Dieck's formulation actually is useful.
14:52
Eh, I just find that reading the formal stuff from tom Dieck and then looking at Hatcher for intuition is better for me than looking at Hatcher directly, but of course different people will have different approaches
that's what I suggested :) but yeah different things work for different people
@Alessandro Notice that if you work with the chain complex $\square_\bullet(X)$ consisting of the free abelian group generated by maps $I^\bullet \to X$ (singular $\bullet$-cubes in $X$), then it's trivial that homotopic maps induce the same morphism in $H(\square_\bullet)$
Because all the prism formalism vanishes. A cube crossed with an interval is cube.
That gives you the chain homotopy immediately
can you do the whole singular homology thing with cubes?
Yup
And it will give you the same theory
nice, I heard of cubical homotopy groups before, but not of cubical singular homology
14:57
I haven't heard of the former. Interesting.
$I^n$ is homeomorphic to the standard $n$-simplex so you can just compose with homeomorphisms, wave your hands a little and call it a day?
intuitively it shouldn't matter if you "detect holes" by looking at simplices without boundary or by looking at cubes without boundary
@Alessandro No.
That is not a proof.
you have to worry about boundary maps etc.
14:59
Oh, no, of course it's not, but every singular cube can be thought of as a singular simplex as well
hmmm, but in many different ways potentially depending on your homeomorphism $\Delta^n\to I^n$
The cleanest proof would say that both of those homology theories are functors on the category of CW complexes satisfying all the relevant axioms of Eilenberg-Steenrod, and takes the same value at a point.
Then those are isomorphic theories by a small theorem.
@Alessandro There is a natural way to interpret a singular cube as a sum of singular simplices, by triangulating $I^n$
@BalarkaSen yeah, that's what I was thinking as well
@BalarkaSen Those axioms are in the next chapter, I'll ask you more about that in a while probably
So that gives a natural transformation $H^n_{cubular} \implies H^n_{singular}$
@BalarkaSen Ok, makes sense
15:01
It takes a little work to see why it's an isomorphism
But not hard
The point is you can realize every singular simplex as a singular cube as well
There is a collapsing map $I^n \to \Delta^n$ by collapsing a few faces.
Compose with that.
That gives the inverse $H^n_{singular} \implies H^n_{cubular}$ if I am not incorrect
I wonder why aren't cubes used instead then, also in the $H_1\cong\pi_1^{\mathrm{ab}}$ proof there was a bit of annoying formalism to go from $\Delta^1\times I$ to $\Delta^2$
Well actually an homotopy of paths $I\times I\to X$ is a singular cube in $X$ and tom Dieck did quotient a face to get a $2$-complex instead so it's the same situation
15:55
Quite.
The reason why cubes aren't used in general is because simplices are combinatorially easier
$n$ vertices vs $2^n$ vertices
$\binom{n}{k}$ faces vs dadada faces
 
5 hours later…
20:50
@MatheinBoulomenos how much does/can Galois cohomology come up in doing elliptic curves? Especially when looking at the latter from a more Galois-ish point of view?
21:09
@Daminark you mostly need $H^0$ and $H^1$
In the cubical singular homology story you need to quotient by 'degenerate' cubes. Without doing something like this check the homology groups you get if a point
I'd say Galois cohomology doesn't come up with elliptic curves doesn't come up until you go fairly deep
there are elementary books e.g. Silverman/Tate which don't mention it at all
Silverman's more advanced book "Arithmetic of Elliptic Curves" does the results he needs in a 7 page appendix
but when you do get deeper into the theory, it becomes more important, then you have stuff like the Weil–Châtelet group, the Tate-Shafarevich group and the Selmer group which are all defined in terms of group cohomology
and there's an indirect way how Galois cohomology can come up: you might want to look at the Galois representation associated to an elliptic curves and then Galois cohomology can become pretty important. I'm taking a class in Galois reps right now and Galois cohomology is pretty important
@BalarkaSen @AlessandroCodenotti Above message was for you
@MikeMiller What do you mean with degenerate?
I don't want to say yet
21:20
Ah I see.
I want you to try to calculate the homology of a point with the 'naive' cubical chain complex :)
Fair
It's too late for that here though, I'll think about it tomorrow in the morning
I may try to see if I can aim toward the Galois rep side of this. But yeah I feel like elliptic curves sorta give you some neat content right off the bat while group cohomology feels like it takes more plowing. I'll still try to include it since it seems neat but I think my principal thing for now is elliptic curves
the thing with group cohomology is you have do build some machinery before you get to the good stuff
that can be a bit dry
i learnt elliptic curves while learning a minimal amiount of group coh (i.e. the amount covered in the appendix of silverman lol) so there's that..

i.e. enough to define shafarevich group, and also some reformulation of the proof of weak mordell weil

but for a first course in elliptic curves it's not really that important imo

but actually if you look at rational points on elliptic curves they do do a tiny bit of gal rep in the last chapter
21:30
I really like group cohomology
I like group cohomology, too
we're doing the proofs of CFT right now
it's basically pure group cohomology
(okay you need some number theoretic inputs, but that's not hard at least in the local case)
that should be really accessible too, (gal group acting on your torsion points) - so you can see how things work there and see if you like the feel of that
i dont know group cohomology to say if i like it or not
it feels quite technical in the beginning, but when you get to Galois cohomology you realize that it's pretty cool. (that's how it felt for me) and it's a pretty important tool in algebraic number theory

It also comes up if you want to do computations in étale cohomology
21:49
Ah well hopefullyill learn about it at some point (i think ive said this to many things)
@loch one major application of group cohomology is elementary school addition
you can't really say that you understand that if you don't know the relation between $H^2(G,A)$ and extensions
@MatheinBoulomenos damn now I'm looking forward to learn about cohomology!
(I kinda hope cohomology is homology with the arrows going the other way around)
@AlessandroCodenotti the paper on it is unironically good and pretty easy
The paper on what?
"A Cohomological Viewpoint on Elementary School Arithmetic"
I always enjoy telling the Quillen story
ah ive seen this before long time ago but never read it carefully
Well I know nothing about cohomology right now, I bookmarked it for the future
maybe ill read it later when im bored
@MikeMiller please tell the Quillen story, I like the stuff that Quillen did
22:00
I think I've told it, about p-tori in a group G
@MikeMiller I'm reading the transcript right now
@MikeMiller I found out that Milnor K-groups come up with higher local class field theory, so that's something topological I have a motivation from NT to learn
Is that topological?
ah right
I was thinking about Quillen K-theory
This room is beyond saving
and I thought it was topological because Milnor did it
22:18
There's a paper by Burt Totaro titled "Milnor K-theory is the Simplest Part of K-theory"
It might have been his thesis
@BalarkaSen Youve packed the court with activist algebraic judges
You need to put some geometers in
All the geometers are busy doing their jobs
We're the only bums in the crew
Fuck
No wonder I can't write a paper
Fuck indeed
No wonder I can't get into a college
What are we waiting for, Vladimir?
We are waiting for Godot
So we are
23:04
You two would love one of the beer skits this year
Sermon for the Church of Thurston
Asking him to protect Neves from becoming an analyst, Benson from getting hooked on p-adic Hodge theory, forgive Peter, the corruptor of youth, evil soul, etc
Amazing
Best part is, the guy honestly sounded like a legitimate southern pastor
(you know the trick to see those)
23:58
i found these lectures online on refined enumerative invariants which had something to do with milnor k theory etc which i might watch (if i can follow)
00:00 - 12:0014:00 - 00:00

« first day (28 days earlier)      last day (1555 days later) »