« first day (2514 days earlier)      last day (881 days later) » 

12:03 AM
3
Q: Analogue of Grauert's upper semi-continuity for Bott–Chern cohomology

SteveIn Coherent analytic sheaves, one has the following theorem due to Grauert: Let $f: X \rightarrow Y$ be a holomorphic family of compact complex manifolds with connected complex manifolds $X, Y$ and $V$ a holomorphic vector bundle on $X$. Then for any integers $q, d \geq 0$, the set $$ \left\{y \i...

 
 
2 hours later…
2:21 AM
3
Q: Is this infinite product entire?

GuidoLet $(z_i)$ be a square-summable sequence which is even summable but not absolute summable, i.e. $\sum_{i=1}^{\infty} \vert z_i \vert = \infty$,$\sum_{i=1}^{\infty} \vert z_i \vert^2 < \infty$ and $\sum_{i=1}^{\infty} z_i$ exists. I would like to ask if the following function $$f(\mu):=\prod_{i=1...

 
2:33 AM
7
Q: Are codatatypes really terminal algebras?

Sylvain Hubert(Disclaimer: I'm not 100% sure how codatatype works, especially when not referring to terminal algebras). Consider the "category of types", something like Hask but with whatever adjustment that fits the discussion. Within such a category, it is said that (1) the initial algebras define datatypes,...

 
2:51 AM
2
Q: Support of torsion in the Borel–Moore homology

user127776Given a complex quasi-projective variety $X$, let $\alpha$ be an element of the Borel–Moore homology $H_i^\text{BM}(X)$ such that it can be killed by a prime $p$. Under what conditions one can say that there is a closed subvariety of $Z$ such that $\alpha$ is the pushforward of an element in the ...

 
 
2 hours later…
4:34 AM
2
Q: How many consecutive integers to ensure one has digit sum divisible by 19?

ThomasLHow many consecutive positive integers are at least required, such that there is always a number in such a sequence whose sum of digits is divisible by 19?

 
 
11 hours later…
4:03 PM
8
Q: Does NumPy array really take less memory than python list?

AnkurPlease refer to below execution - import sys _list = [2,55,87] print(f'1 - Memory used by Python List - {sys.getsizeof(_list)}') narray = np.array([2,55,87]) size = narray.size * narray.itemsize print(f'2 - Memory usage of np array using itemsize - {size}') print(f'3 - Memory usage of np...

 
 
2 hours later…
6:15 PM
0
Q: Why does phantomJS 2.1.1 render this page as background color with no content, but foxshot 1.2.0 renders it correctly?

sootsnootI like to keep track of Massachusetts lottery results (make sure the results are really random). I can bring up the page of results in any browser and copy-paste the lines of text, and run the text through a filter written in php or gawk to extract the numbers for each date. But I thought it woul...

 
 
3 hours later…
8:52 PM
1
Q: Using hyphens in compound adjectives which talk about a range

FarhangWhich of these punctuations is correct? A) The drug is most promising for three-to-fifteen-year-old children. B) The drug is most promising for three- to fifteen-year-old children. I know that the rule for punctuating compound modifiers demands hyphens between all the words in a modifier (as in A...

 
 
1 hour later…
10:21 PM
4
Q: Is every Zariski closed subgroup a stabilizer?

Ian Gershon TeixeiraLet $ G $ be a linear algebraic group. Is it true that a subgroup $ H $ of $ G $ is Zariski closed if and only if there exists a representation $ \pi: G \to GL(V) $ and a vector $ v \in V $ such that the stabilizer $ G_v:=\{g \in G: \pi(g)v=v \} $ is equal to $ H $? I think one implication is cle...

1
Q: How are spatial coordinate systems in physics defined?

stackExchangeUserGrothendieck once asked "What is a meter?" (https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2006/08/letter_from_grothendieck.html). This innocent sounding question, made me to think about how coordinate systems are defined in physics. How are coordinate systems in physics defined, for example in special re...

 
10:51 PM
4
Q: Is there a noncommutative Gaussian?

MeowIn classical probability theory, the (multivariate) Gaussian is in some sense the "nicest quadratic" random variable, i.e. with second moment a specified positive-definite matrix. I do not know how to make this precise, but non-precisely what I mean is that 1. Gaussian shows up everywhere, and 2....

 

« first day (2514 days earlier)      last day (881 days later) »