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12:23 AM
1
Q: A Riemann surface is automatically paracompact

Gerald Edgar[A question I remember from many years ago.] Definition A Riemann surface is a connected complex manifold $X$ of complex dimension one. This means that $X$ is a connected Hausdorff space that is endowed with an atlas of charts to the open unit disk of the complex plane: for every point $x \in X$...

 
 
3 hours later…
3:18 AM
1
Q: Merging two average values without multiplication

KivanConsider I have two sequences of numbers: 1 and 2. I don't have these sequences exactly but I know their means and numbers of elements in them: mean1, mean2, count1, count2. I need to calculate mean of both sequences together knowing only means and counts of those sequences separately. The obviou...

 
 
2 hours later…
4:53 AM
5
Q: Results in linear algebra that depend on the choice of field

Dick JohnsonLinear algebra as we learn it as undergraduates usually holds for any field (even though we usualy learn it for the complex, or real, numbers). I am looking for a list of concepts, and results, in linear algebra that actually depend on the choice of field. To start I propose the notion of an comp...

 
 
4 hours later…
9:18 AM
5
Q: Count occurrences in Pascal's Triangle

emanresu APascal's triangle is a triangular diagram where the values of two numbers added together produce the one below them. This is the start of it: 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 3 3 1 1 4 6 4 1 You can see that the outside is all 1s, and each number is the sum of the two above it. This continues forever. Yo...

 
 
4 hours later…
1:24 PM
3
Q: Why must this divisibility statement be true?

ShkevI am currently reading through Donald Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming, and in it he gives a proof of Euclid's algorithm for finding the greatest common divisor of two number, $m$ and $n$. In the proof, he defines $r$ as the remainder when diving $m$ by $n$ (in other words $r = m \mod n$) ...

 
 
5 hours later…
6:35 PM
5
Q: How to find integer coefficient polynomial knowing its values only at few points (but requiring coefs are small)?

Alexander ChervovExample: How to guess a polynomial $p$ if you know that $p(2) = 11$? It is simple: just write 11 in binary format: 1011 and it gives the coefficients: $p(x) = x^3+x+1$. Well, of course, this polynomial is not unique, because $2x^k$ and $x^{k+1}$ give the same value at $p=2$, so for example $2x^...

 
 
4 hours later…
10:05 PM
1
Q: Fractional Laplacian on closed manifolds

AliNaturally given any $s\in (0,1)$, the fractional Laplacian, $(-\Delta_g)^s u$ on a closed Riemannian manifold can be defined via spectral decomposition of $-\Delta_g$. There is another formulation of the fractional Laplacian that I commonly see that is stated as follows: $$(-\Delta_g)^sf(x)=\int_...

 
posted on September 25, 2021

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