Multiplicity-one theorem is a new article written by someone clearly unfamiliar with Wikipedia usage conventions. It seems to be about group representation theory. Can you help clean it up? Michael Hardy (talk) 04:51, 1 February 2010 (UTC)
It seems to have changed a lot since I posted the comment above.... Michael Hardy (talk) 07:21, 1 February 2010 (UTC)
...just to be clear, this is the version that I first saw, where the opening line was "Let k be a field". Michael Hardy (talk) 19:38, 2 February 2010 (UTC)
But most of the articles on Wikipedia that I see are not on things that I looked up. Michael Hardy (talk) 22:05, 2 February 2010 (UTC)
It's a potential embarrassment, since great chunks of non-encyclopedic material are now being added. I can handle the adminstrator's angle. Over-claiming on the mathematical front is not going to be good for Yau, though, either. You'll probably see why I'm concerned. Charles Matthews (talk) 16:56, 4 February 2010 (UTC)
Another familiar name. Charles Matthews (talk) 10:21, 6 February 2010 (UTC)
Hello. If you know some algebraic geometry, maybe you could comment on this: Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Crooked egg curve. Michael Hardy (talk) 15:59, 15 March 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for correcting my embarrassing oversight [1], and even calling it a "typo". Sometimes I love Wikipedia. Hans Adler 19:18, 20 March 2010 (UTC)
I added a link from Herglotz–Zagier function to Don Zagier and vice-versa. So far there's only one link to the new article besides the bot-added link from the list of mathematics articles. I seems probable that some other articles should link to it. Michael Hardy (talk) 16:44, 24 March 2010 (UTC)
In the above-mentioned article, you only define a Kirillov model, not a Whittaker model. Is this a typo? --Roentgenium111 (talk) 11:26, 25 March 2010 (UTC)
Osgood curve and William Fogg Osgood now link to each other. Several other articles now link to Osgood curve but only as a "see also", except two articles that are lists. So if there are others that should link there or if it can be included within the body of the text rather than as a "see also", you might think about adding those links. Michael Hardy (talk) 04:50, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
Laziness rather than a "typo". It's easy enough to describe explicit examples as variations of the Peano curve, but the topic is so obscure it didnt seem worth the bother. r.e.b. (talk) 05:06, 28 March 2010 (UTC)
You've probably got them on your watchlist, but anyway you'll probably be interested in this edit summary. If you can convince me here as well that's fine- it looks like you know what you're doing, I just don't want a situation where one editor thinks it should be one way, then the next one to come along thinks the other etc. Peter 16:16, 13 April 2010 (UTC)
Since you are working over the hypergeometric function, I thought I'd go back to the reference I know about the finite monodromy case (an old book by Poole on differential equations). What in fact is there is a "Schwartz list" of 15 spherical triangles, classified by the resulting finite group. This must be the same thing, and all very "well-knowable", but not the best sort of citation given that the connection may be somewhat folkloric, or reliant on the old papers of Schwartz and Klein. I first came across this business in papers of Nick Katz. So I wonder if there is a sensible modern reference. Charles Matthews (talk) 18:10, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
Schwarz, H. A. (1873), "Ueber diejenigen Fälle in welchen die Gaussichen hypergeometrische Reihe eine algebraische Function ihres vierten Elementes darstellt", Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik: 292–335, ISSN 0075-4102 r.e.b. (talk) 19:03, 14 April 2010 (UTC)
I'm sorry if I caused confusion in your hypergeometric rearrangements two days ago: I thought your db-g6 tag on Generalized hypergeometric function meant that you wanted to move Hypergeometric series to that title, so I did that and then conscientiously fixed all the resulting double redirects, thinking I was being helpful, and was worried to see that you had to change them all back. Did I misunderstand, or were you engaged in a more complex reshuffle? I have tended to be rather shy of db-g6 (and am even more so now) because of the double redirect problems that arise. Maybe the best thing would be to ignore the seductive "click here to perform the move" link on the template, just do the deletion, and then say to the tagger "Right, I've deleted it, now you sort out the rest of what you want to do". Regards, JohnCD (talk) 22:04, 13 April 2010 (UTC)
How many valid formulae did you delete this time? —Preceding unsigned comment added by A. Pichler (talk • contribs) 07:49, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
So the obvious question is how that is done.
Once upon a time I heard this question: How can one hang a picture from two nails in such a way that if either nail is removed, the picture falls? The answer is this curve (the nails are the deleted points and the picture is located somewhere along the curve). I thought at first I couldn't figure this out without some effort and then a few seconds later this curve came to mind. I'd seen it in a complex variables course, but until I saw your new article here tonight I didn't know that name for it. A philosophy professor to whom I posed this question suggested this: a closed loop of string enters a hole drilled in the picture, goes through to the other side and returns back out through the hole. So there's an end of the loop on each side that you can hang on a nail. It works. But that's not what was intended by the question.
Picture a new curve running at a right angle to the plane through one of the deleted points, then turning so that it gets farther from the other deleted point, winding around the Pochhammer curve and returning to where it started. Then put another closed loop like that where it passes through the other deleted point. You get Borromean links. Do you think that's worth mentioning in the article? Michael Hardy (talk) 05:25, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
I've added a picture that at least conveys the idea. Michael Hardy (talk) 06:06, 15 April 2010 (UTC)
OK, I'm wondering about this:
I'd have thought there might be something that says
and to the right of "=" an expression including an integral along the Pochhammer curve, but what's there includes B(α, β) within the whole expression.
A typo? Michael Hardy (talk) 17:11, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
I should have guessed that's what you meant, but instead I wondered if only the B(α, β) should be on the other side. I really haven't looked at that thing closely yet. Michael Hardy (talk) 22:11, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
Does that include "converging" to ∞ if α or β is 0? And if either parameter is an integer multiple of 2πi, does one just use continuity to define the function there? Michael Hardy (talk) 22:20, 16 April 2010 (UTC)
Oh.... It's not the integral that blows up; it's the quotient of the integral by one of those differences. So when α or β is an integer, then the denominator (1 −e2πiα) (1 −e2πiβ) is 0, and if α or β is 0 then the numerator is not 0. Michael Hardy (talk) 01:34, 17 April 2010 (UTC)
In case this is of interest.[3] The subject came up on your talk page a while back. I don't understand the article myself. I look at the FOM mailing list archives sometimes and I found the reference there. 69.228.170.24 (talk) 08:17, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
Hello,
we (some french speaking wikinautes) try to include the file
in the french version of the article Lakes of Wada. It seems that it doesn't work. Maybe you should put the picture in wikicommon ?
Best regards. --82.234.49.87 (talk) 08:54, 13 June 2010 (UTC) (Biajojo in french wp) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.234.49.87 (talk) 08:55, 13 June 2010 (UTC)
I've finally added the Borromean link comment and the popular puzzle to the Pochhammer contour page. Michael Hardy (talk) 23:25, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
The new article titled mandelbox has a big fat red flag: it's a brand-new thing (introduced during 2010) that cites no refereed source. I won't be surprised if it arouses suspicions about "OR". Michael Hardy (talk) 03:21, 28 June 2010 (UTC)
...but it still might be prudent to find something to cite that will impress suspiciously inclined people. Michael Hardy (talk) 20:53, 28 June 2010 (UTC)
I've added Zariski–Riemann space to the list of topics named after Bernhard Riemann. If you know of any others that should be there but are not, could you add those too? Michael Hardy (talk) 02:54, 1 July 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for your note. I'm glad somebody is actually using zeteo! I fixed the two issues you mentioned. Jakob.scholbach (talk) 21:39, 3 August 2010 (UTC)
You added an proof of Brouwer fixed point theorem via Stokes theorem. Could you please explain me, why is the exterior ederivative of volume form is zero? Kishmakov (talk) 13:10, 2 September 2010 (UTC)
Hi R.e.b., I saw you added a obiuary notices of L. Roth about Francesco Severi to the related entry: do you worry if I move it to the "Bibliography" section? I think it would be a better place, since there you'll find other biographical notices about him. Thank you for your attention (and of course for your help in the making of the entry! :D ): Daniele.tampieri (talk) 18:40, 3 September 2010 (UTC)
What is said about linear disjointness and composita of fields in tensor product of fields doesn't match up to the MathOverflow thread about it.[4] What we currently do is to reference the EoM. MO's thread (at answer #4) references Zariski-Samuel, which is accessible to me; otherwise I'm not quite sure how to make the discussion there (which I'm sure is pretty good) verifiable: probably everything is known but where is it written down? This issue is actually why I got interested in MO in the first place, but I don't seem to have made progress (in other words I have got distracted by the Recent Changes there). Charles Matthews (talk) 08:58, 20 September 2010 (UTC)
In Lattès map, is the affine map from the torus to itself thought of as a map from a 2-dimensional real space rather than as a 1-dimensional complex space (so the composition of the three things is not in general holomorphic)? Michael Hardy (talk) 20:00, 21 September 2010 (UTC)
A discussion has begun about whether the article Otomar Hájek, which you created or to which you contributed, should be deleted. While contributions are welcome, an article may be deleted if it is inconsistent with Wikipedia policies and guidelines for inclusion, explained in the deletion policy.
The article will be discussed at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Otomar Hájek until a consensus is reached, and you are welcome to contribute to the discussion.
You may edit the article during the discussion, including to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion template from the top of the article. -- PhantomSteve/talk|contribs\ 08:12, 5 October 2010 (UTC)
Hi R.e.b. I'm sorry if this is a violation of Wikipedia's guidelines, but I found this page on MathOverflow recently. I've done some editing on Wikipedia so I figured that the 'reb' there might be you. Could you please answer the question raised by Joel Hamkins there(if indeed it is you)? I thought that your answer was very interesting, so I would like to know more. Again, I'm sorry for the invasion of privacy as well as the possible violation of guidelines.
Chimpionspeak (talk) 22:02, 30 October 2010 (UTC)
Hi, thanks for your edits to the Reynolds operator page. I did have one point of contention, though, about your non-English sources. Since the article is on the English Wikipedia, English sources are preferred. Are there any English versions or translations of the citation you listed (reproduced below)?
If not, could you give some indication as to the purpose the references serve? I'm guessing from the location in the text that they're the references where J. Kampé de Fériet first named these operators "Reynolds operators", but it would be a little more clear if they were a footnote, esp. given that there are several.
Thanks again. --Charlesreid1 (talk) 23:20, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
Greetings to all. There's an article on arXiv that you might want to add to the Virasoro algebra references. Best wishes for the New Year (even if you're asleep when it happens), 131.111.24.99 (talk) 09:55, 30 December 2010 (UTC)
You constructed {{Harvard citations}} and I'm hoping you might tell me where I can find the parameter otherpage explained (it looks to me like a never-implemented feature, but I'm just stumbling around in the code without fully understanding it).
Our initial problem (how to show two ISBNs) is described at WT:Citation templates#Citation problem. There is a good reason why we are trying to include two sets of page numbers in some refs (one for UK edition, one for US edition), and I was hoping otherpage might offer something more clever than just putting "pp=238 (209–10)". Johnuniq (talk) 03:29, 12 January 2011 (UTC)
Hi R.e.b. -- in this edit to Desarguesian plane, you replaced "finite geometries" more generally by non-Desarguesian planes, with the Moulton plane as an example, which, if I understand the term correctly, is not a finite geometry. Am I right in concluding that the article should start with "In projective geometry" rather than "In finite geometry"? Joriki (talk) 11:32, 24 January 2011 (UTC)
Hi
Can you tell me why you moved the page back ? (on the articles talk page please)
Thanks Chaosdruid (talk) 06:08, 11 February 2011 (UTC)
Dear Prof. R.e.b,
The hypergeometric function article at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypergeometric_function (section Hypergeometric series) says the function has branch points at 0 and 1? Shouldn't that be 1 and infinity?
Thanks Commutator (talk) 12:05, 14 February 2011 (UTC)
I restored the referenced material you removed, which was not "trivia", but referenced material, one from the Mathematical biographies page (ultimately from Wiener's famous autobiography, which was cited by page) and the other from a recent historian's book, which cites archival sources.
Please expand on Carleman's mathematics, but do not remove referenced sentences. Please consider discussing at the Wikiproject mathematics. Mvh, Kiefer.Wolfowitz (talk) 20:34, 12 February 2011 (UTC)
Hi, Can you move Non-Legendrian geometry, which is eminently Legendrian, back to Dehn's plane? Tkuvho (talk) 05:35, 24 February 2011 (UTC)
Since the previous thread seems to be focusing on the page dealing with Dehn's counterexamples, I am starting a separate thread on infinitesimals. Does Dehn's paper use the term "infinitesimal"? Whether he used Stolz's, du Bois-Reymond's, or Veronese's infinitesimals, he was using work that Cantor attacked as incoherent, without making a distinction between different types of non-Archimedean fields. An infinitesimal is by definition an element of a non-archimedean field that violates the archimedean axiom. To what extent these can be exploited in the calculus is a separate issue, and depends on the power of the field to handle various arithmetic operations, to what extent one has a transfer principle, etcetera. The infinitesimal navbox is intended to cover all notions of infinitesimals. I am not sure what you mean when you say that it is a coincidence that non-standard analysis and Dehn both used non-Archimedean fields. There is certainly no reason to limit the navbox to non-standard analysis. leibniz was not a non-standard analyst. Levi-Civita fields naturally belong here, as well, and for all I know Dehn might have used a Levi-Civita field in his construction. Tkuvho (talk) 05:44, 27 February 2011 (UTC)
Despite what Penrose intended, twistors actually do generalize to higher dimensions in a natural way (see Berkovits on "pure spinors"). Further, your articles on this are full of mathematical jargon that is extremely obfuscatory considering that twistors are concrete accessible computational tools. Could you follow Berkovits more here?69.86.66.128 (talk) 06:08, 21 March 2011 (UTC)
Back in August, you PRODded this, and it was deleted. Undeletion has now been requested at WP:REFUND, so per WP:DEL#Proposed deletion I have restored it, and now notify you in case you wish to consider taking it to AfD. Regards, JohnCD (talk) 18:21, 22 March 2011 (UTC)
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A tag has been placed on Zenon Ivanovich Borevich. requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section A7 of the criteria for speedy deletion, because the article appears to be about a person or group of people, but it does not indicate how or why the subject is important or significant: that is, why an article about that subject should be included in an encyclopedia. Under the criteria for speedy deletion, such articles may be deleted at any time. Please see the guidelines for what is generally accepted as notable.
If you think that this notice was placed here in error, you may contest the deletion by adding {{hang on}} to the top of the page that has been nominated for deletion (just below the existing speedy deletion, or "db", tag; if no such tag exists, then the page is no longer a speedy delete candidate and adding a hang-on tag is unnecessary), coupled with adding a note on the talk page explaining your position, but be aware that once tagged for speedy deletion, if the page meets the criterion, it may be deleted without delay. Please do not remove the speedy deletion tag yourself, but don't hesitate to add information to the page that would render it more in conformance with Wikipedia's policies and guidelines. If the page is deleted, you can contact one of these administrators to request that the administrator userfy the page or email a copy to you. Taroaldo (talk) 04:33, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
{{hang on}}
The article has a line that currently says this:
Was this supposed to be a piecewise equality? Michael Hardy (talk) 01:55, 30 April 2011 (UTC)
A nice reference for measures and p-adic distributions is the article of Mazur–Swinnerton-Dyer: Arithmetic of Weil curves. Also, note that the terminology is kind of a mess with different people calling different things by the same name. For a nice discussion of the modern take on these ideas see chapter 1 of Colmez's book Fontaine's rings and p-adic L-functions. I'd help out, but I'm pretty swamped right now. Cheers. RobHar (talk) 17:50, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
Hi R.e.b.!
Recently you made a change in the article 'Bernoulli number' which I reversed. You again reversed. So let me explain to you why I did so and why I think it should be reversed again.
It is about the convention B_1 = 1/2 or B_1 = -1/2. You are right that B_1 = 1/2 is the more common one. But we have to acknowledge that there are major writers which use B_1 = -1/2. See for example Neukirch, Jürgen, Algebraic Number Theory, Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften.
You write: "Let's use the most common standard convention." Such a convention is fine and everyone giving a lecture or writing a book should fix his use unambiguously. However, I think it is not the mission of an encyclopedia to fix conventions. Rather, to inform about different conventions and to highlight the differences implied; this helps users to avoid confusion.
Note that this approach is common on Wikipedia in all cases where different definition or viewpoints or theories exists.
And the article does in my opinion a good job to explain the differences of the two definitions; not only in the section 'definition' much care is taken to explain both versions, also in numerous other places, for example where the different ranges of validity of representations is stated.
To help the user to distinguish different viewpoints and to enable him to draw his own conclusions about the relative merits of different conventions is an important point of a good article; not only in an encyclopedia, but in an encyclopedia in particular.
Maybe you can reconsider your reversion? 78.55.171.129 (talk) 19:29, 12 May 2011 (UTC)
A colleague of mine lauded Weil conjectures. I was not surprised to see your name in the history. Keep up the good work! Jakob.scholbach (talk) 13:57, 18 May 2011 (UTC)
Quillen-Lichtenbaum conjecture is promising, but what with various reformulations it is not easy to see the relationship to the original Lichtenbaum conjecture (zeta-values up to powers of 2, as I understand it). On googling "Lichtenbaum's original conjecture" it seems clear that there is a relationship; as there is to the Birch-Tate conjecture. What quite "Lichtenbaum conjecture" means to the experts now I'm not so sure: without saying that things have got out of hand, some consolidation of what the literature says would be welcome. Charles Matthews (talk) 13:02, 20 May 2011 (UTC)
I have proposed elsewhere, and I think it got mentioned in a style manual, possibly as a not-universally-agreed rule, that an article about a sequence of polynomials should usually have a plural title as in Hermite polynomials, on the grounds that it's about a set of things rather than about the individual things. Thus, for example, no same person would call an article Maxwell's equation, and even though Sir Paul McCartney is a former Beatle (and thus that word is used in the singular, the article title is nonetheless plural. That much I think is prescribed in WP:MOS. Last I checked (three or four years ago?) there was not yet an infallible decree from the Roman Pontiff or Oprah Winfrey or Miss Manners or whoever that we should do the same with polynomial sequences. Do you have any particular opinion on this one? Michael Hardy (talk) 22:44, 12 June 2011 (UTC)
It looks as if you wrote \mathrm{max} rather than \max in TeX. These don't always give identical results. Thus, \mathrm{max}_{a \in A} yields this:
whereas \max_{a \in A} yields this:
The latter is standard TeX usage.
Also
is more complicated than
and I think in some instances that also gives different results, and is also standard for certain situations. Michael Hardy (talk) 17:29, 15 June 2011 (UTC)
Hi R.e.b., I have reworked a bit the entry about Frederick J. Almgren, Jr., and since you are one of the latest contributors, I thought it was a nice thing to ask for your opinion. If you do not like its present shape, please feel free to change it. Daniele.tampieri (talk) 19:57, 20 June 2011 (UTC)
Hi,
as far as I understand, Wiener's 1/f theorem and Wiener's tauberian theorem are the same fact. Do you think they should be united?
Sasha (talk) 06:09, 28 June 2011 (UTC)
PS I have posted the same comment at Talk:Wiener_algebra.
Hi. I had a question about Nagata ring, to which you seem to have been the earliest contributor. I'm kind of confused by this phrase: "...an integral domain A is called an N-1 ring if its integral closure in its quotient field is a finite A module." Should "finite A module" be "finitely generated A module"? Rschwieb (talk) 11:10, 12 July 2011 (UTC)
In this long ago edit to Cluster expansion, you wrote that "It is only defined for field theories on a lattice, and not field theories on a continuum.". Do you remember why you said that? Glancing thru a textbook on statistical mechanics, I see that it assumes a continuum. Cardamon (talk) 23:08, 11 July 2011 (UTC)
Well, it would seem that after my edit to Andrei Zelevinsky, p-adic group appears in that article as a red link. Who'd'a thunk it? (I'll mention this at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Mathematics unless someone does something about it in the next two seconds.) Michael Hardy (talk) 04:39, 15 July 2011 (UTC)
You wrote:
Suppose that y0 = 1, y1, ... is a sequence of polynomials where yn has degree n, and let Λ be the linear functional with Λ(1) = 1, Λ(yn) = 0 if n > 0. Favard's theorem states that if these polynomials satisfy the 3-term recurrence relation y n + 1 = ( x − c n ) y n − d n y n − 1 {\displaystyle y_{n+1}=(x-c_{n})y_{n}-d_{n}y_{n-1}} then the polynomials yn form an orthogonal sequence for Λ; in other words Λ(ymyn) = 0 if m ≠ n. From the relation Λ(y2n) = dn Λ(y2n–1), it follows that the functional Λ is positive definite if (and only if) the numbers cn are real and the numbers dn are positive.
Suppose that y0 = 1, y1, ... is a sequence of polynomials where yn has degree n, and let Λ be the linear functional with Λ(1) = 1, Λ(yn) = 0 if n > 0. Favard's theorem states that if these polynomials satisfy the 3-term recurrence relation
then the polynomials yn form an orthogonal sequence for Λ; in other words Λ(ymyn) = 0 if m ≠ n.
From the relation Λ(y2n) = dn Λ(y2n–1), it follows that the functional Λ is positive definite if (and only if) the numbers cn are real and the numbers dn are positive.
Could it be that meant something like the following? For some particular values of cn, dn (which normally one would specify in the statement of the theorem) the sequence is orthogonal with respect to that particular linear functional, and then the general case is readily reducible to that? Michael Hardy (talk) 22:30, 8 August 2011 (UTC)
What's the rook polynomial-orthogonal polynomial connection? I didn't see anything in the rook polynomial article to suggest a link. --Joel B. Lewis (talk) 14:23, 14 August 2011 (UTC)
a couple of questions:
a) I saw you switched notation from theta to z in the generalisation, so I did the same in the Legendre part -- I hope you don't object.
b) A more conceptual q-n: to the best of my understanding, Mehler-Heine is a complement to simpler asymptotics (Laplace-Heine for Legendre and Darboux for Jacobi pol-s). Returning to even more basic stuff, I did not find a single wiki-article on asymptotics of OP (even in the classical case!) So the missing Laplace-Heine is perhaps not the major problem, and I do not even know where to start. If you have ideas how this should work, perhaps we can discuss it a bit and then start filling the gap.
Best,
Sasha (talk) 01:35, 20 August 2011 (UTC)
if you would like to add secondary sources to the article, perhaps this would help (p.466).
Best, Sasha (talk) 15:44, 22 August 2011 (UTC)
I have put an "underconstruction" template on the Classical OP page: obviously, it needs a major revision, but I am not sure I understand what to keep there and what to move to the OP page. Since you are still editing the 2 pages, I do not want to create a mess by simultaneous editing, so I won't touch either page for a few days.
Best, Sasha (talk) 15:25, 24 August 2011 (UTC)
Please note that I have done a procedural close to Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2011 September 9#Category:Mathematicians who committed suicide, and created a new discussion about the related category tree at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2011 October 3#Category:Suicides by occupation. Feel free to express your opinion there. עוד מישהו Od Mishehu 09:48, 3 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi r.e.b., Mysterious duality is in immediate danger of being deleted without more references that substantially address the topic. I was hoping you might have better luck with this than I did. Happy editing, Sławomir Biały (talk) 18:56, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
Interesting tidbit you added to the zero sharp article. I heard once in an offhand conversation that the original "oh-sharp" term derived from Kleene's O. Do you have any sourceable info on that? --Trovatore (talk) 21:11, 19 October 2011 (UTC)
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I was very interested in the article 3-transposition_group but I failed to find a good definition for O p ( G ) {\displaystyle O_{p}(G)} . Do you happen to know a good reference (here on Wikipedia) or a simple explanation, that might be suitable for inclusion in the article? Many thanks!
--Evilbu (talk) 19:59, 3 November 2011 (UTC)
if you read German, [6] may be of help.
Best, Sasha (talk) 04:32, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
I noticed you were the editor who created the redirect page from "Regular surface" to "Irregularity of a surface". Would you mind explaining the rationale for this redirect? I created a talk page section at "Irregularity of a surface" for discussion. Thanks! Augurar (talk) 03:09, 14 November 2011 (UTC)
I've been accustomed to thinking of the "H" in "Hermite" as silent, so that one would write "an Hermite ring" rather than "a Hermite ring". Do you have strong feelings one way or the other concerning this? (I changed "a" to "an" in the article.) Michael Hardy (talk) 17:26, 24 November 2011 (UTC)
Hi R. Since the theory of Grunsky matrices involves interpreting them as operators, I will be making Grunsky matrix the main article and Grunsky inequalities a redirect. There are a series of articles to write including a conformal welding article (using the Cauchy transform for existence for sufficiently smooth curves/diffeomorphisms and the Beltrami equation more generally), and the Grunsky matrices fit into that, this time for a pair of univalent functions corresponding to the conformal welding of the diffeomorphism. In that context the Grunsky matrices become corners of a unitary matrix. They also appear as part of the smooth model of universal Teichmüller space, which is the same thing as a slight generalisation of Diff ( S1) that several authors have studied (including your friend from UCSC, who seems to have published a corrected version of the infamous paper that did not get slated in Maths Reviews). The matrix coefficient in the projective representation of Diff ( S1) is expressed as a Fredholm determinant which arises in geometric function theory (called Fredholm eigenvalues of a planar domain) and has been calculated explicitly. Anyway, just so that you are warned (I thought quite long about what title the article should have). I liked the bio on Grunsky, which I had contemplated writing myself. Regards, A. Mathsci (talk) 18:28, 8 December 2011 (UTC)
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I have expanded the Marcel Riesz article which you have edited once. Comments are welcome.
Thanks, Sasha (talk) 16:54, 21 December 2011 (UTC)
Can you say whetehr this edit is a correction or not? It's outside my field of knowledge. JamesBWatson (talk) 17:39, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
Hi, I was looking at Loeb space and it seems to me that the passage from v to mu is not completely correct. Shouldn't there be an application of the inverse shadow somewhere? Tkuvho (talk) 14:48, 8 February 2012 (UTC)
I hit a mental speed bump and thought:
and then: wait a minute: it's a plane curve, so maybe
Then I thought the latter seems more plausible, so I changed it to:
Is that the meaning you intended? Michael Hardy (talk) 04:50, 9 February 2012 (UTC)
Hi, could you comment at Talk:Manifold Destiny#Birman? Tkuvho (talk) 13:23, 22 February 2012 (UTC)
I added Abhyankar's inequality to the list of inequalities. If you know of others that should be there but are not, could you add those too?
The list of inequalities is organized by topic, and the only algebra section was labeled Linear algebra. I dealt with this one by creating an "Algebra" section with "Linear algebra" as a subsection. For now, Abhyankar's inequality is the only item in that section that's not in that subsection. Michael Hardy (talk) 00:13, 10 March 2012 (UTC)
I have real questions about the notability of Albert Eagle. Sławomir Biały (talk) 02:20, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
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Thanks for your stubs on Polish mathematicians. May I suggest that you look at my edits to Zygmunt Zalcwasser and Zenon Waraszkiewicz, and consider incorporating them (adding categories, stub templates, talk page assessments) to your article creation process? Thanks! --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| talk to me 15:19, 4 April 2012 (UTC)
You have not answered to my post on the talk page: Many of the terms you have introduced in this page are not archaic at all. Several appear in the title of publications of XXIth century. What is your project? To rename the page glossary of algebraic geometry or removing the non-archaic terms? What about old terms which are still in use but rarely?
D.Lazard (talk) 14:39, 7 April 2012 (UTC)
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I've added the new article titled wave surface to the list of wave topics. (I also added Category:Waves.) It seems possible that you know of other articles that should be listed there and are not. Michael Hardy (talk) 18:57, 11 April 2012 (UTC)
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It seems to me that the phrase "conjugate with respect to some conic" ought to link somewhere. Whether the place it ought to link to currently exists is another question. I looked briefly at projective harmonic conjugate and at pole and polar, and I thought I could probably figure out where among several articles would be the best article or section to link to. But I haven't done so yet and maybe you already know. Or maybe not. Michael Hardy (talk) 16:27, 30 April 2012 (UTC)
From the little I know about covariants and from the article you created on Hermite reciprocity, it seems like a G-covariant, in representation-theoretic terms, of a representation V of a group G is simply what we would nowadays call a G-equivariant map from V to some other representation W of G. For instance, the work of Davenport and Heilbronn studies binary cubic forms and their quadratic covariant, the Hessian. However, the entry for covariant in the glossary of invariant theory seems to have a much more restricted definition. I'm really unfamiliar with any texts relevant to the notion of covariant, so I was hoping you might be able to fix up the entry in the glossary. Thanks. RobHar (talk) 02:35, 9 May 2012 (UTC)
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Hi R.e.b.; I've just come across the "A priori estimate" entry you created, and I'm writing this just to say you that I'm positively impressed: it's nice work, precise, compact and well documented, and Wikipedia deserves such articles. Daniele.tampieri (talk) 09:46, 25 July 2012 (UTC)
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The article Inter-universal Teichmüller theory has been proposed for deletion because of the following concern:
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I am sorry that the template posted a Teahouse link and treated you like a new user...I just wanted to drop by to tell you I'd added that tag. When it comes to BLP (I am not sure whether or not this is one based on the ref and my quick Google search), I probably apply tags a little more liberally. Thanks and once again sorry for the tone of the template. Go Phightins! 18:55, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
Hi, I'm Go Phightins!. R.e.b., thanks for creating Chitikila Musili!
I've just tagged the page, using our page curation tools, as having some issues to fix. Judging from the only source, I'm not sure if this is a BLP or not, but nevertheless, additional sources and claims to notability would be helpful. Thank you. Feel free to contact me on my talk page with any questions.
The tags can be removed by you or another editor once the issues they mention are addressed. If you have questions, you can leave a comment on my talk page. Or, for more editing help, talk to the volunteers at the Teahouse. Go Phightins! 18:55, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
Hi. Thank you for your recent edits. Wikipedia appreciates your help. We noticed though that when you edited Yasutaka Ihara, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page RIMS (check to confirm | fix with Dab solver). Such links are almost always unintended, since a disambiguation page is merely a list of "Did you mean..." article titles. Read the FAQ • Join us at the DPL WikiProject.
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I haven't fully digested the definition of this concept yet . . . . Would I be right if I guessed that a hyper-finite field is any field satisfying the same first-order sentences in the language of fields that are satisfied by all finite fields? Michael Hardy (talk) 03:35, 11 November 2012 (UTC)
Hi, thanks a lot for all your contributions! I have one request: could you write a little at Teichmüller space about how TX obtains a topology and a complex structure? Thanks and cheers, AxelBoldt (talk) 20:54, 19 November 2012 (UTC)
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Hi R.e.b. I really need an english translation of Homologie nicht-additiver Funktore by Dold & Puppe. Here's the link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangulated_category#CITEREFDoldPuppe1961. Seeing as you're the one who started that page I thought you might know if there exist an english translation. Thanks in advance for any help. Money is tight (talk) 11:31, 6 December 2012 (UTC)
Here's an oddity that became apparent in Parafactorial local ring: The "nbsp" non-breakable space prevents line breaks when it precedes and follows a minus sign, but not when it precedes and follows an en-dash. On the browser I'm using a minus sign does not otherwise look different from an en-dash, but there you have a reason to distinguish between them. Michael Hardy (talk) 22:09, 2 January 2013 (UTC)
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A while ago I had been drafting an article for torsion-free module, but I did not find the time to finish it. I'm glad you dug into it. I was wondering: is the general definition using regular elements the one Matlis used? I know that most (all?) the theory works for a slightly more general definition that appears in Lam's Lectures on modules and rings. Rschwieb (talk) 20:36, 2 February 2013 (UTC)
I was reading the article on unipotent representations, where I came across the following:
My understanding was that it was not unipotent representations, but cuspidal representations, which form the basic building blocks. For instance in the representation theory of G = G L n ( F q ) {\displaystyle G=\mathrm {GL} _{n}(\mathbb {F} _{q})} , the unipotent representations are those that appear inside I n d B G ( 1 ) {\displaystyle \mathrm {Ind} _{B}^{G}(1)} , and so unipotence is in some sense orthogonal to the notion of being a building block. Could you clarify what you meant; are there other induction processes at play?
Thanks for your time, and also for all the beautiful mathematics you've contributed to Wikipedia. --SamTalk 07:40, 15 April 2013 (UTC)
Hi, I'm Ankit Maity. I wanted to let you know that I saw the page you reviewed, Admissible algebra, and have un-reviewed it again. If you have any questions, please ask them on my talk page. Thank you. Ankit MaityTalkContribs 16:40, 4 May 2013 (UTC)
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Hi, many thanks for your edits to the article, it is spruced up nicely as others here have recognized.
However - at the points where I originally wrote "reducible/irreducible" and you changed to "decomposable/indecomposable", the inline citations (including Wigner) use the former terms and not the latter, unless I have somehow complete misread them (the books are not to hand right now). So, the terminology seems to be torn between the current refs and the article... I will not argue about or change any terminology, but it would be great if you added at least one ref using the term "decomposable", as well as more refs furthering the definitions of "reducible/irreducible representations" as opposed to "decomposable/indecomposable".
Many thanks again in advance. M∧Ŝc2ħεИτlk 12:27, 9 July 2013 (UTC)
A file that you uploaded or altered, File:Neighborhood graph of Niemeier lattices.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Files for deletion. Please see the discussion to see why this is (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry), if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you. Sfan00 IMG (talk) 20:21, 13 July 2013 (UTC)
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I think there were typos in the list in Glossary_of_string_theory#C, so I have attempted to fix them. It involves CAR, CCR, and CCR and CAR algebras. Please confirm that I am either correct, incorrect, or "anticorrect". :-) Bearian (talk) 13:39, 19 July 2013 (UTC)
I linked to O'Nan–Scott theorem from the list of permutation topics. If you know of any others that should be there and are not, could you add those too? Michael Hardy (talk) 03:05, 29 July 2013 (UTC)
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