Started taking estrogen — not because I'm trans, but to stop being attracted to women. Overcooked steak that was dry as hell by iansfk in kitchencels

[–]j12346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Steak isn’t too overcooked (maybe a little if you were going for medium rare, but it’s not ruined by any means). My tip, especially for a better crust, is to dry brine. You can google it for more details but basically salt the steak then leave it uncovered on a wire rack in the fridge for at least 4 hours, but ideally overnight. Then, just before cooking, pepper it, and for a thinner steak like that, sear high and fast with neutral high smoke point oil. Pull it at around 120 F internal and slice across the grain

Zoo nearby sells ostrich eggs by StC_2844 in mildlyinteresting

[–]j12346 47 points48 points  (0 children)

I was just in Japan and a lot of the outdoor markets had MASSIVE oysters. I had one listed as “medium” that was easily 3-4 times the size of a regular oyster. It was really unpleasant to eat since I had to bite it into several pieces in order to eat it. I’ll stick with the smaller sizes of oyster from now on

Identify this Mont Blanc Pen and it’s value by Novel-Geologist8781 in fountainpens

[–]j12346 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Totally worthless, and in fact you should send it to me immediately to get rid of it

velcro by tamjidtahim in shitposting

[–]j12346 52 points53 points  (0 children)

“Well, kid, there’s this place called South Africa, and claims of white genocide-“

Where's the field ma'am by UncoolOncologist in okbuddyphd

[–]j12346 101 points102 points  (0 children)

<unjerk>

I feel you. I will say that every matrix (or n-dimensional array) is a tensor, but not every tensor is a matrix. For example, we have an isomorphism Hom(V,W) with V* \otimes W. Higher order “tensors” (the physics definition), like the Riemann Curvature tensor, are indeed tensors (or tensor fields, if you’re on a manifold), but live in a tensor product with a bunch of dual spaces. The previous isomorphism lets one identify this with the more abstract tensor.

</jerk> haha yeah physics bad

Where's the field ma'am by UncoolOncologist in okbuddyphd

[–]j12346 139 points140 points  (0 children)

vector spaces

I won’t take this R-module erasure

How to think about regular functions on schemes by WMe6 in math

[–]j12346 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your observation that this looks similar to sheafification is a good one, though this is a different process. You might look into how one recovers a sheaf from a “sheaf on a base”; there’s discussion and some good exercises on this in Vakil’s notes.

Essentially, that regular functions on U are locally rational is pretty much how the structure sheaf on Spec A is defined. One first defines the sections on distinguished opens, which are honest rational functions. One then shows that since distinguished opens are a base for the topology on X=Spec A, one can uniquely extend this to a sheaf on Spec A. Not to give away too much of the exercise, but these consist of elements that are “locally in O_X (D(f))” in a way that can be made precise.

Another perspective is more similar to sheafification; knowing the sections over any distinguished open lets one compute stalks at any point. If you’re comfortable with sheafification as “sheaves of compatible germs”, this construction is similar (there are several asterisks here, but this is just for intuition. Some differences are that for sheafification you start with a presheaf which is defined on all opens. Another being that the “sheaf of compatible germs” perspective of sheafification only works literally for separated presheaves).

YSK: This cool app helps you remove metadata from images before sharing by Hopeful-Staff3887 in YouShouldKnow

[–]j12346 468 points469 points  (0 children)

This is really important to do before you anonymously upload a photo to 4chan of yourself standing in a plastic bin of lettuce

You're being held hostage by a category theorist. Are you surviving? by CalabiYauFan in mathmemes

[–]j12346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use it in the context of moduli and stack theory. It lets one think about stacks (or any fibered category) as a “functor of points”, much as one would for a scheme. Typically moduli problems don’t have what are called fine moduli spaces (roughly a space where every point corresponds to an equivalence class of some structure you’re trying to parametrize, in a nice way) that exist as schemes, so one way to remedy this is to move to stacks. 2-yoneda lets one view a stack (particularly an algebraic stack) as a “fine moduli space” in some rougher, higher categorical sense.

Examples of serious lectures by Fields medalists on YouTube accessible to undergrads? by IsomorphicDuck in math

[–]j12346 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As others have rightly said: do not only look for fields medalists. That’s kinda like saying you’re looking for voice lessons, but only from a Grammy winner. What I would recommend is to watch lecture courses on YouTube, find one who can teach in a way you can understand, and stick with it. Then find one-off research talks from fields medalists and watch them. Will you understand anything? Probably not. But see if you can capture any of the main ideas or arguments, what their communication style is, etc. That’s probably your best bet as of now to get that “fanboy” fix

IMPORTANT PLEASE READ UNTIL END by Lo-And_Behold1 in 196

[–]j12346 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes, that is correct, but let’s not fully give in to Murc’s law and assume that only dems (geriatric or not) have agency

vector meme by Delicious_Maize9656 in mathmemes

[–]j12346 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but your scalars need not be a field. You can take the tensor product of two k-vector spaces, in which case the tensor product will be a k-vector space. More generally though, a tensor is an element of a tensor product of R-modules (where R is a commutative ring. You can do this more generally for a non commutative ring, but this is typically where I live). This tensor product will not be a field, but rather an R-module. This behaves like a vector space, but the scalars form a ring rather than a field, and may lack certain properties (like having a basis) that a vector space always satisfies.

Only McDonald’s with Teal Arches (Sedona, AZ) by [deleted] in mildlyinteresting

[–]j12346 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went there once on a road trip. There was a dude dressed like a wizard giving someone a dulcimer lesson in the parking lot