About Arnold's ODE Book Notation

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the notation used in Arnold's book regarding group actions and transformations. Participants debate the correctness of Arnold's notation Tg: M→M versus Tg: G→S(M), where M is a set and G is a group. The consensus is that while Arnold's notation is common, it may be considered outdated. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between group elements and their corresponding transformations in the context of ordinary differential equations.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of group theory and group actions
  • Familiarity with transformation notation in mathematics
  • Knowledge of bijective functions and their properties
  • Basic concepts of ordinary differential equations
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the standard notation for group actions in algebraic structures
  • Study the implications of transformations in ordinary differential equations
  • Explore the relationship between groups and sets in mathematical contexts
  • Examine various mathematical texts that discuss group actions and transformations
USEFUL FOR

Mathematicians, students of abstract algebra, and anyone studying group theory and its applications in differential equations will benefit from this discussion.

Martin T
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In Arnold's book, ordinary differential equations 3rd. WHY Arnold say Tg:M→M instead of Tg:G→S(M) for transformations Tfg=Tf Tg,
Tg^-1=(Tg)^-1.

Let M be a group and M a set. We say that an action of the group G on the set M is defined if to each element g of G there corresponds a transformation Tg : M→M of the set M, to the product and inverse elements corresponds Tfg=TfTg, Tg^-1=(Tg)^-1
 
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You know that you only address members who a) have this book and b) are willing to take it from the shelf?
 
Yes, but Arnold is popular and this paragraph is being kill me.
 
As you wish. I could probably answer your question if I only had the book or you had put a little effort in describing the situation. I prefer to read books written in my own language. So, good luck! I'm out.
 
My guess is that ##T : G \rightarrow S\left(M\right)## with ##g \in G \mapsto T_g \in S\left(M\right)##.
 
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Here the Page, the Last paragragh, thanks.
 

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George Jones said:
My guess is that ##T : G \rightarrow S\left(M\right)## with ##g \in G \mapsto T_g \in S\left(M\right)##.
Yes I think the same, then Arnold is wrong with
Tg:M→M.
 
Martin T said:
Yes I think the same, then Arnold is wrong with
Tg:M→M.

If what I wrote is correct, then Arnold is correct., i.e., I, in part, wrote ##T_g \in S\left(M\right)##. This means that ##T_g : M \rightarrow M##. This is fairly common notation.
 
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George Jones said:
If what I wrote is correct, then Arnold is correct., i.e., I, in part, wrote ##T_g \in S\left(M\right)##. This means that ##T_g : M \rightarrow M##. This is fairly common notation.
Then it is a old fashioned notation, thanks
 
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Martin T said:
Then it is a old fashioned notation, thanks

It currently is bog-standard notation used in an almost uncountable number of books on my shelves.
 
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  • #11
But if T takes m to m, how is the same which T takes g of G(or gh of G) to S(M)=group of all bijective transformations of M.
And say Arnold's books are ""pedagogic".
 
  • #12
Martin T said:
And say Arnold's books are ""pedagogic".

Put an end to your sarcastic comments, or I will put an end to helping you.

Martin T said:
But if T takes m to m

This is not what I wrote. I wrote

George Jones said:
##T : G \rightarrow S\left(M\right)##

In other words, ##T## takes ##G## to ##S\left(M\right)##. Consequently, using functional bracket notation, ##T\left(g\right)## is in ##S\left(M\right)##, i.e., ##T\left(g\right)## takes ##M## to ##M##. Here, bracket notation becomes too cluttered/confusing, so it is conventional to denote ##T\left(g\right)## as ##T_g##.
 
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  • #13
Yes, I understand, but in the book Arnold first defines an action:
Let M be a group and M a set. We say that an action of the group G on the set M is defined if to each element g of G there corresponds a transformation Tg : M→M of the set M, to the product and inverse elements corresponds Tfg=TfTg, Tg^-1=(Tg)^-1

Why? It is correct(Arnold talk about homomorphims after)?
 
  • #14
Saw
 

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Martin T said:
Yes, I understand, but in the book Arnold first defines an action:
Let M be a group and M a set. We say that an action of the group G on the set M is defined if to each element g of G there corresponds a transformation Tg : M→M of the set M, to the product and inverse elements corresponds Tfg=TfTg, Tg^-1=(Tg)^-1

Why? It is correct(Arnold talk about homomorphims after)?
It is all correct and standard. Every algebra book (any maths book really) that defines action of a group on a set uses these notation.

Probably what confuses you is that you have a map ##f:A\rightarrow B##, where the target set ##B## is a set of maps, say between the sets ##X## and ##Y##, so the image of any element ##a\in A## is map itself ##f(a) : X \rightarrow Y##.
 
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