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  2. Infinitesimal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinitesimal

    In common speech, an infinitesimal object is an object that is smaller than any feasible measurement, but not zero in size—or, so small that it cannot be distinguished from zero by any available means. Hence, when used as an adjective in mathematics, infinitesimal means infinitely small, smaller than any standard real number. Infinitesimals ...

  3. Big O notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_O_notation

    Big O notation is a mathematical notation that describes the limiting behavior of a function when the argument tends towards a particular value or infinity. Big O is a member of a family of notations invented by German mathematicians Paul Bachmann, [1] Edmund Landau, [2] and others, collectively called Bachmann–Landau notation or asymptotic notation.

  4. Hyperreal number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperreal_number

    Each real set, function, and relation has its natural hyperreal extension, satisfying the same first-order properties. The kinds of logical sentences that obey this restriction on quantification are referred to as statements in first-order logic. The transfer principle, however, does not mean that R and *R have identical behavior.

  5. Infinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinity

    In 1655, John Wallis first used the notation for such a number in his De sectionibus conicis, [19] and exploited it in area calculations by dividing the region into infinitesimal strips of width on the order of . [20] But in Arithmetica infinitorum (1656), [21] he indicates infinite series, infinite products and infinite continued fractions by ...

  6. Increment theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Increment_theorem

    Then the same equation = ′ + holds with the same definition of Δy, but instead of ε being infinitesimal, we have = (treating x and f as given so that ε is a function of Δx alone). See also [ edit ]

  7. Surreal number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surreal_number

    Two numeric forms x and y are forms of the same number (lie in the same equivalence class) if and only if both x ≤ y and y ≤ x. An ordering relationship must be antisymmetric, i.e., it must have the property that x = y (i. e., x ≤ y and y ≤ x are both true) only when x and y are the same object.

  8. Category:Mathematics of infinitesimals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mathematics_of...

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  9. Standard part function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_part_function

    The "infinitesimal microscope" is used to view an infinitesimal neighborhood of a standard real. Nonstandard analysis deals primarily with the pair R ⊆ ∗ R {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} \subseteq {}^{*}\mathbb {R} } , where the hyperreals ∗ R {\displaystyle {}^{*}\mathbb {R} } are an ordered field extension of the reals R {\displaystyle ...