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  2. Reflexive relation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflexive_relation

    An example of a reflexive relation is the relation "is equal to" on the set of real numbers, since every real number is equal to itself. A reflexive relation is said to have the reflexive property or is said to possess reflexivity. Along with symmetry and transitivity, reflexivity is one of three properties defining equivalence relations.

  3. Direct method in the calculus of variations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_method_in_the...

    The direct method may often be applied with success when the space is a subset of a separable reflexive Banach space. In this case the sequential Banach–Alaoglu theorem implies that any bounded sequence ( u n ) {\displaystyle (u_{n})} in V {\displaystyle V} has a subsequence that converges to some u 0 {\displaystyle u_{0}} in W {\displaystyle ...

  4. Reflexive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflexive

    Reflexive relation, a relation where elements of a set are self-related; Reflexive user interface, an interface that permits its own command verbs and sometimes underlying code to be edited; Reflexive operator algebra, an operator algebra that has enough invariant subspaces to characterize it; Reflexive space, a subset of Banach spaces

  5. Reflexive space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflexive_space

    A Banach space is super-reflexive if all Banach spaces finitely representable in are reflexive, or, in other words, if no non-reflexive space is finitely representable in . The notion of ultraproduct of a family of Banach spaces [ 14 ] allows for a concise definition: the Banach space X {\displaystyle X} is super-reflexive when its ultrapowers ...

  6. Uniformly convex space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniformly_convex_space

    The unit sphere can be replaced with the closed unit ball in the definition. Namely, a normed vector space is uniformly convex if and only if for every < there is some > so that, for any two vectors and in the closed unit ball (i.e. ‖ ‖ and ‖ ‖) with ‖ ‖, one has ‖ + ‖ (note that, given , the corresponding value of could be smaller than the one provided by the original weaker ...

  7. Reflection (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflection_(mathematics)

    A reflection through an axis. In mathematics, a reflection (also spelled reflexion) [1] is a mapping from a Euclidean space to itself that is an isometry with a hyperplane as the set of fixed points; this set is called the axis (in dimension 2) or plane (in dimension 3) of reflection.

  8. Reflective subcategory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflective_subcategory

    An anti-reflective subcategory is a full subcategory A such that the only objects of B that have an A-reflection arrow are those that are already in A. [citation needed] Dual notions to the above-mentioned notions are coreflection, coreflection arrow, (mono)coreflective subcategory, coreflective hull, anti-coreflective subcategory.

  9. Reflexive sheaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflexive_sheaf

    A basic example of a reflexive sheaf is a locally free sheaf of finite rank and, in practice, a reflexive sheaf is thought of as a kind of a vector bundle modulo some singularity. The notion is important both in scheme theory and complex algebraic geometry. For the theory of reflexive sheaves, one works over an integral noetherian scheme.