When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Counterexamples in Probability and Statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterexamples_in...

    Counterexamples in Probability and Statistics is a mathematics book by Joseph P. Romano and Andrew F. Siegel. It began as Romano's senior thesis at Princeton University under Siegel's supervision, and was intended for use as a supplemental work to augment standard textbooks on statistics and probability theory.

  3. Models And Counter-Examples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Models_And_Counter-Examples

    Models And Counter-Examples (Mace) is a model finder. [1] Most automated theorem provers try to perform a proof by refutation on the clause normal form of the proof problem, by showing that the combination of axioms and negated conjecture can never be simultaneously true, i.e. does not have a model. A model finder such as Mace, on the other ...

  4. Counterexample - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterexample

    For example, suppose that after a while, the mathematician above settled on the new conjecture "All shapes that are rectangles and have four sides of equal length are squares". This conjecture has two parts to the hypothesis: the shape must be 'a rectangle' and must have 'four sides of equal length'.

  5. Arnold's cat map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold's_cat_map

    Arnold's cat map is a particularly well-known example of a hyperbolic toral automorphism, which is an automorphism of a torus given by a square unimodular matrix having no eigenvalues of absolute value 1.

  6. Homeomorphism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeomorphism

    In the case of a homeomorphism, envisioning a continuous deformation is a mental tool for keeping track of which points on space X correspond to which points on Y—one just follows them as X deforms. In the case of homotopy, the continuous deformation from one map to the other is of the essence, and it is also less restrictive, since none of ...

  7. Counterexamples in Topology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterexamples_in_Topology

    Counterexamples in Topology (1970, 2nd ed. 1978) is a book on mathematics by topologists Lynn Steen and J. Arthur Seebach, Jr.. In the process of working on problems like the metrization problem, topologists (including Steen and Seebach) have defined a wide variety of topological properties.

  8. Jacobian conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobian_conjecture

    It was first conjectured in 1939 by Ott-Heinrich Keller, [1] and widely publicized by Shreeram Abhyankar, as an example of a difficult question in algebraic geometry that can be understood using little beyond a knowledge of calculus. The Jacobian conjecture is notorious for the large number of attempted proofs that turned out to contain subtle ...

  9. Conditional probability distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conditional_probability...

    Then the unconditional probability that = is 3/6 = 1/2 (since there are six possible rolls of the dice, of which three are even), whereas the probability that = conditional on = is 1/3 (since there are three possible prime number rolls—2, 3, and 5—of which one is even).