When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Jacobian conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobian_conjecture

    The strong real Jacobian conjecture was that a real polynomial map with a nowhere vanishing Jacobian determinant has a smooth global inverse. That is equivalent to asking whether such a map is topologically a proper map , in which case it is a covering map of a simply connected manifold , hence invertible.

  3. Jacobian matrix and determinant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobian_matrix_and...

    In other words, if the Jacobian determinant is not zero at a point, then the function is locally invertible near this point. The (unproved) Jacobian conjecture is related to global invertibility in the case of a polynomial function, that is a function defined by n polynomials in n variables. It asserts that, if the Jacobian determinant is a non ...

  4. Inverse function theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse_function_theorem

    If it is true, the Jacobian conjecture would be a variant of the inverse function theorem for polynomials. It states that if a vector-valued polynomial function has a Jacobian determinant that is an invertible polynomial (that is a nonzero constant), then it has an inverse that is also a polynomial function. It is unknown whether this is true ...

  5. Numerical continuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_continuation

    The same terminology applies. A regular solution is a solution at which the Jacobian is full rank (). A singular solution is a solution at which the Jacobian is less than full rank. A regular solution lies on a k-dimensional surface, which can be parameterized by a point in the tangent space (the null space of the Jacobian).

  6. Ott-Heinrich Keller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ott-Heinrich_Keller

    The Jacobian conjecture is quite naturally posed in that setting. The motivation for looking at rather general polynomial transformations , say of the projective plane , came from the singularity theory for algebraic curves .

  7. Implicit function theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_function_theorem

    The unit circle can be specified as the level curve f(x, y) = 1 of the function f(x, y) = x 2 + y 2.Around point A, y can be expressed as a function y(x).In this example this function can be written explicitly as () =; in many cases no such explicit expression exists, but one can still refer to the implicit function y(x).

  8. Abel–Jacobi map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abel–Jacobi_map

    In much the same way, one can define a graph-theoretic analogue of Abel–Jacobi map as a piecewise-linear map from a finite graph into a flat torus (or a Cayley graph associated with a finite abelian group), which is closely related to asymptotic behaviors of random walks on crystal lattices, and can be used for design of crystal structures.

  9. List of conjectures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_conjectures

    strong perfect graph conjecture: perfect graphs: Chudnovsky–Robertson–Seymour–Thomas theorem 2002: Grigori Perelman: Poincaré conjecture, 1904: 3-manifolds: 2003: Grigori Perelman: geometrization conjecture of Thurston: 3-manifolds: ⇒spherical space form conjecture: 2003: Ben Green; and independently by Alexander Sapozhenko: Cameron ...