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  2. Division by zero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_by_zero

    For example, the quotient can be defined to equal zero; it can be defined to equal a new explicit point at infinity, sometimes denoted by the infinity symbol; or it can be defined to result in signed infinity, with positive or negative sign depending on the sign of the dividend. In these number systems division by zero is no longer a special ...

  3. Aleph number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleph_number

    The aleph numbers differ from the infinity commonly found in algebra and calculus, in that the alephs measure the sizes of sets, while infinity is commonly defined either as an extreme limit of the real number line (applied to a function or sequence that "diverges to infinity" or "increases without bound"), or as an extreme point of the ...

  4. Division by infinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_by_infinity

    The hyperbola = /.As approaches ∞, approaches 0.. In mathematics, division by infinity is division where the divisor (denominator) is ∞.In ordinary arithmetic, this does not have a well-defined meaning, since ∞ is a mathematical concept that does not correspond to a specific number, and moreover, there is no nonzero real number that, when added to itself an infinite number of times ...

  5. Plus and minus signs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plus_and_minus_signs

    There is no concept of negative zero in mathematics, but in computing −0 may have a separate representation from zero. In the IEEE floating-point standard , 1 / −0 is negative infinity ( − ∞ {\displaystyle -\infty } ) whereas 1 / 0 is positive infinity ( ∞ {\displaystyle \infty } ).

  6. Sign (mathematics) - Wikipedia

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

    The plus and minus symbols are used to show the sign of a number. In mathematics, the sign of a real number is its property of being either positive, negative, or 0.Depending on local conventions, zero may be considered as having its own unique sign, having no sign, or having both positive and negative sign.

  7. Constant problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constant_problem

    In certain cases, algorithms or other methods exist for proving that a given expression is non-zero, or of showing that the problem is undecidable.For example, if x 1, ..., x n are real numbers, then there is an algorithm [2] for deciding whether there are integers a 1, ..., a n such that

  8. Zero of a function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_of_a_function

    The fundamental theorem of algebra shows that any non-zero polynomial has a number of roots at most equal to its degree, and that the number of roots and the degree are equal when one considers the complex roots (or more generally, the roots in an algebraically closed extension) counted with their multiplicities. [3]

  9. Epsilon number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epsilon_number

    The standard definition of ordinal exponentiation with base α is: =, =, when has an immediate predecessor . = {< <}, whenever is a limit ordinal. From this definition, it follows that for any fixed ordinal α > 1, the mapping is a normal function, so it has arbitrarily large fixed points by the fixed-point lemma for normal functions.