When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Singular point of a curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_point_of_a_curve

    Hence, it is technically more correct to discuss singular points of a smooth mapping here rather than a singular point of a curve. The above definitions can be extended to cover implicit curves which are defined as the zero set ⁠ ⁠ of a smooth function, and it is not necessary just to consider algebraic varieties. The definitions can be ...

  3. Singularity (mathematics) - Wikipedia

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

    The simplest example of singularities are curves that cross themselves. But there are other types of singularities, like cusps. For example, the equation y 2 − x 3 = 0 defines a curve that has a cusp at the origin x = y = 0. One could define the x-axis as a tangent at this point, but this definition can not be the same as the definition at ...

  4. Resolution of singularities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_of_singularities

    Repeatedly blowing up the singular points of a curve will eventually resolve the singularities. The main task with this method is to find a way to measure the complexity of a singularity and to show that blowing up improves this measure. There are many ways to do this. For example, one can use the arithmetic genus of the curve.

  5. Cusp (singularity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cusp_(singularity)

    For example, rhamphoid cusps occur for inflection points (and for undulation points) for which the tangent is parallel to the direction of projection. In many cases, and typically in computer vision and computer graphics, the curve that is projected is the curve of the critical points of the restriction to a (smooth) spatial object of the ...

  6. Singular solution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_solution

    Solutions which are singular in the sense that the initial value problem fails to have a unique solution need not be singular functions. In some cases, the term singular solution is used to mean a solution at which there is a failure of uniqueness to the initial value problem at every point on the curve.

  7. Singularity theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singularity_theory

    Isaac Newton carried out a detailed study of all cubic curves, the general family to which these examples belong. It was noticed in the formulation of Bézout's theorem that such singular points must be counted with multiplicity (2 for a double point, 3 for a cusp), in accounting for intersections of curves.

  8. Tacnode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacnode

    In classical algebraic geometry, a tacnode (also called a point of osculation or double cusp) [1] is a kind of singular point of a curve. It is defined as a point where two (or more) osculating circles to the curve at that point are tangent. This means that two branches of the curve have ordinary tangency at the double point. [1] The canonical ...

  9. Hilbert's twenty-first problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilbert's_twenty-first_problem

    This problem is as follows: To show that there always exists a linear differential equation of the Fuchsian class, with given singular points and monodromic group. The problem requires the production of n functions of the variable z, regular throughout the complex z-plane except at the given singular points; at these points the functions may ...