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Regular Isotopy
The term regular can mean normal or in accordance with rules. It may refer to: People * Moses Regular (born 1971), America football player Arts, entertainment, and media Music * "Regular" (Badfinger song) * Regular tunings of stringed instruments, tunings with equal intervals between the paired notes of successive open strings Other uses in arts, entertainment, and media * Regular character, a main character who appears more frequently and/or prominently than a recurring character * Regular division of the plane, a series of drawings by the Dutch artist M. C. Escher which began in 1936 * '' Regular Show'', an animated television sitcom * ''The Regular Guys'', a radio morning show Language * Regular inflection, the formation of derived forms such as plurals in ways that are typical for the language ** Regular verb * Regular script, the newest of the Chinese script styles Mathematics There are an extremely large number of unrelated notions of "regularity" in mathematics. ...
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Moses Regular
Moses Regular Jr. (born October 30, 1971) is a former American football tight end who played one season with the New York Giants of the National Football League. He played college football at Missouri Valley College and attended Gateway High School in Kissimmee, Florida. He was also a member of the Frankfurt Galaxy of NFL Europe NFL Europe League (simply called NFL Europe and known in its final season as NFL Europa League) was a professional American football league that functioned as the developmental minor league of the National Football League (NFL). Originally .... References External linksJust Sports Stats Living people 1971 births Players of American football from Miami American football linebackers Missouri Valley Vikings football players New York Giants players Frankfurt Galaxy players People from Kissimmee, Florida {{Linebacker-1970s-stub ...
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Regular Number
Regular numbers are numbers that evenly divide powers of 60 (or, equivalently, powers of 30). Equivalently, they are the numbers whose only prime divisors are 2, 3, and 5. As an example, 602 = 3600 = 48 × 75, so as divisors of a power of 60 both 48 and 75 are regular. These numbers arise in several areas of mathematics and its applications, and have different names coming from their different areas of study. * In number theory, these numbers are called 5-smooth, because they can be characterized as having only 2, 3, or 5 as their prime factors. This is a specific case of the more general - smooth numbers, the numbers that have no prime factor greater * In the study of Babylonian mathematics, the divisors of powers of 60 are called regular numbers or regular sexagesimal numbers, and are of great importance in this area because of the sexagesimal (base 60) number system that the Babylonians used for writing their numbers, and that was ce ...
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Regular Measure
In mathematics, a regular measure on a topological space is a measure for which every measurable set can be approximated from above by open measurable sets and from below by compact measurable sets. Definition Let (''X'', ''T'') be a topological space and let Σ be a σ-algebra on ''X''. Let ''μ'' be a measure on (''X'', Σ). A measurable subset ''A'' of ''X'' is said to be inner regular if :\mu (A) = \sup \ and said to be outer regular if :\mu (A) = \inf \ *A measure is called inner regular if every measurable set is inner regular. Some authors use a different definition: a measure is called inner regular if every open measurable set is inner regular. *A measure is called outer regular if every measurable set is outer regular. *A measure is called regular if it is outer regular and inner regular. Examples Regular measures * Lebesgue measure on the real line is a regular measure: see the regularity theorem for Lebesgue measure. * Any Baire probability ...
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Regular Matrix (other)
Regular matrix may refer to: Mathematics * Regular stochastic matrix, a stochastic matrix such that all the entries of some power of the matrix are positive * The opposite of irregular matrix, a matrix with a different number of entries in each row * Regular Hadamard matrix, a Hadamard matrix whose row and column sums are all equal * A regular element of a Lie algebra, when the Lie algebra is ''gln'' * Invertible matrix In linear algebra, an -by- square matrix is called invertible (also nonsingular or nondegenerate), if there exists an -by- square matrix such that :\mathbf = \mathbf = \mathbf_n \ where denotes the -by- identity matrix and the multiplicati ... (this usage is rare) Other uses * QS Regular Matrix, a quadraphonic sound system developed by Sansui Electric {{mathdab ...
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Regular Function
In algebraic geometry, a morphism between algebraic varieties is a function between the varieties that is given locally by polynomials. It is also called a regular map. A morphism from an algebraic variety to the affine line is also called a regular function. A regular map whose inverse is also regular is called biregular, and they are isomorphisms in the category of algebraic varieties. Because regular and biregular are very restrictive conditions – there are no non-constant regular functions on projective varieties – the weaker condition of a rational map and birational maps are frequently used as well. Definition If ''X'' and ''Y'' are closed subvarieties of \mathbb^n and \mathbb^m (so they are affine varieties), then a regular map f\colon X\to Y is the restriction of a polynomial map \mathbb^n\to \mathbb^m. Explicitly, it has the form: :f = (f_1, \dots, f_m) where the f_is are in the coordinate ring of ''X'': :k = k _1, \dots, x_nI, where ''I'' is the ideal defining '' ...
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Cauchy-continuous Function
In mathematics, a Cauchy-continuous, or Cauchy-regular, function is a special kind of continuous function between metric spaces (or more general spaces). Cauchy-continuous functions have the useful property that they can always be (uniquely) extended to the Cauchy completion of their domain. Definition Let X and Y be metric spaces, and let f : X \to Y be a function from X to Y. Then f is Cauchy-continuous if and only if, given any Cauchy sequence \left(x_1, x_2, \ldots\right) in X, the sequence \left(f\left(x_1\right), f\left(x_2\right), \ldots\right) is a Cauchy sequence in Y. Properties Every uniformly continuous function is also Cauchy-continuous. Conversely, if the domain X is totally bounded, then every Cauchy-continuous function is uniformly continuous. More generally, even if X is not totally bounded, a function on X is Cauchy-continuous if and only if it is uniformly continuous on every totally bounded subset of X. Every Cauchy-continuous function is continuous. Co ...
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Borel Regular Measure
Borel may refer to: People * Borel (author), 18th-century French playwright * Borel (1906–1967), pseudonym of the French actor Jacques Henri Cottance * Émile Borel (1871 – 1956), a French mathematician known for his founding work in the areas of measure theory and probability * Armand Borel (1923 – 2003), a Swiss mathematician * Mary Grace Borel (1915 – 1998), American socialite Places * Borel (crater), a lunar crater, named after Émile Borel Mathematics * Borel algebra, operating on Borel sets, named after Émile Borel, also: ** Borel measure, the measure on a Borel algebra * Borel distribution, a discrete probability distribution, also named after Émile Borel * Borel subgroup, in the theory of algebraic groups, named after Armand Borel Other uses * Borel (surname), a surname * Etablissements Borel, an aircraft manufacturing company founded by Gabriel Borel See also *Borrel Borrel is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Amédée Borrel (1867 ...
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Semigroup With Involution
In mathematics, particularly in abstract algebra, a semigroup with involution or a *-semigroup is a semigroup equipped with an involutive anti-automorphism, which—roughly speaking—brings it closer to a group because this involution, considered as unary operator, exhibits certain fundamental properties of the operation of taking the inverse in a group: uniqueness, double application "cancelling itself out", and the same interaction law with the binary operation as in the case of the group inverse. It is thus not a surprise that any group is a semigroup with involution. However, there are significant natural examples of semigroups with involution that are not groups. An example from linear algebra is the multiplicative monoid of real square matrices of order ''n'' (called the full linear monoid). The map which sends a matrix to its transpose is an involution because the transpose is well defined for any matrix and obeys the law , which has the same form of interactio ...
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Regular Semigroup
In mathematics, a regular semigroup is a semigroup ''S'' in which every element is regular, i.e., for each element ''a'' in ''S'' there exists an element ''x'' in ''S'' such that . Regular semigroups are one of the most-studied classes of semigroups, and their structure is particularly amenable to study via Green's relations. History Regular semigroups were introduced by J. A. Green in his influential 1951 paper "On the structure of semigroups"; this was also the paper in which Green's relations were introduced. The concept of ''regularity'' in a semigroup was adapted from an analogous condition for rings, already considered by John von Neumann. It was Green's study of regular semigroups which led him to define his celebrated relations. According to a footnote in Green 1951, the suggestion that the notion of regularity be applied to semigroups was first made by David Rees. The term inversive semigroup (French: demi-groupe inversif) was historically used as synonym in the pa ...
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Regular Semi-algebraic System
In computer algebra, a regular semi-algebraic system is a particular kind of triangular system of multivariate polynomials over a real closed field. Introduction Regular chains and triangular decompositions are fundamental and well-developed tools for describing the complex solutions of polynomial systems. The notion of a regular semi-algebraic system is an adaptation of the concept of a regular chain focusing on solutions of the real analogue: semi-algebraic systems. Any semi-algebraic system S can be decomposed into finitely many regular semi-algebraic systems S_1, \ldots, S_e such that a point (with real coordinates) is a solution of S if and only if it is a solution of one of the systems S_1, \ldots, S_e.Changbo Chen, James H. Davenport, John P. May, Marc Moreno-Maza, Bican Xia, Rong XiaoTriangular decomposition of semi-algebraic systems Proceedings of 2010 International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic Computation (ISSAC 2010), ACM Press, pp. 187–194, 2010. Formal d ...
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Von Neumann Regular Ring
In mathematics, a von Neumann regular ring is a ring ''R'' (associative, with 1, not necessarily commutative) such that for every element ''a'' in ''R'' there exists an ''x'' in ''R'' with . One may think of ''x'' as a "weak inverse" of the element ''a;'' in general ''x'' is not uniquely determined by ''a''. Von Neumann regular rings are also called absolutely flat rings, because these rings are characterized by the fact that every left ''R''-module is flat. Von Neumann regular rings were introduced by under the name of "regular rings", in the course of his study of von Neumann algebras and continuous geometry. Von Neumann regular rings should not be confused with the unrelated regular rings and regular local rings of commutative algebra. An element ''a'' of a ring is called a von Neumann regular element if there exists an ''x'' such that .Kaplansky (1972) p.110 An ideal \mathfrak is called a (von Neumann) regular ideal if for every element ''a'' in \mathfrak there exists ...
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Regular Ring
In commutative algebra, a regular local ring is a Noetherian local ring having the property that the minimal number of generators of its maximal ideal is equal to its Krull dimension. In symbols, let ''A'' be a Noetherian local ring with maximal ideal m, and suppose ''a''1, ..., ''a''''n'' is a minimal set of generators of m. Then by Krull's principal ideal theorem ''n'' ≥ dim ''A'', and ''A'' is defined to be regular if ''n'' = dim ''A''. The appellation ''regular'' is justified by the geometric meaning. A point ''x'' on an algebraic variety ''X'' is nonsingular if and only if the local ring \mathcal_ of germs at ''x'' is regular. (See also: regular scheme.) Regular local rings are ''not'' related to von Neumann regular rings. For Noetherian local rings, there is the following chain of inclusions: Characterizations There are a number of useful definitions of a regular local ring, one of which is mentioned above. In particular, if A is a Noetherian local ring with maximal ide ...
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