Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Generating function" ¶ 58
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

derived and above
In fact the smooth muscle within the abdominal aorta is derived from mesoderm, and the coronary arteries, which arise just above the semilunar valves, possess smooth muscle of mesodermal origin.
Similarly, " suprarenal " is derived from supra-( Latin, " above ") and renes.
" Alternately, the name may have derived from the Persian bālkāneh or bālākhāna, meaning " high, above, or proud house ," and brought to the region in the 11th and 12th centuries by Turkic tribes who applied it to the area.
In practice, the above definition is rarely used because in virtually all cases, the curl operator can be applied using some set of curvilinear coordinates, for which simpler representations have been derived.
Locke believed that individuals had given consent to government and therefore authority derived from the people rather than from above.
It is also the name of various other places and place-related terms, mostly derived historically from the above town:
The above results can be derived perhaps more simply in polar coordinates, and at the same time extended to general motion within a plane, as shown next.
The two equations above can be derived by adding or subtracting Euler's formulas:
Independency or congregationalist polity among Protestants may involve the rejection of any governmental structure or binding authority above local congregations ; conformity to the decisions of these councils is therefore considered purely voluntary and the councils are to be considered binding only insofar as those doctrines are derived from the Scriptures.
Vegetable shortening, used mainly for baking, and margarine, used in baking and as a spread, can be derived from the above oils by hydrogenation.
Traditionally Mark's authority and survival has derived from its Petrine origins ( see above " Authorship ").
They also believe there are traditional formulas that date back to Moses on how the divine law may be interpreted-see above, " Rules by which early Jewish law was derived ".
Gilbert Chase, in his book The Music of Spain, describes Pedrell ’ s influence on Albéniz: “ What Albéniz derived from Pedrell was above all a spiritual orientation, the realization of the wonderful values inherent in Spanish music ".
At the same time as the generation of the gynogenetic and androgenetic embryos discussed above, mouse embryos were also being generated that contained only small regions that were derived from either a paternal or maternal source.
The relation between the geocentric latitude ( ψ ) and the geodetic latitude ( φ ) is derived in the above references as
MUMPS can be made more obfuscated by using the contracted operator syntax, as shown in this terse example derived from the example above:
This variety in combination with the complexity of angular measure described above along with the intrinsic uncertainty of geodetically derived units mitigated against the extant definitions in favor of a simple unit of pure length.
As noted above, Richard appears in connection with Robin Hood in Sir Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe and the many works derived from the novel, and in numerous films about Robin Hood.
A whiskey that fulfils all these above requirements except that it is derived from less than 51 % of any one specific type of grain can be called simply a " straight whiskey " without naming a grain.
From the above formula, the following formulas can be derived, using,, and.
The term Giclée, derived from the French and meaning " to spurt ", is sometimes used in the commercial fine art print community to describe the ink-jet printing processes listed above.
The Rhodes piano's tone-generating principles are derived from the concept of an asymmetrical tuning fork, with a stiff wire ( called a " tine "), struck by a felt-tipped ( neoprene rubber-tipped after 1970 ) hammer, acting as one side of the tuning fork, and a counterbalancing resonating tone bar above the tine acting as the other side.
Since the uncertainty relation can be derived from the wavefunction in other interpretations of quantum mechanics, it can be likewise derived ( in the epistemic sense mentioned above ), on the de Broglie – Bohm theory.
The phenomenological tie-in with the sociology of knowledge stems from two key historical sources for Mannheim's analysis: Mannheim was dependent on insights derived from Husserl's phenomenological investigations, especially the theory of meaning as found in Husserl's Logical Investigations of 1900 / 1901 ( Husserl: 2000 ), in the formulation of his central methodological work: " On The Interpretation of Weltanschauung " ( Mannheim: 1993: see fn41 & fn43 )-this essay forms the centerpiece for Mannheim's method of historical understanding and is central to his conception of the sociology of knowledge as a research program ; and The concept of " Weltanschauung " employed by Mannheim has its origins in the hermeneutic philosophy of Wilhelm Dilthey, who relied on Husserl's theory of meaning ( above ) for his methodological specification of the interpretive act ( Mannheim: 1993: see fn38 ).

derived and ordinary
The sculptors derived this from observations on human beings, but they also embodied in concrete form, issues beyond the reach of ordinary thought.
In the formation of an ordinary agate, it is probable that waters containing silica in solution — derived, perhaps, from the decomposition of some of the silicates in the lava itself — percolated through the rock and deposited a siliceous coating on the interior of the vapour-vesicles.
The following properties can all be derived from the ordinary differentiation rules of calculus.
This was followed by a second ordinary, established by Stacey Taylor in 1804, and later by " Purcel's Store " and Post Office, Established by Valentine Vernon Purcell ( from whom the Town's name is derived ).
Expressions for the ordinary generating function of other sequences are easily derived from this one.
The Art, Music and dances of Sri Lanka were derived from the elements of Nature. Sri Lanka had traditional folk music from the beginning of its race, which has been enjoyed and developed under the Buddhist environment. They were used by the ordinary people.
In practice, where a resident of a treaty partner alienates assets situated in China as part of its ordinary course of business the gains so derived will likely be assessed as if it is a capital gain, rather than business profit.
Garfinkel states that it was derived from the concept of indexical expressions appearing in ordinary language philosophy ( 1967 ), wherein a statement is considered to be indexical insofar as it is dependent for its sense upon the context in which it is embedded ( Bar-Hillel: 1954: 359-379 ).
In the Javanese language alphabet characters derived from the alphabets used to write Sanskrit, no longer in ordinary use, are used in literary words as a mark of respect.
It was derived from the ordinary fleet signal books used by both British and German navies, which had thousands of predetermined instructions which could be represented by simple combinations of signal flags or lamp flashes for transmission between ships.
Rather, an entirely different sort of basic connection of elements is possible, from which our ordinary notions of space and time, along with those of separately existent material particles, are abstracted as forms derived from the deeper order.
* Tokajské samorodné suché ( samorodné derived from a Slovak word meaning " the way it was grown ", suché means " dry "): Samorodné wine is set apart from ordinary wine in that it is made from bunches which contain a considerable proportion of botrytised grapes.
James ), above, and by Walpole, who surmised that the name is derived from the response of ordinary folk on encountering them and that they were "... then deemed so astonishing, that the common people called them Ha!
The term is derived from militia, which in turn claims its etymology from the concept of a military force composed of ordinary citizens.

derived and generating
In mathematics, the Weil conjectures were some highly-influential proposals by on the generating functions ( known as local zeta-functions ) derived from counting the number of points on algebraic varieties over finite fields.
The generating function has coefficients derived from the numbers N < sub > k </ sub > of points over the ( essentially unique ) field with q < sup > k </ sup > elements.
Historically, the markers originally used were detectable phenotypes ( enzyme production, eye color ) derived from coding DNA sequences ; eventually, confirmed or assumed noncoding DNA sequences such as microsatellites or those generating restriction fragment length polymorphisms ( RFLPs ) have been used.
For example, since a segment may be equivalent to the generating segment inverted and transposed, say, 6 semitones, when the entire row is inverted and transposed six semitones the generating segment will now consist of the pitch classes of the derived segment.
Instead of " is-ness " generating " actuality ," he argued that existence and actuality come first, and the essence is derived afterward.
As described below, this equation may be derived from Hamiltonian mechanics by treating S as the generating function for a canonical transformation of the classical Hamiltonian
It may also be observed in Igor Stravinsky's Russian period, such as in Les Noces, derived from his use of folk melodies as generating material and influenced by shorter pieces by Claude Debussy, such as Voiles, and Modest Mussorgsky.
SEED has a fairly complex key schedule, generating its thirty-two 32-bit subkeys through application of its G-function on a series of rotations of the raw key, combined with round constants derived ( as in TEA ) from the Golden ratio.
According to the American Heritage Dictionary, the Latin word sincerus is derived from the Indo-European root * sm ̥ kēros, itself derived from the zero-grade of * sem ( one ) and the suffixed, lengthened e-grade of * ker ( grow ), generating the underlying meaning of one growth, hence pure, clean.
As such, generating recurring " revenue " is not the focus of operations management ; what counts is management of the relationship between the cost of goods sold and the revenue derived from their sale.
In thermodynamics, Bridgman's thermodynamic equations are a basic set of thermodynamic equations, derived using a method of generating a large number of thermodynamic identities involving a number of thermodynamic quantities.

2.155 seconds.