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conic section differentiation rule
conic section
ARTICLE
A plane curve, either the ellipse, parabola, or hyperbola, which results from the intersection of a plane with a cone. See the article for a full exposition
Cf. Dandelin's Spheres.

constant
An unvarying quantity, usually represented notationally by an alphabetic letter such as ‘k,’ ‘c,’ etc.

constant function
A constant function f is one whose value is the same at all points of its domain.

continuous
Analysis: A function f is continuous at a point x of its domain if, whenever we are given a number e greater than 0, we may find a d greater than 0 so that whenever y is within a d-neighborhood of x, then f(y) is within an e-neighborhood of f(x).
Topology: A transformation of one topological space into another is continuous if the inverse image of every open set is open, or equivalently if the inverse image of every closed set is closed.
Cf. uniformly continuous, equicontinuous, absolutely continuous.

continuum
In mathematics, the real numbers or real number line.

Related article: Gödel's Theorems
Related MiniText: Infinity -- You Can't Get There From Here...

contradiction
An assertion that some statement is simultaneously true and false.
When a contradiction arises in mathematics, it is an indication that a mistaken assumption has been made, and this is often used to write “proofs by contradiction,” a strategy in which the negation of the statement to be proved is assumed, and a contradiction then derived. The contradiction is then taken as proving the original (non-negated) statement. (This strategy relies on the supposition that the mathematical theory under discussion is itself consistent, that is, free of contradiction.)
It sometimes happens that a contradiction arises, and yet none of the assumptions leading to the contradiction can be sacrificed. This is known as a paradox. If the assumptions are formal axioms, the result is called an antinomy.

convergent series
See series.

Related article: Series

converse statement
Given a conditional, i.e., a statement of the form “if A then B,” or “A implies B,” its converse is “B implies A.” A conditional neither implies nor is implied by its converse. However, the converse of a conditional and its inverse are logically equivalent, since they are contrapositives of each other.

convex
Naively, a region of space is convex if the line segement joining any two points of the region lies wholly within it. Thus, a polygon is convex if every line segment joining any two points on its sides lies entirely within the polygon. (This is equivalent to the condition that all its interior angles be less than 180°.)
 More generally, a region in a real vector space is convex if whenever two points x and y are in the region then so is any point tx + (1 - t)y, where t lies in the interval [0, 1]. See the immediately following entries for additional uses of the descriptor “convex.”
Cf. concave.

convex function
A function is convex if the chord joining any two points of its graph lies entirely above the graph.
Cf. concave function.

cross product
See vector product.

cube
A regular polyhedron having six square faces.
 More generally, an n-dimensional cube in the first quadrant of a Euclidean space with one vertex at the origin is given by the collection of all n-tuples of the form (e1,e2, ... , en), with each ei an element of the set {0,1}.
Cf. platonic solid.

Related article: Platonic Solids

Dandelin’s Spheres
ARTICLE
A proof by the 17th century French mathematician Germinal Dandelin of the equivalence of the plane-geometry and conic-section definitions of the ellipse, parabola, and hyperbola. See the article for a full exposition.

definite integral
See: integral.

degenerate conic
A conic section in which the intersecting plane passes through the vertex.

Related article: Conics

degree
Geometry: A unit of measure of angles, denoted by “ ° ”. A complete circle contains 360°, a straight line 180°, and a right angle 90°. Compare radians.

Algebra: The degree of a polynomial is the highest sum of exponents appearing in any term with a non-zero coefficient.
Graph Theory: The degree of a vertex is the number of edges incident on that vertex, counting loops twice. The degree of an edge is an unordered pair of the degrees of its two ends.

derivative
For a function f of a single real variable x, the derivative is defined as the limit of the difference quotient
 provided this limit exists. In practice, the derivative is interpreted as the instantaneous rate of change of the function at x. Graphically, the derivative returns the slope of the tangent at x.
Cf. differentiation rules.

diameter
Geometry: A diameter of a circle (or sphere) is a line containing the center and with endpoints on the perimeter (resp. surface).
Analysis: Given a set X in a metric space, the diameter of X is the supremum of the distances between all pairs of points of X.
Graph Theory: The diameter of a given graph G is the maximum, over all pairs of vertices u, v of G that are in the same connected component of G, of the distance between u and v. In other words, it is the greatest distance between two vertices on the graph.

difference
The difference of two numbers m and n, with n > m, is the number which when added to m yields n. For example, the difference of 3 and 5 is 2.
Set Theory: The difference of two sets A and B, denoted either as AB or as A - B, is the set of elements of A that are not in B.

differentiable
A function is differentiable at a point of its domain if its derivative exists at that point. A function is said to be (simply) differentiable if its derivative exists at all points of its domain.

differentiation rule
ARTICLE
A rule permitting easy differentiation of functions having certain forms. See the article for a complete description.
Cf. derivative.

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