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  neighborhood – ordered pair

neighborhood   A neighborhood of a point x of a topological space is an open set of the space containing x. In a metric space, a d-neighborhood of x is the collection of all points of the space whose distance from x is less than d.

non-denumerable   Uncountable.

norm   Analysis: A non-negative real-valued function “|| x ||” defined on a vector space, satisfying
  1. || –x || = || x ||,
  2. || cx || = || c || × || x || for all scalars c, and
  3. || x + y || <= || x || + || y || (triangle inequality)
Statistics: Another term for the mode of a frequency distribution.


normal   A line intersecting a curve (or surface) perpendicular to the tangent line (or tangent plane) at the point of intersection. The normal to a surface expressed as a function of several variables xi is given by the gradient.

normalized bounded variation   See: bounded variation.

normed space   A vector space with a norm defined on it.

nowhere dense   Given a space X and a subset A of X, we say that A is nowhere dense if every open set of X contains an open subset that is disjoint from A. This is equivalent to saying that the complement of A is dense, or that A has empty interior.

null set   A set of measure zero. That is, given a measure m on a measure space X, a measurable set A in X is called a null set if its measure is zero.
Cf. positive set, negative set, almost everywhere.


number   There is no precise mathematical definition of the word “number.” There are however precise definitions of the terms “natural number,” “rational number,” “real number,” “complex number,” and other less commonly used kinds of number. When a mathematician speaks about numbers she usually has one of these cases in mind and she should, at the outset, make it clear to which type of number she is referring. The naive, inborn concept of number that is shared to some degree by all humans is a matter for philosophical rather than strictly mathematical inquiry, and it may be noted that there has historically been strong opposition to the introduction of new generalizations of established concepts of number.

numeral   Graphical symbol representing a number.

obtuse   An angle is called obtuse if it is greater than a right angle, that is, if its measure is greater than 90° (p/2 radians). A triangle is called obtuse if one of its angles is obtuse.
Cf. acute.


octahedron   A polyhedron having eight faces.


The faces of a regular octahedron are congruent, equilateral triangles.
Cf. Platonic solid, polyhedron.


open   See: open function, open interval, open set.

open cover   A collection of open sets which contains a given set X is called an open cover of X.

open covering   In a topological space, an open covering of a set E is a collection {Ui} of open sets such that E is contained in the union of the Ui.

open disk   The interior of a circle.
Cf. neighborhood, disk.


open function   A function from one topological space into another is called open if the image of every open set of the domain is an open set in the range.

open interval   An interval of the real number line (or any other totally ordered set) which does not include its endpoints. An interval containing only one of its endpoints is called half-open.
Cf. closed interval.


open set   A subset U of a topological space X is open if every element x of U is contained in an open set of X that is also contained in U. In a metric space, U is open if for every x in U we may find a d greater than zero such that the d neighborhood of x is also contained in U.

ordered field   See field.

ordered pair   An ordered tuple (a,b), the first element of which is called the abscissa, and the second element the ordinate, and for which (a,b) = (b,a) if and only if a = b. Functions, graphs of functions, and binary relations are represented as sets of ordered pairs. In standard set theory, the ordered pair (a,b) is defined to be the set { {a}, {a,b} }.
Cf. flat pair.


 





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neighborhood – ordered pair



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