
West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District Geometry Honors
... Building on their work with the Pythagorean theorem to find distances, students will use a rectangular coordinate system to verify geometric relationships, including properties and slopes of parallel and perpendicular lines. Students will experiment with transformations in the plane. Comparisons of ...
... Building on their work with the Pythagorean theorem to find distances, students will use a rectangular coordinate system to verify geometric relationships, including properties and slopes of parallel and perpendicular lines. Students will experiment with transformations in the plane. Comparisons of ...
37(2)
... given balancing number x?!! The answer to this question is affirmative. More precisely, if x is any balancing number, then the next balancing number is 3x + V8x2 +1 and, consequently, the previous one is 3x - V8x2 4-1. Theorem 3.1: If x is any balancing number, then there is no balancing number y su ...
... given balancing number x?!! The answer to this question is affirmative. More precisely, if x is any balancing number, then the next balancing number is 3x + V8x2 +1 and, consequently, the previous one is 3x - V8x2 4-1. Theorem 3.1: If x is any balancing number, then there is no balancing number y su ...
Smoothness of the sum and Riemann summability of double
... In the second part of the disertation we dene two new summation methods: the Riemann summability od double trigonometric series, and Lebesgue summability of double trigonometric integrals. In the third chapter we extend the concept of the Riemann summability from single to double trigonometric seri ...
... In the second part of the disertation we dene two new summation methods: the Riemann summability od double trigonometric series, and Lebesgue summability of double trigonometric integrals. In the third chapter we extend the concept of the Riemann summability from single to double trigonometric seri ...
Proper Maps and Universally Closed Maps
... Case 2. Suppose that A is all locally compact Hausdorff spaces. The proof in Case 1 goes through if one replaces the Stone-Čech compactification βX with the one point compactification X •. Case 3. Suppose that A is all closed subsets of R n , where n ranges over all nonnegative integers. If X is ...
... Case 2. Suppose that A is all locally compact Hausdorff spaces. The proof in Case 1 goes through if one replaces the Stone-Čech compactification βX with the one point compactification X •. Case 3. Suppose that A is all closed subsets of R n , where n ranges over all nonnegative integers. If X is ...
3 First examples and properties
... complete and closed and would have to be compact. But K is not compact, so V /W cannot have any one-dimensional subspace, i.e., must have dimension zero. Thus, W = V and V is nite dimensional. ...
... complete and closed and would have to be compact. But K is not compact, so V /W cannot have any one-dimensional subspace, i.e., must have dimension zero. Thus, W = V and V is nite dimensional. ...
6.6 Theorems Involving Similarity
... set of congruent angles (the right angle). ∆BAC and ∆BCD share 6 B, so ∆BAC ∼ ∆BCD by AA ∼. Similarly, ∆BAC and ∆CAD share 6 C, so ∆BAC ∼ ∆CAD by AA ∼. By the transitive property, all three triangles must be similar to one another. Vocabulary ...
... set of congruent angles (the right angle). ∆BAC and ∆BCD share 6 B, so ∆BAC ∼ ∆BCD by AA ∼. Similarly, ∆BAC and ∆CAD share 6 C, so ∆BAC ∼ ∆CAD by AA ∼. By the transitive property, all three triangles must be similar to one another. Vocabulary ...
Brouwer fixed-point theorem

Brouwer's fixed-point theorem is a fixed-point theorem in topology, named after Luitzen Brouwer. It states that for any continuous function f mapping a compact convex set into itself there is a point x0 such that f(x0) = x0. The simplest forms of Brouwer's theorem are for continuous functions f from a closed interval I in the real numbers to itself or from a closed disk D to itself. A more general form than the latter is for continuous functions from a convex compact subset K of Euclidean space to itself.Among hundreds of fixed-point theorems, Brouwer's is particularly well known, due in part to its use across numerous fields of mathematics.In its original field, this result is one of the key theorems characterizing the topology of Euclidean spaces, along with the Jordan curve theorem, the hairy ball theorem and the Borsuk–Ulam theorem.This gives it a place among the fundamental theorems of topology. The theorem is also used for proving deep results about differential equations and is covered in most introductory courses on differential geometry.It appears in unlikely fields such as game theory. In economics, Brouwer's fixed-point theorem and its extension, the Kakutani fixed-point theorem, play a central role in the proof of existence of general equilibrium in market economies as developed in the 1950s by economics Nobel prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Gérard Debreu.The theorem was first studied in view of work on differential equations by the French mathematicians around Poincaré and Picard.Proving results such as the Poincaré–Bendixson theorem requires the use of topological methods.This work at the end of the 19th century opened into several successive versions of the theorem. The general case was first proved in 1910 by Jacques Hadamard and by Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer.