|
|
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| {{Unreferenced|date=March 2007}}
| | Hi there. Allow me start by introducing the writer, her name is Sophia. Distributing production is how he tends to make a living. Mississippi is exactly where her house is but her husband desires them to move. To perform lacross is the thing I adore most of all.<br><br>my webpage [http://www.prayerarmor.com/uncategorized/dont-know-which-kind-of-hobby-to-take-up-read-the-following-tips/ authentic psychic readings] |
| In [[mathematics]], a complete set of [[Invariant (mathematics)|invariant]]s for a [[classification theorems|classification problem]] is a collection of maps
| |
| :<math>f_i : X \to Y_i \,</math>
| |
| (where ''X'' is the collection of objects being classified, up to some equivalence relation, and the <math>Y_i</math> are some sets), such that <math>x</math> ∼ <math>x'</math> if and only if <math>f_i(x) = f_i(x')</math> for all ''i''. In words, such that two objects are equivalent if and only if all invariants are equal.
| |
| | |
| Symbolically, a complete set of invariants is a collection of maps such that
| |
| :<math>\prod f_i : (X/\sim) \to \prod Y_i</math>
| |
| is [[injective]].
| |
| | |
| As invariants are, by definition, equal on equivalent objects, equality of invariants is a ''necessary'' condition for equivalence; a ''complete'' set of invariants is a set such that equality of these is ''sufficient'' for equivalence. In the context of a group action, this may be stated as: invariants are functions of [[coinvariant]]s (equivalence classes, orbits), and a complete set of invariants characterizes the coinvariants (is a set of defining equations for the coinvariants).
| |
| | |
| ==Examples==
| |
| * In the [[classification of two-dimensional closed manifolds]], [[Euler characteristic]] (or [[Genus (mathematics)|genus]]) and [[orientability]] are a complete set of invariants.
| |
| * [[Jordan normal form]] of a matrix is a complete invariant for matrices up to conjugation, but [[eigenvalue]]s (with multiplicities) are not.
| |
| | |
| ==Realizability of invariants==
| |
| A complete set of invariants does not immediately yield a [[classification theorem]]: not all combinations of invariants may be realized. Symbolically, one must also determine the image of
| |
| :<math>\prod f_i : X \to \prod Y_i.</math>
| |
| | |
| {{DEFAULTSORT:Complete Set Of Invariants}}
| |
| [[Category:Mathematical terminology]]
| |
Hi there. Allow me start by introducing the writer, her name is Sophia. Distributing production is how he tends to make a living. Mississippi is exactly where her house is but her husband desires them to move. To perform lacross is the thing I adore most of all.
my webpage authentic psychic readings