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=Selberg sieve=
 
=Selberg sieve=
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==References==
 
==References==
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Alina Carmen Cojocaru | coauthors=M. Ram Murty | title=An introduction to sieve methods and their applications | series=London Mathematical Society Student Texts | volume=66 | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn=0-521-61275-6 | pages=113-134 }}
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* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author=Alina Carmen Cojocaru | coauthors=M. Ram Murty | title=An introduction to sieve methods and their applications | series=London Mathematical Society Student Texts | volume=66 | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn=0-521-61275-6 | pages=113-134 }}
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=George Greaves | title=Sieves in number theory | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | date=2001 | isbn=3-540-41647-1}}
+
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author=George Greaves | title=Sieves in number theory | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | date=2001 | isbn=3-540-41647-1}}
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Heini Halberstam | coauthors=H.E. Richert | title=Sieve Methods | publisher=[[Academic Press]] | date=1974 | isbn=0-12-318250-6}}
+
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author=Heini Halberstam | coauthors=H.E. Richert | title=Sieve Methods | publisher=[[Academic Press]] | date=1974 | isbn=0-12-318250-6}}
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author= Christopher Hooley | authorlink=Christopher Hooley | title=Applications of sieve methods to the theory of numbers | publisher=Cambridge University Press | date=1976 | isbn=0-521-20915-3| pages=7-12}}
+
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author= Christopher Hooley | authorlink=Christopher Hooley | title=Applications of sieve methods to the theory of numbers | publisher=Cambridge University Press | date=1976 | isbn=0-521-20915-3| pages=7-12}}
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Atle Selberg | authorlink=Atle Selberg | title=On an elementary method in the theory of primes | journal=Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh. Trondheim | volume=19 | year=1947 | pages=64-67 }}
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* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author=Atle Selberg | authorlink=Atle Selberg | title=On an elementary method in the theory of primes | journal=Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh. Trondheim | volume=19 | year=1947 | pages=64-67 }}
 
 
 
 
=Sober space=
 
A [[topological space]] in which every [[irreducible set|irreducible]] [[closed set]] has a unique [[generic point]].  Here a closed set is ''irreducible'' if it is not the union of two non-empty proper closed subsets of itself. 
 
 
 
Any [[Hausdorff space]] is sober, since the only irreducible subsets are [[singleton]]s.  Any sober spaces is a [[T0 space]].  However, sobriety is not equivalent to the [[T1 space]] condition: an infinite set with the [[cofinite topology]] is T1 but not sober whereas a Sierpinski space is sober but not T1.
 
  
A sober space is characterised by its [[lattice (order)|lattice]] of [[open set]]s. An open set in a sober space is again a sober space, as is a closed set. 
+
=Separation axioms=
 +
In [[topology]], '''separation axioms''' describe classes of [[topological space]] according to how well the [[open set]]s of the topology distinguish between distinct points.
  
==References==
 
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Peter T. Johnstone | title=Sketches of an elephant | series=Oxford Logic Guides | publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] | year=2002 | isbn=0198534256 | pages=491-492 }}
 
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Maria Cristina Pedicchio | coauthors=Walter Tholen | title=Categorical Foundations: Special Topics in Order, Topology, Algebra, and Sheaf Theory | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | year=2004 | isbn=0-521-83414-7 | pages=54-55 }}
 
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=Steven Vickers | title=Topology via Logic | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | year=1989 | isbn=0-521-36062-5 | pages=66 }}
 
  
=Srivastava code=
+
==Terminology==
A class of parameterised [[error-correcting code]]s. They are block linear codes which are a special case of [[alternant code]]s.
+
A ''neighbourhood of a point'' ''x'' in a topological space ''X'' is a set ''N'' such that ''x'' is in the interior of ''N''; that is, there is an open set ''U'' such that <math>x \in U \subseteq N</math>.
 +
A ''neighbourhood of a set'' ''A'' in ''X'' is a set ''N'' such that ''A'' is contained in the interior of ''N''; that is, there is an open set ''U'' such that <math>A \subseteq U \subseteq N</math>.
  
The original ''Srivastava code'' of length $n$ and parameter $s$ over $GF(q)$ isdefined by an $n \times s$ [[parity check matrix]] $H$ of [[alternant matrix|alternant]] form
+
Subsets ''U'' and ''V'' are ''separated'' in ''X'' if ''U'' is disjoint from the [[Closure (topology)|closure]] of ''V'' and ''V'' is disjoint from the closure of ''U''.
$$
 
\begin{bmatrix}
 
\frac{\alpha_1^\mu}{\alpha_1-w_1} & \cdots & \frac{\alpha_n^\mu}{\alpha_n-w_1} \\
 
\vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\
 
\frac{\alpha_1^\mu}{\alpha_1-w_s} & \cdots & \frac{\alpha_n^\mu}{\alpha_n-w_s} \\
 
\end{bmatrix}
 
$$
 
where the $\alpha_i$ and $z_i$ are elements of $GF(q^m)$.
 
  
The parameters of this code are length $n$, dimension $\ge n - ms$ and minimum distance $\ge s+1$.
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A '''Urysohn function''' for subsets ''A'' and ''B'' of ''X'' is a [[continuous function]] ''f'' from ''X'' to the real unit interval such that ''f'' is 0 on ''A'' and 1 on ''B''.
  
== References ==
+
==Axioms==
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/ref | author=F.J. MacWilliams | title=The Theory of Error-Correcting Codes | publisher=North-Holland | date=1977 | isbn=0-444-85193-3 | pages=357-360 }}
+
A topological space ''X'' is
 +
* '''T0''' if for any two distinct points there is an open set which contains just one
 +
* '''T1''' if for any two points ''x'', ''y'' there are open sets ''U'' and ''V'' such that ''U'' contains ''x'' but not ''y'', and ''V'' contains ''y'' but not ''x''
 +
* '''T2''' if any two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods
 +
* '''T2½''' if distinct points have disjoint closed neighbourhoods
 +
* '''T3''' if a closed set ''A'' and a point ''x'' not in ''A'' have disjoint neighbourhoods
 +
* '''T3½''' if for any closed set ''A'' and point ''x'' not in ''A'' there is a Urysohn function for ''A'' and {''x''}
 +
* '''T4''' if disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods
 +
* '''T5''' if separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods
  
=Stably free module=
+
* '''Hausdorff''' is a synonym for T2
In [[mathematics]], a '''stably free module''' is a [[module (mathematics)|module]] which is close to being [[free module|free]].
+
* '''completely Hausdorff''' is a synonym for T2½
  
==Definition==
+
* '''regular''' if T0 and T3
A module ''M'' over a ring ''R'' is ''stably free'' if there exist free modules ''F'' and ''G'' over ''R'' such that
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* '''completely regular''' if T0 and T3½
 +
* '''Tychonoff''' is completely regular and T1
  
:<math> M \oplus F = G . \, </math>
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* '''normal''' if T0 and T4
 +
* '''completely normal''' if T1 and T5
 +
* '''perfectly normal''' if normal and every closed set is a [[G-delta set|G<sub>δ</sub>]]
  
 
==Properties==
 
==Properties==
* A module is stably free if and only if it possesses a finite [[free resolution]].
+
* A space is T1 if and only if each point ([[singleton]]) forms a closed set.
 
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* ''Urysohn's Lemma'': if ''A'' and ''B'' are disjoint closed subsets of a T4 space ''X'', there is a  Urysohn function for ''A'' and ''B'''.
== See also ==
 
* [[Free object]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{cite book | author=Serge Lang | authorlink=Serge Lang | title=Algebra | edition=3rd ed. | publisher=[[Addison-Wesley]] | year=1993 | isbn=0-201-55540-9 | page=840}}
+
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | last1=Steen | first1=Lynn Arthur | last2=Seebach | first2=J. Arthur Jr. | title=Counterexamples in Topology | year=1978 | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | location=Berlin, New York | isbn=0-387-90312-7 }}
 
 
 
 
=Stirling numbers=
 
 
 
In [[combinatorics]], the '''Stirling numbers''' count certain arrangements of objects into a given number of structures.  There are two kinds of Stirling number, depending on the nature of the structure being counted.
 
 
 
The Stirling number of the first kind ''S''(''n'',''k'') counts the number of ways ''n'' labelled objects can be arranged into ''k'' cycles: cycles are regarded as equivalent, and counted only once, if they differ by a [[cyclic permutation]], thus [ABC] = [BCA] = [CAB] but is counted as different from [CBA] = [BAC] = [ACB].  The order of the cycles in the list is irrelevant.
 
 
 
For example, 4 objects can be arranged into 2 cycles in eleven ways, so ''S''(4,2) = 11:
 
 
 
* [ABC],[D]
 
* [ACB],[D]
 
* [ABD],[C]
 
* [ADB],[C]
 
* [ACD],[B]
 
* [ADC],[B]
 
* [BCD],[A]
 
* [BDC],[A]
 
* [AB],[CD]
 
* [AC],[BD]
 
* [AD],[BC]
 
 
 
The Stirling number of the second kind ''s''(''n'',''k'') counts the number of ways ''n'' labelled objects can be arranged into ''k'' subsets: cycles are regarded as equivalent, and counted only once, if they have the same elements, thus {ABC} = {BCA} = {CAB} = {CBA} = {BAC} = {ACB}.  The order of the subsets in the list is irrelevant.
 
 
 
For example, 4 objects can be arranged into 2 subsets in seven ways, so ''s''(4,2) = 7:
 
 
 
* {ABC},{D}
 
* {ABD},{C}
 
* {ACD},{B}
 
* {BCD},{A}
 
* {AB},{CD}
 
* {AC},{BD}
 
* {AD},{BC}
 
 
 
==References==
 
* {{cite book | author=Ronald L. Graham | coauthors=Donald E. Knuth, Oren Patashnik | title=Concrete Mathematics | publisher=[[Addison Wesley]] | year=1989 | isbn=0-201-14236-8 | pages=243-253 }}
 
=Tau function=
 
In [[mathematics]], Ramanujan's '''tau function''' is an [[arithmetic function]] which may defined in terms of the [[Delta form]] by the formal infinite product
 
 
 
:<math>q \prod_{n=1}^\infty \left(1-q^n\right)^{24} = \sum_n \tau(n) q^n .\,</math>
 
 
 
Since Δ is a [[Hecke operator|Hecke]] [[eigenform]], the tau function is multiplicative, with [[formal Dirichlet series]] and Euler product
 
 
 
:<math> \sum_n \tau(n) n^{-s} = \prod_p \left(1 - \tau(p) p^{-s} + p^{11-2s} \right)^{-1} .\,</math>
 
 
 
  
 
=Turan sieve=
 
=Turan sieve=
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==References==
 
==References==
 
* {{cite book | author=Alina Carmen Cojocaru | coauthors=M. Ram Murty | title=An introduction to sieve methods and their applications | series=London Mathematical Society Student Texts | volume=66 | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn=0-521-61275-6 | pages=47-62 }}
 
* {{cite book | author=Alina Carmen Cojocaru | coauthors=M. Ram Murty | title=An introduction to sieve methods and their applications | series=London Mathematical Society Student Texts | volume=66 | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | isbn=0-521-61275-6 | pages=47-62 }}
=Tutte matrix=
 
In [[graph theory]], the '''Tutte matrix''' <math>A</math> of a [[Graph (mathematics)|graph]] ''G'' = (''V'',''E'') is a matrix used to determine the existence of a [[perfect matching]]: that is, a set of edges which is incident with each vertex exactly once.
 
 
If the set of vertices ''V'' has 2''n'' elements then the Tutte matrix is a 2''n'' × 2''n'' matrix A with entries
 
 
::: <math>A_{ij} = \begin{cases} x_{ij}\;\;\mbox{if}\;(i,j) \in E \mbox{ and } i<j\\
 
-x_{ji}\;\;\mbox{if}\;(i,j) \in E \mbox{ and } i>j\\
 
0\;\;\;\;\mbox{otherwise} \end{cases}</math>
 
 
where the ''x''<sub>''ij''</sub> are indeterminates.  The [[determinant]] of this [[skew-symmetric]] matrix is then a polynomial (in the variables ''x<sub>ij</sub>'', ''i<j'' ): this coincides with the square of the [[pfaffian]] of the matrix ''A'' and is non-zero (as a polynomial) if and only if a perfect matching exists.  (It should be noted that this is not the [[Tutte polynomial]] of ''G''.)
 
 
The Tutte matrix is a generalisation of the [[Edmonds matrix]] for a balanced [[bipartite graph]].
 
 
==References==
 
*{{cite book|author=R. Motwani, P. Raghavan |title=Randomized Algorithms|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1995|page=167}}
 
*{{cite book|author=Allen B. Tucker|title=Computer Science Handbook|publisher=CRC Press|date=2004|isbn=158488360X|page=12.19}}
 
* {{cite journal|url= http://jlms.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/s1-22/2/107.pdf|title= The factorization of linear graphs.
 
|accessdate= 2008-06-15|author= W.T. Tutte|authorlink=W. T. Tutte|year= 1947|month= April|volume=22|journal=J. London Math. Soc.|pages=107-111|doi=10.1112/jlms/s1-22.2.107}}
 
 
 
 
=Weierstrass preparation theorem=
 
=Weierstrass preparation theorem=
 
In [[algebra]], the '''Weierstrass preparation theorem''' describes a canonical form for [[formal power series]] over a [[complete local ring]].
 
In [[algebra]], the '''Weierstrass preparation theorem''' describes a canonical form for [[formal power series]] over a [[complete local ring]].
Line 202: Line 131:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{cite book | author=Serge Lang | authorlink=Serge Lang | title=Algebra | edition=3rd ed | publisher=[[Addison-Wesley]] | year=1993 | isbn=0-201-55540-9 | pages=208-209 }}
+
* {{User:Richard Pinch/sandbox/Ref | author=Serge Lang | authorlink=Serge Lang | title=Algebra | edition=3rd ed | publisher=[[Addison-Wesley]] | year=1993 | isbn=0-201-55540-9 | pages=208-209 }}
  
  

Latest revision as of 19:14, 2 May 2020


Selberg sieve

A technique for estimating the size of "sifted sets" of positive integers which satisfy a set of conditions which are expressed by congruences. It was developed by Atle Selberg in the 1940s.

Description

In terms of sieve theory the Selberg sieve is of combinatorial type: that is, derives from a careful use of the inclusion-exclusion principle. Selberg replaced the values of the Möbius function which arise in this by a system of weights which are then optimised to fit the given problem. The result gives an upper bound for the size of the sifted set.

Let A be a set of positive integers ≤ x and let P be a set of primes. For each p in P, let Ap denote the set of elements of A divisible by p and extend this to let Ad the intersection of the Ap for p dividing d, when d is a product of distinct primes from P. Further let A1 denote A itself. Let z be a positive real number and P(z) denote the product of the primes in P which are ≤ z. The object of the sieve is to estimate

\[S(A,P,z) = \left\vert A \setminus \bigcup_{p \in P(z)} A_p \right\vert . \]

We assume that |Ad| may be estimated by

\[ \left\vert A_d \right\vert = \frac{1}{f(d)} X + R_d . \]

where f is a multiplicative function and X   =   |A|. Let the function g be obtained from f by Möbius inversion, that is

\[ g(n) = \sum_{d \mid n} \mu(d) f(n/d) \] \[ f(n) = \sum_{d \mid n} g(d) \]

where μ is the Möbius function. Put

\[ V(z) = \sum_{\begin{smallmatrix}d < z \\ d \mid P(z)\end{smallmatrix}} \frac{\mu^2(d)}{g(d)} . \]

Then

\[ S(A,P,z) \le \frac{X}{V(z)} + O\left({\sum_{\begin{smallmatrix} d_1,d_2 < z \\ d_1,d_2 \mid P(z)\end{smallmatrix}} \left\vert R_{[d_1,d_2]} \right\vert} \right) .\]

It is often useful to estimate V(z) by the bound

\[ V(z) \ge \sum_{d \le z} \frac{1}{f(d)} . \, \]

Applications

  • The Brun-Titchmarsh theorem on the number of primes in an arithmetic progression;
  • The number of nx such that n is coprime to φ(n) is asymptotic to e x / log log log (x) .

References

  • Alina Carmen Cojocaru; M. Ram Murty; An introduction to sieve methods and their applications, ser. London Mathematical Society Student Texts 66 , pp. 113-134, Cambridge University Press ISBN: 0-521-61275-6
  • George Greaves; Sieves in number theory, , Springer-Verlag ISBN: 3-540-41647-1
  • Heini Halberstam; H.E. Richert; Sieve Methods, , Academic Press ISBN: 0-12-318250-6
  • Christopher Hooley; Applications of sieve methods to the theory of numbers, , pp. 7-12, Cambridge University Press ISBN: 0-521-20915-3
  • Atle Selberg; On an elementary method in the theory of primes, Norske Vid. Selsk. Forh. Trondheim, 19 (1947), pp. 64-67

Separation axioms

In topology, separation axioms describe classes of topological space according to how well the open sets of the topology distinguish between distinct points.


Terminology

A neighbourhood of a point x in a topological space X is a set N such that x is in the interior of N; that is, there is an open set U such that \(x \in U \subseteq N\). A neighbourhood of a set A in X is a set N such that A is contained in the interior of N; that is, there is an open set U such that \(A \subseteq U \subseteq N\).

Subsets U and V are separated in X if U is disjoint from the closure of V and V is disjoint from the closure of U.

A Urysohn function for subsets A and B of X is a continuous function f from X to the real unit interval such that f is 0 on A and 1 on B.

Axioms

A topological space X is

  • T0 if for any two distinct points there is an open set which contains just one
  • T1 if for any two points x, y there are open sets U and V such that U contains x but not y, and V contains y but not x
  • T2 if any two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods
  • T2½ if distinct points have disjoint closed neighbourhoods
  • T3 if a closed set A and a point x not in A have disjoint neighbourhoods
  • T3½ if for any closed set A and point x not in A there is a Urysohn function for A and {x}
  • T4 if disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods
  • T5 if separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods
  • Hausdorff is a synonym for T2
  • completely Hausdorff is a synonym for T2½
  • regular if T0 and T3
  • completely regular if T0 and T3½
  • Tychonoff is completely regular and T1
  • normal if T0 and T4
  • completely normal if T1 and T5
  • perfectly normal if normal and every closed set is a Gδ

Properties

  • A space is T1 if and only if each point (singleton) forms a closed set.
  • Urysohn's Lemma: if A and B are disjoint closed subsets of a T4 space X, there is a Urysohn function for A and B'.

References

  • Steen, Lynn Arthur; Seebach, J. Arthur Jr.; Counterexamples in Topology, (1978), Springer-Verlag ISBN: 0-387-90312-7

Turan sieve

In mathematics, in the field of number theory, the Turán sieve is a technique for estimating the size of "sifted sets" of positive integers which satisfy a set of conditions which are expressed by congruences. It was developed by Pál Turán in 1934.

Description

In terms of sieve theory the Turán sieve is of combinatorial type: deriving from a rudimentary form of the inclusion-exclusion principle. The result gives an upper bound for the size of the sifted set.

Let A be a set of positive integers ≤ x and let P be a set of primes. For each p in P, let Ap denote the set of elements of A divisible by p and extend this to let Ad the intersection of the Ap for p dividing d, when d is a product of distinct primes from P. Further let A1 denote A itself. Let z be a positive real number and P(z) denote the product of the primes in P which are ≤ z. The object of the sieve is to estimate

\[S(A,P,z) = \left\vert A \setminus \bigcup_{p \in P(z)} A_p \right\vert . \]

We assume that |Ad| may be estimated, when d is a prime p by

\[ \left\vert A_p \right\vert = \frac{1}{f(p)} X + R_p \]

and when d is a product of two distinct primes d = p q by

\[ \left\vert A_{pq} \right\vert = \frac{1}{f(p)f(q)} X + R_{p,q} \]

where X   =   |A| and f is a function with the property that 0 ≤ f(d) ≤ 1. Put

\[ U(z) = \sum_{p \mid P(z)} f(p) . \]

Then

\[ S(A,P,z) \le \frac{X}{U(z)} + \frac{2}{U(z)} \sum_{p \mid P(z)} \left\vert R_p \right\vert + \frac{1}{U(z)^2} \sum_{p,q \mid P(z)} \left\vert R_{p,q} \right\vert . \]

Applications

References

Weierstrass preparation theorem

In algebra, the Weierstrass preparation theorem describes a canonical form for formal power series over a complete local ring.

Let O be a complete local ring and f a formal power series in O''X''. Then f can be written uniquely in the form

\[f = (X^n + b_{n-1}X^{n-1} + \cdots + b_0) u(x) , \,\]

where the bi are in the maximal ideal m of O and u is a unit of O''X''.

The integer n defined by the theorem is the Weierstrass degree of f.

References

  • Serge Lang; Algebra, (1993), pp. 208-209, Addison-Wesley ISBN: 0-201-55540-9


Zipf distribution

In probability theory and statistics, the Zipf distribution and zeta distribution refer to a class of discrete probability distributions. They have been used to model the distribution of words in words in a text , of text strings and keys in databases, and of the sizes of businesses and towns.

The Zipf distribution with parameter n assigns probability proportional to 1/r to an integer rn and zero otherwise, with normalization factor Hn, the n-th harmonic number.

A Zipf-like distribution with parameters n and s assigns probability proportional to 1/rs to an integer rn and zero otherwise, with normalization factor \(\sum_{r=1}^n 1/r^s\).

The zeta distribution with parameter s assigns probability proportional to 1/rs to all integers r with normalization factor given by the Riemann zeta function 1/ζ(s).

References

How to Cite This Entry:
Richard Pinch/sandbox-CZ. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Richard_Pinch/sandbox-CZ&oldid=30435