Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q6613646> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Q6613646 subject Q7211696.
- Q6613646 subject Q7214708.
- Q6613646 subject Q8087979.
- Q6613646 abstract "This is a list of convexity topics, by Wikipedia page.Alpha blending - the process of combining a translucent foreground color with a background color, thereby producing a new blended color. This is a convex combination of two colors allowing for transparency effects in computer graphics.Barycentric coordinates - a coordinate system in which the location of a point of a simplex (a triangle, tetrahedron, etc.) is specified as the center of mass, or barycenter, of masses placed at its vertices. The coordinates are non-negative for points in the convex hull.Borsuk's conjecture - a conjecture about the number of pieces required to cover a body with a larger diameter. Solved by Hadwiger for the case of smooth convex bodies.Bond convexity - a measure of the non-linear relationship between price and yield duration of a bond to changes in interest rates, the second derivative of the price of the bond with respect to interest rates. A basic form of convexity in finance.Carathéodory's theorem (convex hull) - If a point x of R^d lies in the convex hull of a set P, there is a subset of P with d+1 or fewer points such that x lies in its convex hull.Choquet theory - an area of functional analysis and convex analysis concerned with measures with support on the extreme points of a convex set C. Roughly speaking, all vectors of C should appear as 'averages' of extreme points.Complex convexity — extends the notion of convexity to complex numbers.Convex analysis - the branch of mathematics devoted to the study of properties of convex functions and convex sets, often with applications in convex minimization.Convex combination - a linear combination of points where all coefficients are non-negative and sum to 1. All convex combinations are within the convex hull of the given points.Convex and concave - a print by Escher in which many of the structure's features can be seen as both convex shapes and concave impressions.Convex body - a compact convex set in a Euclidean space whose interior is non-empty.Convex conjugate - a dual of a real functional in a vector space. Can be interpreted as an encoding of the convex hull of the function's epigraph in terms of its supporting hyperplanes.Convex curve - a curve that lies entirely on one side of each of its tangents. The interior of a convex curve is a convex set.Convex function - a function in which the line segment between any two points on the graph of the function lies above the graph.Closed convex function - a convex function whose every the sublevel set is a closed set.Proper convex function - a convex function whose effective domain is nonempty and it never attains minus infinity.Concave function - the negative of a convex function.Convex geometry - the branch of geometry studying convex sets, mainly in Euclidean space. Contains three sub-branches: general convexity, polytopes and polyhedra, and discrete geometry.Convex hull (aka convex envelope) - the smallest convex set that contains a given set of points in Euclidean space.Convex lens - a lens in which one or two sides is curved or bowed outwards. Light passing through the lens is converged (or focused) to a spot behind the lens.Convex optimization - a subfield of optimization, studies the problem of minimizing convex functions over convex sets. The convexity property can make optimization in some sense "easier" than the general case - for example, any local minimum must be a global minimum.Convex polygon - a 2-dimensional polygon whose interior is a convex set in the Euclidean plane.Convex polytope - an n-dimensional polytope which is also a convex set in the Euclidean n-dimensional space.Convex set - a set in Euclidean space in which contains every segment between every two of its points.Convexity (finance) - refers to non-linearities in a financial model. When the price of an underlying variable changes, the price of an output does not change linearly, but depends on the higher-order derivatives of the modeling function. Geometrically, the model is no longer flat but curved, and the degree of curvature is called the convexity.Epigraph (mathematics)Extreme pointFenchel conjugateFenchel's inequalityFixed point theorems in infinite-dimensional spacesFour vertex theorem - every convex curve has at least 4 vertices.Gift wrapping algorithmGraham scanHadwiger conjecture (combinatorial geometry) - any convex body in n-dimensional Euclidean space can be covered by 2^n or fewer smaller bodies homothetic with the original body.Hadwiger's theorem - a theorem that characterizes the valuations on convex bodies in R^n.Helly's theoremHyperplaneIndifference curveInfimal convoluteInterval (mathematics)Jarvis marchJensen's inequalityLagrange multiplierLegendre transformationLocally convex topological vector spaceMahler volumeMinkowski's theoremMixed volumeMixture densityNewton polygonRadon's theoremSeparating axis theoremShapley–Folkman lemmaShephard's problemSimplexSimplex methodSubdifferentialSupporting hyperplaneSupporting hyperplane theorem".
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1076274.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1097021.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134296.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1138624.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q115646.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q134164.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1347059.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1385465.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1471282.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1572357.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q15864883.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1632433.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q17089994.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q17157111.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1783542.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q1783548.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q185148.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q193657.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q2234833.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q2471737.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q2627315.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q289500.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q2914302.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q2990379.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q3001187.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q3075186.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q3075259.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q319913.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q3259505.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q331350.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q3788045.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q4129097.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q4424496.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q463359.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q467092.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5135337.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5156575.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5166514.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5166516.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5166524.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q518131.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5638112.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q5638115.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q598870.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q657586.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q6795830.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q693457.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q7211696.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214708.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q738422.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q7494442.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q768575.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q8087979.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q894242.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q908652.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q914780.
- Q6613646 wikiPageWikiLink Q994401.
- Q6613646 comment "This is a list of convexity topics, by Wikipedia page.Alpha blending - the process of combining a translucent foreground color with a background color, thereby producing a new blended color. This is a convex combination of two colors allowing for transparency effects in computer graphics.Barycentric coordinates - a coordinate system in which the location of a point of a simplex (a triangle, tetrahedron, etc.) is specified as the center of mass, or barycenter, of masses placed at its vertices.".
- Q6613646 label "List of convexity topics".