영어에서 This theorem 을 사용하는 예와 한국어로 번역
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Programming
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Computer
Why is this theorem true?
Cuius rei demonstrationem mirabilem sane detexi hanc marginis exiguitas non caperet” as Fermat put it“I have discovered a truly remarkable proof of this theorem which this margin is too small to contain.”.
This theorem includes the method of least work as a special case.
One-side Power Spectrum satisfying this theorem can be defined as follow;
This theorem gave, as a corollary, the complete structure of all finite projective geometries.
Kronecker had first stated a version of this theorem in a lecture which he gave to the Accademia dei Lincei in 1886.
This theorem was motivated by applications and leads to a startling practical prediction.
If we know two of these, we can then use this theorem, this formula to solve for the third.
This theorem is widely used in the theory of group varieties, combinatorial group theory, and permutation group theory.
Inspired by Richtmyer, Lax established with this theorem the conditions under which a numerical implementation gives a valid approximation to the solution of a differential equation.
This theorem showed that under the combined action of three operators on a physical event: P, the parity operator, which performed a reflection;
The first proof of this theorem was given by Dirichlet in his lectures of 1862(published 1904) before Heine proved it in 1872.
This theorem was conjectured in the 18th century, but it was not proved until 1896, when Hadamard and(independently) Charles de la Vallée Poussin, used complex analysis.
The statement of this theorem is an afterthought to a paper in which Jacobi responds to the published correction by Thomas Clausen(1842) of an earlier paper by Jacobi(1836).
This theorem showed that if voters have to rank candidates- to say, in other words, who comes first, second and so forth- there will inevitably be one of two major potential failures.
This theorem shows that if a cone is intersected by a plane in a conic, then the foci of the conic are the points where this plane is touched by the spheres inscribed in the cone.
If we look at the Pythagorean theorem, this is C.
Gödel's second incompleteness theorem shows this to be impossible.
This last theorem implies, in particular, the proposition that free groups are residually finite.