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Topic: P-vector


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In the News (Sat 19 Dec 09)

  
 Expression vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Expression vectors are often specifically designed to contain regulatory sequences that act as enhancer and promoter regions, and lead to efficient transcription of the gene that is carried on the expression vector.
Once the expression vector is inside the cell, the protein that is encoded by the gene is produced by the cellular transcription and translation machinery.
Expression vectors are used for molecular biology techniques such as site-directed mutagenesis.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Expression_vector   (205 words)

  
 Vector (spatial) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A spatial vector is a special case of a tensor and is also analogous to a four-vector in relativity (and is sometimes therefore called a three-vector in reference to the three spatial dimensions, although this term also has another meaning for p-vectors of differential geometry).
The force and displacement are vectors, the magnitudes are scalars, and the coordinates are neither.
A vector may also be multiplied by a real number r.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_(spatial)   (3072 words)

  
 Vector (spatial) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A spatial vector is a special case of a tensor and is also analogous to a four-vector in relativity (and is sometimes therefore called a three-vector in reference to the three spatial dimensions, although this term also has another meaning for p-vectors of differential geometry).
Vectors can be contrasted with scalar quantities such as distance, speed, energy, time, temperature, charge, power, work, and mass, which have magnitude, but no direction (they are invariant under coordinate rotations).
A vector may also be multiplied by a real number r.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_(spatial)   (3072 words)

  
 Column vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The set of all column vectors forms a vector space which is the dual space to the set of all row vectors.
Matrix multiplication involves the action of multiplying each column vector of one matrix by each row vector of another matrix.
In linear algebra, a column vector is an m × 1 matrix, i.e.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Column_vector   (101 words)

  
 Vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector, the capital of the Empire in the videogame Final Fantasy VI Vector the Crocodile, a character from the Sonic the Hedgehog series of videogames
Vector processor, a supercomputer has SIMD operations that work on arrays of several numbers at once
The Vector, the New Jersey Institute of Technology's school newspaper
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector   (244 words)

  
 Darboux vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Darboux vector provides a concise way of interpreting curvature &; and torsion &; geometrically: curvature is the measure of the rotation of the Frenet frame about the binormal unit vector, whereas torsion is the measure of the rotation of the Frenet frame about the tangent unit vector.
Each Frenet vector moves about an "origin" which is the center of the rigid object (pick some point within the object and call it its center).
As it does so, the object's motion will be described by two vectors: a translation vector, and a rotation vector w, which is an areal velocity vector: the Darboux vector.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Darboux_vector   (244 words)

  
 Vector space - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Given a vector space V, any nonempty subset W of V which is closed under addition and scalar multiplication is called a subspace of V. It is easy to see that subspaces of V are vector spaces (over the same field) in their own right.
A vector space (or linear space) is the basic object of study in the branch of mathematics called linear algebra.
A vector space over the field of complex numbers C is called a complex vector space.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_space   (244 words)

  
 Logarithmic spiral - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In differential geometric terms the spiral can be defined as a curve c(t), having a constant angle θ between the radius or path vector and the tangential vector
Insects approach a light source in a logarithmic spiral because they are used to having the light source at a constant angle against their flight path.
Starting at a point P and moving inwards along the spiral, one has to circle the origin infinitely often before reaching it; yet, the total distance covered on this path is finite.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Logarithmic_spiral   (244 words)

  
 Vector
Vector (computing) is the method that malicious code (viruses, etc) uses to propagate itself.
Vector (spatial) : In physics and engineering, vector most often refers specifically to an object that has a special relationship to the spatial coordinates/directions, i.e.
If the vector space is finite-dimensional, its vectors are commonly denoted by matrices with dimensions n ×1 ( column vector) or 1× n ( row vector).
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/vector   (244 words)

  
 Basic Vector Operations
Vector addition involves finding vector components, adding them and finding the polar form of the resultant.
Vectors are resolved into components by use of the triangle trig relationships.
This is called the polar form of the vector.
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu /hbase/vect.html   (244 words)

  
 PlanetMath: closure of a vector subspace is a vector subspace
PlanetMath: closure of a vector subspace is a vector subspace
closure of a vector subspace is a vector subspace
This is version 5 of closure of a vector subspace is a vector subspace, born on 2005-02-04, modified 2005-03-01.
planetmath.org /encyclopedia/ClosureOfAVectorSubspaceIsAVectorSubspace2.html   (244 words)

  
 Covariant vs. Contravariant Vector
The terms covariant vector and contravariant vector have various, but related, meanings.
Consider a vector A in a coordinate system which has straight coordinate axes but which are mutually orthogonal.
The vector A can then be expressed either as A = (x
www.geocities.com /physics_world/co_vs_contra.htm   (244 words)

  
 Vector quantization - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In data compression, vector quantization is a quantization technique often used in lossy data compression in which the basic idea is to code or replace with a key, values from a multidimensional vector space into values from a discrete subspace of lower dimension.
Twin vector quantization (VQF) is part of the MPEG-4 standard dealing with time domain weighted interleaved vector quantization.
The lower-space vector requires less storage space and the data is thus compressed.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_quantization   (170 words)

  
 Vector space - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Given a vector space V, any nonempty subset W of V which is closed under addition and scalar multiplication is called a subspace of V. It is easy to see that subspaces of V are vector spaces (over the same field) in their own right.
Thus vector spaces over a given field are fixed up to isomorphism by a single cardinal number (called the dimension of the vector space) representing the size of the basis.
A vector space with a topology compatible with the operations — such that addition and scalar multiplication are continuous maps— is called a topological vector space.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_space   (1657 words)

  
 Normed vector space - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The definition of many normed spaces (in particular, Banach spaces) involves a seminorm defined on a vector space and then the normed space is defined as the quotient space by the subspace of elements of seminorm zero.
A semi normed vector space is a 2-tuple (V,p) where V is a vector space and p a semi norm on V.
A surjective isometry between the normed vector spaces V and W is called a isometric isomorphism, and V and W are called isometrically isomorphic.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Normed_vector_space   (899 words)

  
 Wave vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The wave vector is most useful for generalizing the equation of a single wave into a description of a family of waves.
The wave vector has magnitude indicating wavenumber (inversely related to wavelength), and the direction of the vector indicates the direction of wave propagation.
a plane wave), we can easily extend the formula by substituting the wave vector k for the wavenumber k, and the location in space vector r for the variable z:
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Wave_vector   (271 words)

  
 Plane wave - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the vector wave equation of electromagnetism, a is the vector for the electric or magnetic field (and is orthogonal to k, for an isotropic medium).
In the physics of wave propagation (especially electromagnetic waves), a plane wave (also spelled planewave) is a constant-frequency wave whose wavefronts (surfaces of constant phase) are infinite parallel planes normal to the phase velocity vector.
where i is the imaginary unit, k is the wave vector, ω is the angular frequency, and a is the (complex) amplitude.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Plane_wave   (281 words)

  
 Vector field - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector fields are often used in physics to model for example the speed and direction of a moving fluid throughout space, or the strength and direction of some force, such as the magnetic or gravitational force, as it changes from point to point.
Vector fields should be compared to scalar fields, which associate a number or scalar to every point in space (or every point of some manifold).
Given a particle in a gravitational vector field, where each vector represents the force acting on the particle at this point in space, the curve integral is the work done on the particle when it travels along a certain path.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_field   (281 words)

  
 The Physics Classroom
The magnitude of a vector in a scaled vector diagram is depicted by the length of the arrow.
The magnitude of a vector is represented by the length of the arrow; a scale is indicated (such as, 1 cm = 5 miles) and the arrow is drawn the proper length according to the chosen scale.
Vector diagrams were introduced and used in earlier units to depict the forces acting upon an object; such diagrams are known as free-body diagrams.
www.physicsclassroom.com /Class/vectors/U3L1a.html   (1113 words)

  
 Differential geometry of curves - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The main contemporary application is in physics as part of vector calculus.
The solution is the set of Frenet vectors describing the curve specified by the generalized curvature functionsχ
The Frenet frame and the generalized curvatures are invariant under reparametrization and therefore differential geometric properties of the curve.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Curvature_vector   (1112 words)

  
 Xenosaga (Organizations) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector is also the employer of Shion Uzuki, one of the main characters in the Xenosaga series.
The fact that Vector is one of its primany investors explains why most of the equipment installed onboard the Durandal is highly advanced and made by Vector.
Vector Industries is the largest business conglomerate in the Galaxy Federation and an integral part of modern civilization.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_Industries   (2318 words)

  
 Orbital state vectors - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State vectors are excellent for pre-launch orbital predictions when combined with time (epoch) expressed as an offset to the launch time.
Orbital state vectors are equivalent to orbital elements (Keplerian elements) and each can be computed with each other (and used to derive other parameters of the orbit).
A time-independent state vector can be combined with the launch time using xxx method in order to arrive at a valid set of orbital elements whereas computed in advance orbital elements are valid only when launch occurs without the slip.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Orbital_state_vectors   (361 words)

  
 Vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector (spatial): In physics and engineering, vector most often refers specifically to an object that has a special relationship to the spatial coordinates/directions, that is, an element of a tangent bundle.
Vector is the capital of the Empire in the videogame Final Fantasy VI.
If the vector space is finite-dimensional, its vectors are commonly denoted by matrices with dimensions n×1 (column vector) or 1×n (row vector).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector   (361 words)

  
 Vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector (spatial): In physics and engineering, vector most often refers specifically to an object that has a special relationship to the spatial coordinates/directions, that is, an element of a tangent bundle.
Vector is the capital of the Empire in the videogame Final Fantasy VI.
If the vector space is finite-dimensional, its vectors are commonly denoted by matrices with dimensions n×1 (column vector) or 1×n (row vector).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector   (361 words)

  
 Cathode ray tube - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector displays for computers did not noticeably suffer the display artifacts of aliasing and pixelization, but were limited in that they could display only a shape's outline, and only a very small amount of rather largely-drawn text.
Vector monitors were used in many computer displays as well as by some late 1970s to mid 1980s arcade games such as Asteroids.
The earliest version of the CRT was a cold-cathode diode, a modification of the Crookes tube (used to produce X-rays) with a phosphor-coated screen, sometimes called a Braun tube.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Cathode_ray_tube   (361 words)

  
 Vector (spatial) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The cross product (also vector product or outer product) differs from the dot product primarily in that the result of a cross product of two vectors is a vector.
A spatial vector is a special case of a tensor and is also analogous to a four-vector in relativity (and is sometimes therefore called a three-vector in reference to the three spatial dimensions, although this term also has another meaning for p-vectors of differential geometry).
Vectors can be contrasted with scalar quantities such as distance, speed, energy, time, temperature, charge, power, work, and mass, which have magnitude, but no direction (they are invariant under coordinate rotations).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_(spatial)   (361 words)

  
 Vector (spatial) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A spatial vector is a special case of a tensor and is also analogous to a four-vector in relativity (and is sometimes therefore called a three-vector in reference to the three spatial dimensions, although this term also has another meaning for p-vectors of differential geometry).
Vectors can be contrasted with scalar quantities such as distance, speed, energy, time, temperature, charge, power, work, and mass, which have magnitude, but no direction (they are invariant under coordinate rotations).
In physics and in vector calculus, a spatial vector is a concept characterized by a magnitude, which is a scalar, and a direction (which can be defined in a 3-dimensional space by the Euler angles).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector_(spatial)   (3183 words)

  
 Vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector (spatial): In physics and engineering, vector most often refers specifically to an object that has a special relationship to the spatial coordinates/directions, that is, an element of a tangent bundle.
In physics vector (field) theory refers to a quantum field theory in which both chiralities of a Dirac field are present.
In mathematics a vector refers generally to any element of an abstractly-defined vector space over a field.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector   (3183 words)

  
 Vector - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vector (spatial): In physics and engineering, vector most often refers specifically to an object that has a special relationship to the spatial coordinates/directions, that is, an element of a tangent bundle.
Vector is the capital of the Empire in the videogame Final Fantasy VI.
A biological vector is a mechanism that transmits genes or organisms.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vector   (453 words)

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