In the mathematical theory of dynamical systems, an exponential dichotomy is a property of an equilibrium point that extends the idea of hyperbolicity to non-autonomous systems. (Wikipedia).
Introduces notation and formulas for exponential growth models, with solutions to guided problems.
From playlist Discrete Math
Use inverse operation to solve exponential equation without one to one property
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Solve an exponential equation using one to one property and isolating the exponent
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Non-negatively Weighted #CSPs: An Effective Complexity Dichotomy - Xi Chen
Xi Chen Columbia University March 28, 2011 We prove a complexity dichotomy theorem for all non-negatively weighted counting Constraint Satisfaction Problems (#CSP). This caps a long series of important results on counting problems including unweighted and weighted graph homomorphisms and t
From playlist Mathematics
Lecture 05 - Training Versus Testing
Training versus Testing - The difference between training and testing in mathematical terms. What makes a learning model able to generalize? Lecture 5 of 18 of Caltech's Machine Learning Course - CS 156 by Professor Yaser Abu-Mostafa. View course materials in iTunes U Course App - https://
From playlist Machine Learning Course - CS 156
Solving exponential equations using the one to one property
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Learn how to isolate and take the log of both sides to solve the equation
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Learn the basics for solve an exponential equation using a calculator
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Dmitriy Zhuk: Quantified constraint satisfaction problem: towards the classification of complexity
HYBRID EVENT Recorded during the meeting "19th International Conference on Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science" the November 2, 2021 by the Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques (Marseille, France) Filmmaker: Guillaume Hennenfent Find this video and other t
From playlist Virtual Conference
Solving an exponential equation using the one to one property
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Solving an exponential equation using the one to one property 16^x + 2 = 6
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
A Complete Dichotomy Rises from the Capture of Vanishing Signatures - Jin-Yi Cai
Jin-Yi Cai University of Wisconsin November 19, 2012 Holant Problems are a broad framework to describe counting problems. The framework generalizes counting Constraint Satisfaction Problems and partition functions of Graph Homomorphisms. We prove a complexity dichotomy theorem for Holant
From playlist Mathematics
CONFERENCE Recording during the thematic meeting : « ALEA Days» the March 16, 2023 at the Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques (Marseille, France) Filmmaker : Guillaume Hennenfent Find this video and other talks given by worldwide mathematicians on CIRM's Audiovisual Mathemat
From playlist Mathematical Aspects of Computer Science
The VC Dimension - A measure of what it takes a model to learn. Relationship to the number of parameters and degrees of freedom. Lecture 7 of 18 of Caltech's Machine Learning Course - CS 156 by Professor Yaser Abu-Mostafa. View course materials in iTunes U Course App - https://itunes.apple
From playlist Machine Learning Course - CS 156
Carmen Núñez : Dissipativity in nonautonomous linear-quadratic control processes
Abstract: This talk concerns the concept of dissipativity in the sense of Willems for nonautonomous linear-quadratic (LQ) control systems. A nonautonomous system of Hamiltonian ODEs can be associated with such an LQ system, and the analysis of the corresponding symplectic dynamics provides
From playlist Dynamical Systems and Ordinary Differential Equations
Ben Green - University of Oxford Classical Fourier analysis has found many uses in additive number theory. However, while it is well-adapted to some pro - blems, it is unable to handle others. For example, if one has a set A, and one wishes to know how many 3-term arithmetic progressions
From playlist Ben Green - Nilsequences
Applied Probability: Birth processes (part 2) - Oxford Mathematics 3rd Year Student Lecture
In the second of 2 lectures from her 3rd Year Undergraduate course (you can watch the first on this channel), Christina Goldschmidt discusses Birth processes. Birth processes are some of the simplest continuous-time Markov chains: they model the size of a population which can only increas
From playlist Oxford Mathematics Student Lectures - Probability
Using inverse operations to help us solve exponential equations
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms
Structure vs Randomness in Complexity Theory - Rahul Santhanam
Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics Seminar I Topic: Structure vs Randomness in Complexity Theory Speaker: Rahul Santhanam Affiliation: University of Oxford Date: April 20, 2020 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu
From playlist Mathematics
Solving an exponential equation by using change of base for logarithms
👉 Learn how to solve exponential equations. An exponential equation is an equation in which a variable occurs as an exponent. To solve an exponential equation, we isolate the exponential part of the equation. Then we take the log of both sides. Note that the base of the log should correspo
From playlist Solve Exponential Equations with Logarithms