
Proof of geometric series formula - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Sep 20, 2021 · Proof of geometric series formula Ask Question Asked 4 years, 2 months ago Modified 4 years, 2 months ago
statistics - What are differences between Geometric, Logarithmic …
Aug 3, 2020 · Now lets do it using the geometric method that is repeated multiplication, in this case we start with x goes from 0 to 5 and our sequence goes like this: 1, 2, 2•2=4, 2•2•2=8, …
why geometric multiplicity is bounded by algebraic multiplicity?
The geometric multiplicity the be the dimension of the eigenspace associated with the eigenvalue $\lambda_i$. For example: $\begin {bmatrix}1&1\\0&1\end {bmatrix}$ has root $1$ with …
Calculate expectation of a geometric random variable
Dec 13, 2013 · 2 A clever solution to find the expected value of a geometric r.v. is those employed in this video lecture of the MITx course "Introduction to Probability: Part 1 - The Fundamentals" …
terminology - Is it more accurate to use the term Geometric …
For example, there is a Geometric Progression but no Exponential Progression article on Wikipedia, so perhaps the term Geometric is a bit more accurate, mathematically speaking? …
What does the dot product of two vectors represent?
May 23, 2014 · 21 It might help to think of multiplication of real numbers in a more geometric fashion. $2$ times $3$ is the length of the interval you get starting with an interval of length …
linear algebra - How do you calculate the geometric multiplicities ...
Dec 11, 2014 · For your particular case, you can say directly that the first matrix has geometric multiplicity $2$, because it is already in diagonal form and the second is $1$, because it is …
Geometric Mean of a Function - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Mar 30, 2018 · If the $(\\int_a ^b f(x))/(a-b)$ is the arithmetic average of all the values of $f(x)$ between $a$ and $b$, what is the expression representing the geometric average ...
Series expansion: $\\frac{1}{(1-x)^n}$ - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Jan 24, 2016 · What is the expansion for $(1-x)^{-n}$? Could find only the expansion upto the power of $-3$. Is there some general formula?
What is the geometric interpretation of the transpose?
1 We better interpret the geometric meaning of transpose from the view point of projective geometry. Because only in projective geometry, it is possible to interpret that of all square …