isomorphic intervals - meaning and definition. What is isomorphic intervals
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What (who) is isomorphic intervals - definition

Computably isomorphic

Nested intervals         
  • {{pi}} can be estimated by computing the perimeters of circumscribed and inscribed polygons.
In mathematics, a sequence of nested intervals can be intuitively understood as an ordered collection of intervals I_n on the real number line with natural numbers n=1,2,3,\dots as an index. In order for a sequence of intervals to be considered nested intervals, two conditions have to be met:
Isomorphic keyboard         
MUSICAL INPUT DEVICE CONSISTING OF A 2D GRID OF BUTTONS OR KEYS ON WHICH ANY GIVEN SEQUENCE/COMBINATION OF MUSICAL INTERVALS HAS THE "SAME SHAPE" ON THE KEYBOARD WHEREVER IT OCCURS—WITHIN A KEY, ACROSS KEYS, ACROSS OCTAVES, AND ACROSS TUNINGS
Isomorphic keyboards; Tuning invariance; Tuning-invariant; Tuning invariant
An isomorphic keyboard is a musical input device consisting of a two-dimensional grid of note-controlling elements (such as buttons or keys) on which any given sequence and/or combination of musical intervals has the "same shape" on the keyboard wherever it occurs – within a key, across keys, across octaves, and across tunings.
Cascade chart (NDI interval reliability)         
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A cascade chart is tool that can be used in damage tolerance analysis to determine the proper inspection interval, based on reliability analysis, considering all the context uncertainties. The chart is called a "cascade chart" because the scatter of data points and downward curvature resembles a waterfall or cascade.

Wikipedia

Computable isomorphism

In computability theory two sets A ; B N {\displaystyle A;B\subseteq \mathbb {N} } of natural numbers are computably isomorphic or recursively isomorphic if there exists a total bijective computable function f : N N {\displaystyle f\colon \mathbb {N} \to \mathbb {N} } with f ( A ) = B {\displaystyle f(A)=B} . By the Myhill isomorphism theorem, the relation of computable isomorphism coincides with the relation of mutual one-one reducibility.

Two numberings ν {\displaystyle \nu } and μ {\displaystyle \mu } are called computably isomorphic if there exists a computable bijection f {\displaystyle f} so that ν = μ f {\displaystyle \nu =\mu \circ f}

Computably isomorphic numberings induce the same notion of computability on a set.