gas regulator - translation to dutch
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

gas regulator - translation to dutch

THEOREM
Regulator of an algebraic number field; Regulator (mathematics); Regulator of a number field; Dirichlet unit theorem; Higher regulator; Stark regulator; P-adic regulator

gas regulator      
gasregulator (mechanisme dat het ritme van vuren van automatisch vuurwapen regelt door laten ontsnappen van gassen die tijdens het vuren ontstaan)
fuel gas         
  • 19th-century style gas lights in New Orleans
COMBUSTIBLE IN GAS FORM
Manufactured gas; Gasfitter; Gaseous fuel; Propellant gas; Cooking gas; Gaseous fuels
benzine
gas stove         
  • A gas stove in a San Francisco apartment, 1975.
  • blue]] [[flame]] colour, meaning complete combustion, as with other gas appliances.
  • Early gas stoves produced by Windsor. From ''[[Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management]]'', 1904.
  • Electric ignition spark
  • A built-in Japanese three burner gas stove with a fish grill. Note the thermistor buttons protruding from the gas burners, which cut off the flame if the temperature exceeds 250{{nbsp}}°C.
STOVE THAT IS FUELED BY COMBUSTIBLE GAS
Gas oven; Gas stoves; Gas range; Gas cooker; Cook with Gas; Cook with gas; Cook Gas; Gas hob; Natural gas stove
gasfornuis

Definition

gas range
n. to light, turn on a gas range

Wikipedia

Dirichlet's unit theorem

In mathematics, Dirichlet's unit theorem is a basic result in algebraic number theory due to Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet. It determines the rank of the group of units in the ring OK of algebraic integers of a number field K. The regulator is a positive real number that determines how "dense" the units are.

The statement is that the group of units is finitely generated and has rank (maximal number of multiplicatively independent elements) equal to

where r1 is the number of real embeddings and r2 the number of conjugate pairs of complex embeddings of K. This characterisation of r1 and r2 is based on the idea that there will be as many ways to embed K in the complex number field as the degree n = [ K : Q ] {\displaystyle n=[K:\mathbb {Q} ]} ; these will either be into the real numbers, or pairs of embeddings related by complex conjugation, so that

Note that if K is Galois over Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} } then either r1 = 0 or r2 = 0.

Other ways of determining r1 and r2 are

  • use the primitive element theorem to write K = Q ( α ) {\displaystyle K=\mathbb {Q} (\alpha )} , and then r1 is the number of conjugates of α that are real, 2r2 the number that are complex; in other words, if f is the minimal polynomial of α over Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} } , then r1 is the number of real roots and 2r2 is the number of non-real complex roots of f (which come in complex conjugate pairs);
  • write the tensor product of fields K Q R {\displaystyle K\otimes _{\mathbb {Q} }\mathbb {R} } as a product of fields, there being r1 copies of R {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} } and r2 copies of C {\displaystyle \mathbb {C} } .

As an example, if K is a quadratic field, the rank is 1 if it is a real quadratic field, and 0 if an imaginary quadratic field. The theory for real quadratic fields is essentially the theory of Pell's equation.

The rank is positive for all number fields besides Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} } and imaginary quadratic fields, which have rank 0. The 'size' of the units is measured in general by a determinant called the regulator. In principle a basis for the units can be effectively computed; in practice the calculations are quite involved when n is large.

The torsion in the group of units is the set of all roots of unity of K, which form a finite cyclic group. For a number field with at least one real embedding the torsion must therefore be only {1,−1}. There are number fields, for example most imaginary quadratic fields, having no real embeddings which also have {1,−1} for the torsion of its unit group.

Totally real fields are special with respect to units. If L/K is a finite extension of number fields with degree greater than 1 and the units groups for the integers of L and K have the same rank then K is totally real and L is a totally complex quadratic extension. The converse holds too. (An example is K equal to the rationals and L equal to an imaginary quadratic field; both have unit rank 0.)

The theorem not only applies to the maximal order OK but to any order OOK.

There is a generalisation of the unit theorem by Helmut Hasse (and later Claude Chevalley) to describe the structure of the group of S-units, determining the rank of the unit group in localizations of rings of integers. Also, the Galois module structure of Q O K , S Z Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} \oplus O_{K,S}\otimes _{\mathbb {Z} }\mathbb {Q} } has been determined.

Examples of use of gas regulator
1. Previously, officials with Argentina‘s natural gas regulator and the public works agency resigned as part of a bribery scandal involving a Swedish construction company.
2. Electricity and gas regulator Ofgem has said it usually takes around nine months for price rises or cuts to be felt by the customer.
3. The price was the same as an earlier agreement by Australia‘s North West Shelf venture to supply China National‘s terminal in Guangdong, Rachmat Sudibyo, who heads the oil and gas regulator in Indonesia, said on Oct. 24, 2002.
4. "Initially, we were worried about H2S (hydrogen sulfide) gas emerging, causing many people to go to hospital because they were worried about poisoning." An official from Indonesian oil and gas regulator BPMIGAS also said the situation had been brought under control.