Schubert$72671$ - significado y definición. Qué es Schubert$72671$
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Qué (quién) es Schubert$72671$ - definición

Schubert cell; Schubert cycle; Schubert varieties

Misha Schubert         
AUSTRALIAN JOURNALIST
Mischa schubert; Mischa Schubert
Misha Schubert (born 22 February 1973) in an Australian newspaper journalist. She was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Science & Technology Australia in March 2020.
Franz Schubert         
  • The house in which Schubert was born]], today Nußdorfer Straße 54
  • Signature written in ink in a flowing script
  • Franz Schubert by [[Josef Kriehuber]] (1846)
  • Watercolour of Franz Schubert by [[Wilhelm August Rieder]] (1825)
  • Portrait of Franz Schubert by [[Franz Eybl]] (1827)
  • Memorial at the Kalvarienberg Church, [[Hernals]]
  • Lithograph of Franz Schubert by [[Josef Kriehuber]] (1846)
  • Autograph of ''Die Nebensonnen'' (The [[Sun dog]]s) from ''Winterreise''
  • 1814}},  attributed to [[Josef Abel]]
  • Schubert's glasses
  • ''Schubert at the Piano'' by [[Gustav Klimt]] (1899)
  • The Schubert Denkmal]]
  • The site of Schubert's first tomb at [[Währing]]
  • Interior of museum at Schubert's birthplace, Vienna, 1914
AUSTRIAN COMPOSER (1797-1828)
Franz Peter Schubert; Schubert; Franz Shubert; Graz Waltzes; Schubert, Franz; Schwämmerl
Franz Peter Schubert (; 31 January 179719 November 1828) was an Austrian composer of the late Classical and early Romantic eras. Despite his short lifetime, Schubert left behind a vast oeuvre, including more than 600 secular vocal works (mainly lieder), seven complete symphonies, sacred music, operas, incidental music, and a large body of piano and chamber music.
Ulrich S. Schubert         
GERMAN ORGANIC CHEMIST
Ulrich Schubert
Ulrich Sigmar Schubert (born 17 July 1969, Tübingen) is a German chemist and full professor for Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry at the Friedrich-Schiller University Jena.

Wikipedia

Schubert variety

In algebraic geometry, a Schubert variety is a certain subvariety of a Grassmannian, usually with singular points. Like a Grassmannian, it is a kind of moduli space, whose points correspond to certain kinds of subspaces V, specified using linear algebra, inside a fixed vector subspace W. Here W may be a vector space over an arbitrary field, though most commonly over the complex numbers.

A typical example is the set X whose points correspond to those 2-dimensional subspaces V of a 4-dimensional vector space W, such that V non-trivially intersects a fixed (reference) 2-dimensional subspace W2:

X   =   { V W dim ( V ) = 2 , dim ( V W 2 ) 1 } . {\displaystyle X\ =\ \{V\subset W\mid \dim(V)=2,\,\dim(V\cap W_{2})\geq 1\}.}

Over the real number field, this can be pictured in usual xyz-space as follows. Replacing subspaces with their corresponding projective spaces, and intersecting with an affine coordinate patch of P ( W ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (W)} , we obtain an open subset X° ⊂ X. This is isomorphic to the set of all lines L (not necessarily through the origin) which meet the x-axis. Each such line L corresponds to a point of X°, and continuously moving L in space (while keeping contact with the x-axis) corresponds to a curve in X°. Since there are three degrees of freedom in moving L (moving the point on the x-axis, rotating, and tilting), X is a three-dimensional real algebraic variety. However, when L is equal to the x-axis, it can be rotated or tilted around any point on the axis, and this excess of possible motions makes L a singular point of X.

More generally, a Schubert variety is defined by specifying the minimal dimension of intersection between a k-dimensional V with each of the spaces in a fixed reference flag W 1 W 2 W n = W {\displaystyle W_{1}\subset W_{2}\subset \cdots \subset W_{n}=W} , where dim W j = j {\displaystyle \dim W_{j}=j} . (In the example above, this would mean requiring certain intersections of the line L with the x-axis and the xy-plane.)

In even greater generality, given a semisimple algebraic group G with a Borel subgroup B and a standard parabolic subgroup P, it is known that the homogeneous space X = G/P, which is an example of a flag variety, consists of finitely many B-orbits that may be parametrized by certain elements of the Weyl group W. The closure of the B-orbit associated to an element w of the Weyl group is denoted by Xw and is called a Schubert variety in G/P. The classical case corresponds to G = SLn and P being the kth maximal parabolic subgroup of G.