two-sample problem - significado y definición. Qué es two-sample problem
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Qué (quién) es two-sample problem - definición

THE EXACTLY SOLVABLE PROBLEM OF A PARTICLE THAT IS ACTED UPON BY THE GRAVITATIONAL FIELD OF TWO OTHER POINT MASSES THAT ARE FIXED IN SPACE
Euler three-body problem; Restricted 3-body problem; Euler's three body problem; Copenhagen problem; Pythagorean problem; Problem of two fixed centers; Euler-Jacobi problem; Problem of two centers; Problem of two centers of gravitation; Two-center Kepler problem; Problem of two fixed centres; Problem of two centres; Two-centre Kepler problem; Problem of two centres of gravitation; Darboux's problem; Velde's problem; Copenhagen Problem; CRTBP

Euler's three-body problem         
In physics and astronomy, Euler's three-body problem is to solve for the motion of a particle that is acted upon by the gravitational field of two other point masses that are fixed in space. This problem is exactly solvable, and yields an approximate solution for particles moving in the gravitational fields of prolate and oblate spheroids.
Paul Sample (artist)         
  • Paul Sample at work in his studio.
AMERICAN ARTIST (1896-1974)
Paul Starrett Sample
Paul Starrett Sample (September 14, 1896 in Louisville, Kentucky – February 26, 1974 in Norwich, Vermont) was an American artist who portrayed life in New England in the middle of the 20th Century with a style that showed elements of "Social Realism and Regionalism."
Sample space         
  •  Up or down? Flipping a brass tack leads to a '''sample space''' composed of two outcomes that are not equally likely.
  • Flipping a coin leads to a '''sample space''' composed of two outcomes that are almost equally likely.
  • A visual representation of a finite sample space and events. The red oval is the event that a number is odd, and the blue oval is the event that a number is prime.
SET OF ALL POSSIBLE OUTCOMES OR RESULTS OF A STATISTICAL TRIAL OR EXPERIMENT
SampleSpace; Probability/Sample space; Sample Space; Sample spaces; Universal sample space; Sample description space; Possibility space
In probability theory, the sample space (also called sample description space or possibility space) of an experiment or random trial is the set of all possible outcomes or results of that experiment. A sample space is usually denoted using set notation, and the possible ordered outcomes, or sample points, are listed as elements in the set.

Wikipedia

Euler's three-body problem

In physics and astronomy, Euler's three-body problem is to solve for the motion of a particle that is acted upon by the gravitational field of two other point masses that are fixed in space. This problem is exactly solvable, and yields an approximate solution for particles moving in the gravitational fields of prolate and oblate spheroids. This problem is named after Leonhard Euler, who discussed it in memoirs published in 1760. Important extensions and analyses were contributed subsequently by Lagrange, Liouville, Laplace, Jacobi, Darboux, Le Verrier, Velde, Hamilton, Poincaré, Birkhoff and E. T. Whittaker, among others.

Euler's problem also covers the case when the particle is acted upon by other inverse-square central forces, such as the electrostatic interaction described by Coulomb's law. The classical solutions of the Euler problem have been used to study chemical bonding, using a semiclassical approximation of the energy levels of a single electron moving in the field of two atomic nuclei, such as the diatomic ion HeH2+. This was first done by Wolfgang Pauli in his doctoral dissertation under Arnold Sommerfeld, a study of the first ion of molecular hydrogen, namely the hydrogen molecule-ion H2+. These energy levels can be calculated with reasonable accuracy using the Einstein–Brillouin–Keller method, which is also the basis of the Bohr model of atomic hydrogen. More recently, as explained further in the quantum-mechanical version, analytical solutions to the eigenvalues (energies) have been obtained: these are a generalization of the Lambert W function.

The exact solution, in the full three dimensional case, can be expressed in terms of Weierstrass's elliptic functions For convenience, the problem may also be solved by numerical methods, such as Runge–Kutta integration of the equations of motion. The total energy of the moving particle is conserved, but its linear and angular momentum are not, since the two fixed centers can apply a net force and torque. Nevertheless, the particle has a second conserved quantity that corresponds to the angular momentum or to the Laplace–Runge–Lenz vector as limiting cases.

The Euler three-body problem is known by a variety of names, such as the problem of two fixed centers, the Euler–Jacobi problem, and the two-center Kepler problem. Various generalizations of Euler's problem are known; these generalizations add linear and inverse cubic forces and up to five centers of force. Special cases of these generalized problems include Darboux's problem and Velde's problem.