weakly homologous - significado y definición. Qué es weakly homologous
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Qué (quién) es weakly homologous - definición

WEAK DERIVATION
Weakly Differentiable; Weakly differentiable

Homologous chromosome         
  •  During the process of meiosis, homologous chromosomes can recombine and produce new combinations of genes in the daughter cells.
  • Diagram of the general process for double-stranded break repair as well as synthesis-dependent strand annealing.
  •  Sorting of homologous chromosomes during meiosis.
  • 1. Meiosis I 2. Meiosis II 3. Fertilization 4. Zygote
Nondisjunction is when chromosomes fail to separate normally resulting in a gain or loss of chromosomes. In the left image the blue arrow indicates nondisjunction taking place during meiosis II. In the right image the green arrow is indicating nondisjunction taking place during meiosis I.
SET OF ONE MATERNAL AND ONE PATERNAL CHROMOSOME THAT PAIR UP WITH EACH OTHER INSIDE A CELL DURING MEIOSIS. HOMOLOGS HAVE THE SAME GENES IN THE SAME LOCI
Homologous Chromosomes; Homologous chromosomes; Homologs
A couple of homologous chromosomes, or homologs, are a set of one maternal and one paternal chromosome that pair up with each other inside a cell during fertilization. Homologs have the same genes in the same loci where they provide points along each chromosome which enable a pair of chromosomes to align correctly with each other before separating during meiosis. This is the basis for Mendelian inheritance which characterizes inheritance patterns of genetic material from an organism to its offspring parent developmental cell at the given time and area.
Homologous series         
  • Normal boiling points of straight chain alkanes
SERIES OF CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES WITH THE SAME GENERAL FORMULA, VARYING BY A SINGLE PARAMETER
Homologous Series
In organic chemistry, a homologous series is a sequence of compounds with the same functional group and similar chemical properties in which the members of the series can be branched or unbranched, or differ by molecular formula of and molecular mass of 14u. This can be the length of a carbon chain, for example in the straight-chained alkanes (paraffins), or it could be the number of monomers in a homopolymer such as amylose.
Weak NP-completeness         
SET OF COMPUTATIONAL PROBLEMS FOR WHICH THERE IS AN ALGORITHM SOLVING THEM IN POLYNOMIAL TIME IN THE DIMENSION OF THE PROBLEM AND THE MAGNITUDES OF THE DATA INVOLVED (IF GIVEN AS INTEGERS), RATHER THAN THE BASE-TWO LOGARITHMS OF THEIR MAGNITUDES
Weakly NP-complete; Weakly NP-hard
In computational complexity, an NP-complete (or NP-hard) problem is weakly NP-complete (or weakly NP-hard) if there is an algorithm for the problem whose running time is polynomial in the dimension of the problem and the magnitudes of the data involved (provided these are given as integers), rather than the base-two logarithms of their magnitudes. Such algorithms are technically exponential functions of their input size and are therefore not considered polynomial.

Wikipedia

Weak derivative

In mathematics, a weak derivative is a generalization of the concept of the derivative of a function (strong derivative) for functions not assumed differentiable, but only integrable, i.e., to lie in the Lp space L 1 ( [ a , b ] ) {\displaystyle L^{1}([a,b])} .

The method of integration by parts holds that for differentiable functions u {\displaystyle u} and φ {\displaystyle \varphi } we have

a b u ( x ) φ ( x ) d x = [ u ( x ) φ ( x ) ] a b a b u ( x ) φ ( x ) d x . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\int _{a}^{b}u(x)\varphi '(x)\,dx&={\Big [}u(x)\varphi (x){\Big ]}_{a}^{b}-\int _{a}^{b}u'(x)\varphi (x)\,dx.\\[6pt]\end{aligned}}}

A function u' being the weak derivative of u is essentially defined by the requirement that this equation must hold for all infinitely differentiable functions φ vanishing at the boundary points ( φ ( a ) = φ ( b ) = 0 {\displaystyle \varphi (a)=\varphi (b)=0} ).