cylindrical or cylindric - définition. Qu'est-ce que cylindrical or cylindric
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est cylindrical or cylindric - définition

DECOMPOSITION OF EUCLIDEAN SPACE INTO CELLS WHERE EACH OF A SET OF POLYNOMIALS HAS CONSTANT SIGN
Cylindrical decomposition; Cylindric decomposition; Cylindric algebraic decomposition; Cylindrical Decomposition; Cylindric Algebraic Decomposition; Cylindrical Algebraic Decomposition; Cylindric Decomposition

Cylindric algebra         
ALGEBRAIZES FIRST-ORDER LOGIC WITH EQUALITY
Cylindrical algebra; Cylindric algebras
In mathematics, the notion of cylindric algebra, invented by Alfred Tarski, arises naturally in the algebraization of first-order logic with equality. This is comparable to the role Boolean algebras play for propositional logic.
Cylindrical algebraic decomposition         
In mathematics, cylindrical algebraic decomposition (CAD) is a notion, and an algorithm to compute it, that are fundamental for computer algebra and real algebraic geometry. Given a set S of polynomials in Rn, a cylindrical algebraic decomposition is a decomposition of Rn into connected semialgebraic sets called cells, on which each polynomial has constant sign, either +, − or 0.
Central cylindrical projection         
CYLINDRICAL PERSPECTIVE MAP PROJECTION
Central cylindric projection
The central cylindrical projection is a perspective cylindrical map projection. It corresponds to projecting the Earth's surface onto a cylinder tangent to the equator as if from a light source at Earth's center.

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Cylindrical algebraic decomposition

In mathematics, cylindrical algebraic decomposition (CAD) is a notion, and an algorithm to compute it, that are fundamental for computer algebra and real algebraic geometry. Given a set S of polynomials in Rn, a cylindrical algebraic decomposition is a decomposition of Rn into connected semialgebraic sets called cells, on which each polynomial has constant sign, either +, − or 0. To be cylindrical, this decomposition must satisfy the following condition: If 1 ≤ k < n and π is the projection from Rn onto Rnk consisting in removing the last k coordinates, then for every pair of cells c and d, one has either π(c) = π(d) or π(c) ∩ π(d) = ∅. This implies that the images by π of the cells define a cylindrical decomposition of Rnk.

The notion was introduced by George E. Collins in 1975, together with an algorithm for computing it.

Collins' algorithm has a computational complexity that is double exponential in n. This is an upper bound, which is reached on most entries. There are also examples for which the minimal number of cells is doubly exponential, showing that every general algorithm for cylindrical algebraic decomposition has a double exponential complexity.

CAD provides an effective version of quantifier elimination over the reals that has a much better computational complexity than that resulting from the original proof of Tarski–Seidenberg theorem. It is efficient enough to be implemented on a computer. It is one of the most important algorithms of computational real algebraic geometry. Searching to improve Collins' algorithm, or to provide algorithms that have a better complexity for subproblems of general interest, is an active field of research.