dynamically decomposable - definição. O que é dynamically decomposable. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é dynamically decomposable - definição

GENERALIZATION OF THE CONCEPT OF DIRECT SUM
Decomposable operator

Nearly completely decomposable Markov chain         
Nearly completely decomposable; Nearly completely decomposable matrix; NCD Markov chain
In probability theory, a nearly completely decomposable (NCD) Markov chain is a Markov chain where the state-space can be partitioned in such a way that movement within a partition occurs much more frequently than movement between partitions. Particularly efficient algorithms exist to compute the stationary distribution of Markov chains with this property.
Visualizing Energy Resources Dynamically on the Earth         
DOE ENERGY VISUALIZATION
User:Scottjones5600/sandbox; Draft:Visualizing Energy Resources Dynamically on the Earth
VERDE (Visualizing Energy Resources Dynamically on the Earth) is a visualization and analysis capability of the United States Department of Energy (DOE). The system, developed and maintained by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), provides wide-area situational understanding of the U.
Direct integral         
In mathematics and functional analysis a direct integral is a generalization of the concept of direct sum. The theory is most developed for direct integrals of Hilbert spaces and direct integrals of von Neumann algebras.

Wikipédia

Direct integral

In mathematics and functional analysis a direct integral or Hilbert integral is a generalization of the concept of direct sum. The theory is most developed for direct integrals of Hilbert spaces and direct integrals of von Neumann algebras. The concept was introduced in 1949 by John von Neumann in one of the papers in the series On Rings of Operators. One of von Neumann's goals in this paper was to reduce the classification of (what are now called) von Neumann algebras on separable Hilbert spaces to the classification of so-called factors. Factors are analogous to full matrix algebras over a field, and von Neumann wanted to prove a continuous analogue of the Artin–Wedderburn theorem classifying semi-simple rings.

Results on direct integrals can be viewed as generalizations of results about finite-dimensional C*-algebras of matrices; in this case the results are easy to prove directly. The infinite-dimensional case is complicated by measure-theoretic technicalities.

Direct integral theory was also used by George Mackey in his analysis of systems of imprimitivity and his general theory of induced representations of locally compact separable groups.