Group - определение. Что такое Group
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Что (кто) такое Group - определение

ALGEBRAIC SET WITH AN INVERTIBLE, ASSOCIATIVE INTERNAL OPERATION ADMITTING A NEUTRAL ELEMENT
GrouP; MathematicalGrouP; MathematicalGroup; Mathematical Group; Group (algebra); Group (math); Mathematical group; Group law; Group operation; Group axioms; Group axiom; Group mathematics; Group maths; Group (Mathematics); Translation (group theory); Elementary group theory
  • alt=The clock hand points to 9 o'clock; 4 hours later it is at 1 o'clock.
Найдено результатов: 10942
group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
I
n.
1) an affinity; age; control; discussion; encounter; ethnic, minority; peer; pressure; social; special-interest; splinter group
2) (BE) a ginger group ('a group of activists')
3) a blood group
II
v.
1) (d; intr.) to group around (the scouts grouped around their leader)
2) (d; tr.) to group under (to group several types under one heading)
Group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
·noun An assemblage of objects in a certain order or relation, or having some resemblance or common characteristic; as, groups of strata.
II. Group ·noun A number of eighth, sixteenth, ·etc., notes joined at the stems;
- sometimes rather indefinitely applied to any ornament made up of a few short notes.
III. Group ·noun To form a group of; to arrange or combine in a group or in groups, often with reference to mutual relation and the best effect; to form an assemblage of.
IV. Group ·noun A cluster, crowd, or throng; an assemblage, either of persons or things, collected without any regular form or arrangement; as, a group of men or of trees; a group of isles.
V. Group ·noun A variously limited assemblage of animals or plants, having some resemblance, or common characteristics in form or structure. The term has different uses, and may be made to include certain species of a genus, or a whole genus, or certain genera, or even several orders.
group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
¦ noun [treated as sing. or plural]
1. a number of people or things located, gathered, or classed together.
2. a number of musicians who play popular music together.
3. Chemistry a set of elements occupying a column in the periodic table and having broadly similar properties.
4. Chemistry a combination of atoms having a recognizable identity in a number of compounds.
5. Mathematics a set of elements, together with an associative binary operation, which contains an inverse for each element and an identity element.
6. a division of an air force, usually consisting of two or more stations.
¦ verb place in or form a group or groups.
Derivatives
groupage noun
grouping noun
Origin
C17: from Fr. groupe, from Ital. gruppo, of Gmc origin; related to crop.
group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
A group G is a non-empty set upon which a binary operator * is defined with the following properties for all a,b,c in G: Closure: G is closed under *, a*b in G Associative: * is associative on G, (a*b)*c = a*(b*c) Identity: There is an identity element e such that a*e = e*a = a. Inverse: Every element has a unique inverse a' such that a * a' = a' * a = e. The inverse is usually written with a superscript -1. (1998-10-03)
group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
(groups, grouping, grouped)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1.
A group of people or things is a number of people or things which are together in one place at one time.
The trouble involved a small group of football supporters...
The students work in groups on complex problems.
N-COUNT-COLL: oft N of n
2.
A group is a set of people who have the same interests or aims, and who organize themselves to work or act together.
...the Minority Rights Group...
Members of an environmental group are staging a protest inside a chemical plant.
N-COUNT: usu supp N
3.
A group is a set of people, organizations, or things which are considered together because they have something in common.
She is among the most promising players in her age group...
As a group, today's old people are still relatively deprived.
N-COUNT: usu supp N
4.
A group is a number of separate commercial or industrial firms which all have the same owner. (BUSINESS)
The group made a pre-tax profit of ?1.05 million.
...a French-based insurance group.
N-COUNT: usu supp N
5.
A group is a number of musicians who perform together, especially ones who play popular music.
At school he played bass in a pop group called The Urge.
...Billy Bragg's backing group.
= band
N-COUNT
6.
If a number of things or people are grouped together or group together, they are together in one place or within one organization or system.
The fact sheets are grouped into seven sections...
The G-7 organization groups together the world's seven leading industrialized nations...
We want to encourage them to group together to act as a big purchaser.
VERB: be V-ed prep, V pl-n with together, V together, also V n prep
7.
group         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Groups; People group; People groups; Group (disambiguation); Group (chemistry)
I. n.
Cluster, collection, assemblage, clump.
II. v. a.
Arrange, dispose, assign places to, form into groups.
Cultivar group         
GROUPING USED FOR CULTIVATED PLANTS
Group (Botany); Cultivar Group; Cultivar groups; Group (horticulture); Group (botany)
A Group (previously cultivar-groupInternational Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants, 4th edition (1969), 5th edition (1980) and 6th edition (1995)) is a formal category in the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (ICNCP) used for cultivated plants (cultivars) that share a defined characteristic. It is represented in a botanical name by the symbol Group or Gp.
Group (military unit)         
GENERIC MILITARY UNIT SIZE DESIGNATION
Group (air force unit); Air group; Air force group; Group (air force); Groupe; Group (military aviation unit); Group (British Army)
A group is a military unit or a military formation that is most often associated with military aviation.
Group (auto racing)         
FIA RACING CAR CLASSIFICATION
Group (Auto Racing); Group (Auto racing)
A FIA Group is a category of car allowed to compete in auto racing. The FIA Appendix J to the international motor sports code defines the various Groups.
Group (computing)         
GROUPING OF USERS IN COMPUTING AS A WAY TO SIMPLIFY ACCESS CONTROL TO COMPUTER SYSTEMS
Groups (Unix); Group (Unix)
In computing, the term group generally refers to a grouping of users. In principle, users may belong to none, one, or many groups (although in practice some systems place limits on this.

Википедия

Group (mathematics)

In mathematics, a group is a non-empty set and an operation that combines any two elements of the set to produce a third element of the set, in such a way that the operation is associative, an identity element exists and every element has an inverse. These three axioms hold for number systems and many other mathematical structures. For example, the integers together with the addition operation form a group. The concept of a group and the axioms that define it were elaborated for handling, in a unified way, essential structural properties of very different mathematical entities such as numbers, geometric shapes and polynomial roots. Because the concept of groups is ubiquitous in numerous areas both within and outside mathematics, some authors consider it as a central organizing principle of contemporary mathematics.

In geometry groups arise naturally in the study of symmetries and geometric transformations: The symmetries of an object form a group, called the symmetry group of the object, and the transformations of a given type form a general group. Lie groups appear in symmetry groups in geometry, and also in the Standard Model of particle physics. The Poincaré group is a Lie group consisting of the symmetries of spacetime in special relativity. Point groups describe symmetry in molecular chemistry.

The concept of a group arose in the study of polynomial equations, starting with Évariste Galois in the 1830s, who introduced the term group (French: groupe) for the symmetry group of the roots of an equation, now called a Galois group. After contributions from other fields such as number theory and geometry, the group notion was generalized and firmly established around 1870. Modern group theory—an active mathematical discipline—studies groups in their own right. To explore groups, mathematicians have devised various notions to break groups into smaller, better-understandable pieces, such as subgroups, quotient groups and simple groups. In addition to their abstract properties, group theorists also study the different ways in which a group can be expressed concretely, both from a point of view of representation theory (that is, through the representations of the group) and of computational group theory. A theory has been developed for finite groups, which culminated with the classification of finite simple groups, completed in 2004. Since the mid-1980s, geometric group theory, which studies finitely generated groups as geometric objects, has become an active area in group theory.