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Degeneracy (mathematics)

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In mathematics, a degenerate case is a limiting case in which a class of object changes its nature so as to belong to another, usually simpler, class.

Another usage of the word comes in eigenproblems: a degenerate eigenvalue is one that has more than one linearly independent eigenvector.

[edit] Degenerate rectangle

For any non-empty subset S \subseteq \{1, 2, \ldots, n\}, there is a bounded, axis-aligned degenerate rectangle

R \triangleq \left\{\mathbf{x} \in \mathbb{R}^n: x_i = c_i \ (\text{for } i\in S) \text{ and } a_i \leq x_i \leq b_i \ (\text{for } i \notin S)\right\}

where \mathbf{x} \triangleq [x_1, x_2, \ldots, x_n] and ai,bi,ci are constant (with a_i \leq b_i for all i). The number of degenerate sides of R is the number of elements of the subset S. Thus, there may be as few as one degenerate "side" or as many as n (in which case R reduces to a singleton point).

[edit] See also

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