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单词 invariant
释义

Definition of invariant in English:

invariant

adjective ɪnˈvɛːrɪəntˌɪnˈvɛriənt
  • Never changing.

    the pattern of cell divisions was found to be invariant
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Absence of major oceanographic anomalies in the immediate vicinity of Johnston Atoll may contribute to relatively high and invariant survival in Brown Boobies.
    • For a transactional leader, there are no universal invariant principles, policies, or goals applicable to all situations and at all times.
    • In villages, families throng at the lone hand pump for the stuff: this is a sight that is so invariant in India that you might be forgiven for thinking hand pumps go back to Vedic times.
    • The open time constants are invariant to ligand concentrations, suggesting that ligand binds exclusively to the closed channel.
    • Consistent with the close phylogenetic relationships of the species sampled, most nucleotide sites were invariant in pair wise comparisons.
    • In contrast, was relatively invariant among populations because the number of segregating sites was largely determined by the presence of both alleles.
    • Results for ecstasy and traditional hard drug users were highly invariant, but the ecstasy users' rate of previous hard drug use was much higher than that of any other group.
    • All these are invariant in our sequences, of both sets A and B.
    • This term is invariant to the change in reference genotype that allowed us to derive this equation.
    • However, the scholarship of revivals has not emphasised the possibility of significant invariant qualities in appropriated or ‘revived’ folk culture.
    • One of the diverged phenotypes in cultivated rice is observed in the patterns of coloration due to anthocyanin pigmentation in spite of invariant pigmentation in the wild forms of rice.
    • Further analysis of the data revealed the presence of at least two fluorescent species and fitting to a bi-exponential model was performed assuming invariant lifetimes.
    • As outlined above, we assumed that both environmentally induced variability and colony growth rates were relatively invariant within a population.
    • As in all mixture problems, this model is not identifiable as the likelihood is invariant under any relabeling of the populations.
    • Replacement substitutions are extremely variable in rate, ranging from many sites that are essentially invariant to a few that evolve fairly rapidly.
    • The results reveal 23 nonsynonymous changes and 127 invariant sites in total in the hinge region.
    • So looking at whether something makes people happy is largely futile. In statisticians' terms, you are looking for variance in something that is invariant.
    • The interactions of the individual dipoles in a magnet do not depend on any particular direction, and their dynamics are rotationally invariant.
    • Skuladottir and Charnov collaborated on a paper in 2000 predicting that indeed there are invariant rules for sex change and presenting shrimp data to bolster their claim.
    • Among women, the long-term health effects of early parental support also appeared to be relatively invariant, with one exception.
    Synonyms
    unalterable, immutable, invariable, unvarying, changeless, firm, fixed, hard and fast, cast-iron, set in stone, set, decided, established, permanent, deep-rooted, enduring, abiding, lasting, indestructible, ineradicable, irreversible, unfading, constant, perpetual, eternal, lifelong
noun ɪnˈvɛːrɪəntˌɪnˈvɛriənt
Mathematics
  • A function, quantity, or property which remains unchanged when a specified transformation is applied.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For example, in Euclidean geometry, the relevant invariants are embodied in quantities that are not altered by geometric transformations such as rotations, dilations, and reflections.
    • Also in 1887 Voigt first wrote down the transformations and showed that certain equations were invariant under these transformations.
    • Todd generalised the arithmetic genus and the invariants of the canonical system on an algebraic variety to a system of invariants of every codimension.
    • At Freiburg, he took a course with Oskar Bolza on the theory of invariants, and a course on differential geometry and a history seminar with Alfred Loewy, one of the two professors at Freiburg.
    • Under their direction he laid the basis for the important work he was later to achieve in the fields of foundations of geometry, projective geometry, topology, differential invariants and spinors.

Derivatives

  • invariance

  • noun
    • The very invariance of the universal fossil sequence is the strongest argument against its production in a single gulp.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Hermeneutical realism is not a constructivism because the objects that we perceive to be real exhibit invariances that are not under our control.
      • The complete measurement and path model was tested for configural invariance across ethnic groups.
      • In classical mathematics, he founded modern topology by establishing, for example, the topological invariance of dimension and the fixpoint theorem.
      • Others, notably James Clerk Maxwell, restricted their opposition to the attempts to apply the concept of natural selection outside the biological realm by pointing to the invariances of the microscopic world.
 
 

Definition of invariant in US English:

invariant

adjectiveˌɪnˈvɛriəntˌinˈverēənt
  • Never changing.

    the pattern of cell divisions was found to be invariant
    Example sentencesExamples
    • All these are invariant in our sequences, of both sets A and B.
    • This term is invariant to the change in reference genotype that allowed us to derive this equation.
    • In contrast, was relatively invariant among populations because the number of segregating sites was largely determined by the presence of both alleles.
    • Among women, the long-term health effects of early parental support also appeared to be relatively invariant, with one exception.
    • So looking at whether something makes people happy is largely futile. In statisticians' terms, you are looking for variance in something that is invariant.
    • In villages, families throng at the lone hand pump for the stuff: this is a sight that is so invariant in India that you might be forgiven for thinking hand pumps go back to Vedic times.
    • The interactions of the individual dipoles in a magnet do not depend on any particular direction, and their dynamics are rotationally invariant.
    • One of the diverged phenotypes in cultivated rice is observed in the patterns of coloration due to anthocyanin pigmentation in spite of invariant pigmentation in the wild forms of rice.
    • As in all mixture problems, this model is not identifiable as the likelihood is invariant under any relabeling of the populations.
    • Results for ecstasy and traditional hard drug users were highly invariant, but the ecstasy users' rate of previous hard drug use was much higher than that of any other group.
    • The open time constants are invariant to ligand concentrations, suggesting that ligand binds exclusively to the closed channel.
    • Consistent with the close phylogenetic relationships of the species sampled, most nucleotide sites were invariant in pair wise comparisons.
    • However, the scholarship of revivals has not emphasised the possibility of significant invariant qualities in appropriated or ‘revived’ folk culture.
    • The results reveal 23 nonsynonymous changes and 127 invariant sites in total in the hinge region.
    • For a transactional leader, there are no universal invariant principles, policies, or goals applicable to all situations and at all times.
    • Absence of major oceanographic anomalies in the immediate vicinity of Johnston Atoll may contribute to relatively high and invariant survival in Brown Boobies.
    • As outlined above, we assumed that both environmentally induced variability and colony growth rates were relatively invariant within a population.
    • Further analysis of the data revealed the presence of at least two fluorescent species and fitting to a bi-exponential model was performed assuming invariant lifetimes.
    • Skuladottir and Charnov collaborated on a paper in 2000 predicting that indeed there are invariant rules for sex change and presenting shrimp data to bolster their claim.
    • Replacement substitutions are extremely variable in rate, ranging from many sites that are essentially invariant to a few that evolve fairly rapidly.
    Synonyms
    unalterable, immutable, invariable, unvarying, changeless, firm, fixed, hard and fast, cast-iron, set in stone, set, decided, established, permanent, deep-rooted, enduring, abiding, lasting, indestructible, ineradicable, irreversible, unfading, constant, perpetual, eternal, lifelong
nounˌɪnˈvɛriəntˌinˈverēənt
Mathematics
  • A function, quantity, or property which remains unchanged when a specified transformation is applied.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Also in 1887 Voigt first wrote down the transformations and showed that certain equations were invariant under these transformations.
    • Under their direction he laid the basis for the important work he was later to achieve in the fields of foundations of geometry, projective geometry, topology, differential invariants and spinors.
    • For example, in Euclidean geometry, the relevant invariants are embodied in quantities that are not altered by geometric transformations such as rotations, dilations, and reflections.
    • Todd generalised the arithmetic genus and the invariants of the canonical system on an algebraic variety to a system of invariants of every codimension.
    • At Freiburg, he took a course with Oskar Bolza on the theory of invariants, and a course on differential geometry and a history seminar with Alfred Loewy, one of the two professors at Freiburg.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 5:50:38