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Only lines with n = 1 or 3 have no points (red). In mathematics, the coin problem (also referred to as the Frobenius coin problem or Frobenius problem, after the mathematician Ferdinand Frobenius) is a mathematical problem that asks for the largest monetary amount that cannot be obtained using only coins of specified denominations. [1]
The postage stamp problem (also called the Frobenius Coin Problem and the Chicken McNugget Theorem [1]) is a mathematical riddle that asks what is the smallest postage value which cannot be placed on an envelope, if the latter can hold only a limited number of stamps, and these may only have certain specified face values.
The 1-form dz − y dx. on R 3 maximally violates the assumption of Frobenius' theorem. These planes appear to twist along the y-axis.It is not integrable, as can be verified by drawing an infinitesimal square in the x-y plane, and follow the path along the one-forms.
The most famous of these are the Cartan–Kähler theorem, which only works for real analytic differential systems, and the Cartan–Kuranishi prolongation theorem. See § Further reading for details. The Newlander–Nirenberg theorem gives integrability conditions for an almost-complex structure.
Frobenius reciprocity theorem in group representation theory describing the reciprocity relation between restricted and induced representations on a subgroup Perron–Frobenius theorem in matrix theory concerning the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a matrix with positive real coefficients
The key to the argument is the following Claim. The set V of all elements a of D such that a 2 ≤ 0 is a vector subspace of D of dimension n − 1.Moreover D = R ⊕ V as R-vector spaces, which implies that V generates D as an algebra.
A more general version of Frobenius's theorem states that if C is a conjugacy class with h elements of a finite group G with g elements and n is a positive integer, then the number of elements k such that k n is in C is a multiple of the greatest common divisor (hn,g) (Hall 1959, theorem 9.1.1).
Some solutions of a differential equation having a regular singular point with indicial roots = and .. In mathematics, the method of Frobenius, named after Ferdinand Georg Frobenius, is a way to find an infinite series solution for a linear second-order ordinary differential equation of the form ″ + ′ + = with ′ and ″.