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  2. N1 (South Africa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N1_(South_Africa)

    1.2 Northern Cape. 1.3 Free State. 1.4 Gauteng. 1.5 Limpopo. ... The old N1 route however followed the designation of the R42 through Vanderbijlpark to Vereeniging, ...

  3. IFM 102.2 (South Africa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IFM_102.2_(South_Africa)

    LSM Groups 6 - 10 [2] Age Group 25 - 49 [2] ... Arcelor Mittal, HR Building - Main Gate, Delfos Boulevard, Vanderbijlpark [1] References External links. Official ...

  4. Vanderbijlpark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanderbijlpark

    Vanderbijlpark is an industrial city with approximately 95,000 inhabitants, situated on the Vaal River in the south of Gauteng province, South Africa. The city is named after Hendrik van der Bijl , an electrical engineer and industrialist.

  5. Vaal Triangle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaal_Triangle

    The Vaal Triangle is a triangular area formed by Vereeniging, Vanderbijlpark and Sasolburg about 60 km south of Johannesburg, South Africa. [1] The area forms a substantial urban complex.

  6. R54 (South Africa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R54_(South_Africa)

    [1] North of Vanderbijlpark (south of Sebokeng; just after the N1 overbridge), the R54 meets the R553 road and the R28 route. The R28 route stops cosigning with the R553 road southwards and begins cosigning with the R54 road eastwards towards Vereeniging. After 6 km, the R54 becomes its own road eastwards as Houtkop Road by way of a left turn ...

  7. List of named matrices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_matrices

    Vandermonde matrix: A row consists of 1, a, a 2, a 3, etc., and each row uses a different variable. Walsh matrix: A square matrix, with dimensions a power of 2, the entries of which are +1 or −1, and the property that the dot product of any two distinct rows (or columns) is zero. Z-matrix: A matrix with all off-diagonal entries less than zero.

  8. Spectrum of a matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectrum_of_a_matrix

    The determinant of the matrix equals the product of its eigenvalues. Similarly, the trace of the matrix equals the sum of its eigenvalues. [4] [5] [6] From this point of view, we can define the pseudo-determinant for a singular matrix to be the product of its nonzero eigenvalues (the density of multivariate normal distribution will need this ...

  9. Matrix norm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_norm

    The most familiar cases are p = 1, 2, ∞. The case p = 2 yields the Frobenius norm, introduced before. The case p = ∞ yields the spectral norm, which is the operator norm induced by the vector 2-norm (see above). Finally, p = 1 yields the nuclear norm (also known as the trace norm, or the Ky Fan 'n'-norm [7]), defined as: