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  2. Six degrees of separation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_degrees_of_separation

    The average separation for all users of the application is 5.73 degrees, whereas the maximum degree of separation is 12. The application has a "Search for Connections" window to input any name of a Facebook user, to which it then shows the chain of connections.

  3. Gap wedge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gap_wedge

    Gap wedges are loosely defined, but typically have the loft between that of a pitching wedge and sand wedge, between 50 and 54 degrees. [2] At the extremes there is redundancy with either the pitching wedge (typically 48°) or the sand wedge (typically 56°), however some players will "fine-tune" the lofts of these other wedges to their play style, leading to alternate loft choices for a gap ...

  4. Erdős number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erdős_number

    Six degrees of separation – Concept of social inter-connectedness of all people; Small-world experiment – Experiments examining the average path length for social networks; Small-world network – Graph where most nodes are reachable in a small number of steps; Sociology of scientific knowledge – Study of science as a social activity

  5. Angular distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_distance

    When the rays are lines of sight from an observer to two points in space, it is known as the apparent distance or apparent separation. Angular distance appears in mathematics (in particular geometry and trigonometry ) and all natural sciences (e.g., kinematics , astronomy , and geophysics ).

  6. Welch–Satterthwaite equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welch–Satterthwaite_equation

    In statistics and uncertainty analysis, the Welch–Satterthwaite equation is used to calculate an approximation to the effective degrees of freedom of a linear combination of independent sample variances, also known as the pooled degrees of freedom, [1] [2] corresponding to the pooled variance.

  7. Degrees of freedom (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degrees_of_freedom...

    In text and tables, the abbreviation "d.f." is commonly used. R. A. Fisher used n to symbolize degrees of freedom but modern usage typically reserves n for sample size. When reporting the results of statistical tests, the degrees of freedom are typically noted beside the test statistic as either subscript or in parentheses. [6]

  8. Connected: The Power of Six Degrees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connected:_The_Power_of...

    Connected: The Power of Six Degrees (alternate title: How Kevin Bacon Cured Cancer [1]) is a 2008 documentary film by Annamaria Talas. It was first aired in 2009 on the Science Channel . The documentary introduces the audience to the main ideas of network science through the exploration of the concept of six degrees of separation . [ 2 ]

  9. Shortest path problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortest_path_problem

    Shortest path (A, C, E, D, F) between vertices A and F in the weighted directed graph. In graph theory, the shortest path problem is the problem of finding a path between two vertices (or nodes) in a graph such that the sum of the weights of its constituent edges is minimized.