Why Use 'Singular' to Describe Singular Simplex?

  • Thread starter Thread starter navigator
  • Start date Start date
navigator
Messages
42
Reaction score
0
Why do we use the term "singular" to describe singular simplex? Are there any relations between singular matrix (or singular point)and singular simplex?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I ran a google search for singular and found http://www.thefreedictionary.com/singular. Definitions 3 and 4 read

3. Being beyond what is ordinary or usual; remarkable.
4. Deviating from the usual or expected; odd. See Synonyms at strange.

and I believe it is the meaning appropriate for "singular simplex". Indeed, whereas in simplicial homology, the objects of interest are actual simplices (the n-dimensional generalisation of a triangle), in singular homology, the objects of interest are merely continuous images of simplices. In particular, these images may be very degenerate (a point for instance) and not resemble a simplex at all. That is, they may deviate from what is expected of something called a simplex.
 
To answer the other question, singular matrices and singular simplices have nothing to do with each other, unless you really stretch :)

(The big stretch: if you have a degenerate simplex in the top dimension represented by a differentiable map, its Jacobian would be singular)
 
Thank for your replies.
 

Similar threads

Replies
6
Views
543
Replies
167
Views
6K
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
3K
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
3K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
25
Views
3K
Back
Top