In mathematics, interval is a concept relating to the sequence and set-membership of one or more numbers.
As mentioned above, a particularly important case is when
Intervals of
In each case where they appear above, a and b are known as endpoints of the interval. If one considers the extended reals five new cases arise:
Intervals using the round brackets ( or ) as in the general interval (a,b) or specific examples (-1,3) and (2,4) are called open intervals and the endpoints are not included in the set. Intervals using the square brackets or as in the general interval or specific examples *" target="_blank" >are called closed intervals and the endpoints are included in the set. Intervals using both square and round brackets * and or specific examples [-1,3) and (2,4 are called half-closed intervals or half-open intervals.
Intervals play an important role in the theory of integration, because they are the simplest sets whose "size" or "measure" or "length" is easy to define (see above). The concept of measure can then be extended to more complicated sets, leading to the Borel measure and eventually to the Lebesgue measure.
Intervals are precisely the connected subsets of
In order theory, one usually considers partially ordered sets. However, the above notations and definitions can immediately be applied to this general case as well. Of special interest in this general setting are intervals of the form *.
For a partially ordered set (P, ≤) and two elements a and b of P, one defines the set
Interval arithmetic, also called interval mathematics, interval analysis, and interval computation, has been being developed by mathematicians since the 1950s and 1960s as an approach to putting bounds on rounding errors in mathematical computation and thus obtaining very reliable results. Where classical arithmetic defines operations on individual numbers, interval arithmetic defines a set of operations on intervals:
The basic operations of interval arithmetic are, for two intervals and [c,d that are subsets of the real line (-∞, ∞),
Division by an interval containing zero is not defined under the basic interval arithmetic.
The addition and multiplication operations are commutative, associative and sub-distributive: the set X ( Y + Z ) is a subset of XY + XZ.
Relational operations on intervals can be defined in tri-state logic {true, false, uncertain}:
Often intervals are considered as estimations of some individual numbers. In that case for both arithmetic and relational interval operations the following is true: if x in T and y in S, then the result of T · S contains x · y.
This notation is somewhat easier to remember (inwards pointing bracket for inclusion, outwards-pointing bracket for exclusion). Another advantage is that this notation does not overlap with the tuple notation, which is equally commonly used in set theory.
Where numbers are written with a decimal comma, the endpoints in the interval notation may also be separated by a semicolon instead of a comma, to avoid ambiguity.
Interval (matematika) | Interval (matematik) | Intervall (Mathematik) | Intervalo (matemática) | Intervalle (mathématiques) | 구간 | Intervallo (matematica) | קטע (מתמטיקה) | Intervallum | Interval (wiskunde) | 区間 (数学) | Przedział (matematyka) | Intervalo (matemática) | Interval (matematika) | Khoảng (toán học) | 區間
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