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Encyclopedia > Multiple root

This article is about the mathematical term; Multiplicity is also the title of a 1996 film.


In mathematics, the multiplicity of a member of a multiset is how many memberships in the multiset it has. For example, the term is used to refer to the value of the totient valence function, or the number of times a given polynomial equation has a root at a given point.

Contents

Multiplicity of a prime factor

In the prime factorization

60 = 2 × 2 × 3 × 5

the multiplicity of the prime factor 2 is 2; the multiplicity of the prime factor 3 is 1; and the multiplicity of the prime factor 5 is 1.


Multiplicity of a root of a polynomial

A real or complex number a is called a root of multiplicity k of a polynomial p if there exists a polynomial s with:

and

p(x) = (xa)ks(x).

If k = 1, then a is a simple root.


Example

The following polynomial p:

p(x) = x3 + 2x2 − 7x + 4

has 1 and −4 as roots, and can be written as:

p(x) = (x + 4)(x − 1)2

This means that x = 1 is a root of multiplicity 2, and x = −4 is a 'simple' root (multiplicity 1).


In complex analysis

Let z0 be a root of a function f, and let n be the least positive integer m such that, the m-th derivative of f evaluated in z = z0 differs from zero:

Then the power series of f about z0 begins with the nth term, and f is said to have a root of multiplicity (or "order") n. If n = 1, the root is called a simple root (Krantz 1999, p. 70).


See also

External link

"Multiplicity" on MathWorld (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Multiplicity.html)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Root-finding algorithm - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1333 words)
Thus an algorithm to find isolated real roots of a low-degree polynomial in one variable may bear little resemblance to an algorithm for complex roots of a "fl-box" function which is not even known to be differentiable.
If p(x) is a polynomial with a multiple root at r, then finding the value of r can be difficult (inefficient or impossible) for many of the standard root-finding algorithms.
Notice that g(x) will have a root of the same multiplicity at r that p′(x) has and the degree of the polynomial g(x) will generally be much less than that of p(x).
Digital Root (241 words)
Multiplication table produces many beautiful pattern and properties that worth to put into separate section to describe about it.
For example, 1/3 has no root (undefined, similar to a number divided by zero in decimal system) but 6/3 has multiple roots of 2, 5 and 8.
Digital root 9 has no root unless the denominator is also 9 which produce 9 multiple roots of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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