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Related Concept Videos

Sequences01:29

Sequences

Sequences are fundamental mathematical objects consisting of ordered lists of numbers that follow a specific rule or pattern. Sequences are critical in various mathematical concepts, including calculus, series, and number theory. They can model real-world phenomena such as population growth, financial investments, and physical processes like the diminishing height of a bouncing ball.Each number in a sequence is referred to as a term. Typically, the terms are denoted as a1, a2, a3,…, where the...
Introduction to Sequences01:26

Introduction to Sequences

The ancient Greek philosopher Zeno of Elea proposed a series of paradoxes to challenge prevailing notions of motion and continuity. One such paradox imagines a man walking toward a door but only ever covering half the remaining distance with each step. This sequence of movements—first one-half, then one-quarter, then one-eighth of the total distance, and so on—forms a mathematical concept known as a geometric sequence. Each term is half of the previous one and can be written...
Convergence of Sequences01:26

Convergence of Sequences

A sequence is a function defined on the natural numbers that assigns a value to each index. It can be understood as an ordered list of terms generated one after another. In mathematical analysis, an important question is whether the terms of a sequence approach a single real number as the index becomes very large. When this happens, the sequence is said to converge, and the value approached is called the limit. From a graphical perspective, convergence means that the plotted terms approach a...
Maxam-Gilbert Sequencing01:05

Maxam-Gilbert Sequencing

In the same year as the discovery of the Sanger sequencing method, another group of scientists, Allan Maxam and Walter Gilbert, demonstrated their chemical-cleavage method for DNA sequencing. The Maxam-Gilbert method relies on using different chemicals that can cleave the DNA sequence at specific sites, the separation of resulting DNA fragments of variable size using electrophoresis, and deciphering the DNA sequence from the resulting gel bands.
Challenges of the Maxam-Gilbert Method
The...
Geometric Sequences01:30

Geometric Sequences

In systems where values diminish by a constant proportion at each stage, the resulting sequence follows a geometric structure. Each new value in the sequence is obtained by applying a fixed multiplier to the preceding term. This regular, proportional decline type is often used to represent processes involving gradual loss, such as energy dissipation or reduction in amplitude over time.When analyzing the total effect of such a process across unlimited iterations, the series of values is referred...
Per-Unit Sequence Models01:26

Per-Unit Sequence Models

An ideal Y-Y transformer, grounded through neutral impedances, displays per-unit sequence networks akin to those of a single-phase ideal transformer when subjected to balanced positive- or negative-sequence currents. These currents do not produce neutral currents, and their associated voltage drops.
Zero-sequence currents, which are identical in magnitude and phase, generate a neutral current, resulting in voltage drops across the neutral impedance and the low-voltage winding. If the...

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  2. When One Sequence Is Enough-and When It Isn't
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  2. When One Sequence Is Enough-and When It Isn't

Related Experiment Video

Creating and Applying a Reference to Facilitate the Discussion and Classification of Proteins in a Diverse Group
07:49

Creating and Applying a Reference to Facilitate the Discussion and Classification of Proteins in a Diverse Group

Published on: August 16, 2017

When One Sequence Is Enough-And When It Isn't

Kang Wang1, Hanxue Gu1

  • 1Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, 505 Parnassus Ave, San Francisco, CA 94143.

Radiology. Artificial Intelligence
|June 24, 2026
Summary

No abstract available in PubMed .

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