Null (mathematics)

For other uses, see Null (disambiguation).

In mathematics, the word null (from German: null meaning "zero", which is from Latin: nullus meaning "none")[1] means of or related to having zero members in a set or a value of zero. Sometimes the symbol is used to distinguish "null" from 0. is sometimes called Aleph null.

In a normed vector space the null vector is the zero vector; in a seminormed vector space such as Minkowski space, null vectors are, in general, non-zero. In set theory, the null set is the set with zero elements; and in measure theory, a null set is a set with zero measure.

A null space of a mapping is the part of the domain that is mapped into the null element of the image (the inverse image of the null element).

In statistics, a null hypothesis is a proposition presumed true unless statistical evidence indicates otherwise.

References

  1. ""null"". The Oxford English Dictionary, Draft Revision March 2004. 2004. Retrieved 2007-04-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.