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  1. statistics - What are differences between Geometric, Logarithmic and ...

    Aug 3, 2020 · Now lets do it using the geometric method that is repeated multiplication, in this case we start with x goes from 0 to 5 and our sequence goes like this: 1, 2, 2•2=4, 2•2•2=8, 2•2•2•2=16, …

  2. Proof of geometric series formula - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Sep 20, 2021 · Proof of geometric series formula Ask Question Asked 4 years, 2 months ago Modified 4 years, 2 months ago

  3. why geometric multiplicity is bounded by algebraic multiplicity?

    The geometric multiplicity is the number of linearly independent vectors, and each vector is the solution to one algebraic eigenvector equation, so there must be at least as much algebraic multiplicity.

  4. Calculate expectation of a geometric random variable

    Dec 13, 2013 · 2 A clever solution to find the expected value of a geometric r.v. is those employed in this video lecture of the MITx course "Introduction to Probability: Part 1 - The Fundamentals" (by the way, …

  5. terminology - Is it more accurate to use the term Geometric Growth or ...

    For example, there is a Geometric Progression but no Exponential Progression article on Wikipedia, so perhaps the term Geometric is a bit more accurate, mathematically speaking? Why are there two …

  6. What does the dot product of two vectors represent?

    May 23, 2014 · 21 It might help to think of multiplication of real numbers in a more geometric fashion. $2$ times $3$ is the length of the interval you get starting with an interval of length $3$ and then …

  7. Why is a geometric progression called so? [duplicate]

    May 14, 2015 · Just curious about why geometric progression is called so. Is it related to geometry?

  8. probability - Deriving the mean of the Geometric Distribution ...

    Feb 22, 2013 · I am missing something that might be trivial in deriving the mean of the geometric distribution function by using expected value identity $$ \\sum_x x \\theta (1-\\theta)^{x-1}. $$

  9. Non-infinite geometric sum; does not start at 0 or 1

    Jan 31, 2016 · Non-infinite geometric sum; does not start at 0 or 1 Ask Question Asked 9 years, 10 months ago Modified 2 years, 7 months ago

  10. What is the geometric interpretation of the transpose?

    1 We better interpret the geometric meaning of transpose from the view point of projective geometry. Because only in projective geometry, it is possible to interpret that of all square matrices.