impossible to measure
Look at other dictionaries:
measure — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 official action to deal with a problem ADJECTIVE ▪ appropriate, effective, necessary, practical ▪ We urge you to adopt all necessary measures to guarantee people s safety. ▪ key … Collocations dictionary
Measure (mathematics) — Informally, a measure has the property of being monotone in the sense that if A is a subset of B, the measure of A is less than or equal to the measure of B. Furthermore, the measure of the empty set is required to be 0. In mathematical analysis … Wikipedia
Measure for Measure — Mesure pour mesure Mesure pour mesure Facsimilé du premier in folio de 1623 Auteur William Shakespeare Genre Mixte : tragi comédie satirique et morale Pays d origine … Wikipédia en Français
Mission: Impossible (film series) — Mission: Impossible series Mission: Impossible trilogy blu ray box set Directed by Brian De Palma John Woo J. J … Wikipedia
Mission: Impossible — This article is about the original 1966–1973 television series. For other uses, see Mission: Impossible (disambiguation). Mission: Impossible Original series logo Genre Espionage Created by … Wikipedia
Haar measure — In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure is a way to assign an invariant volume to subsets of locally compact topological groups and subsequently define an integral for functions on those groups.This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar, a… … Wikipedia
Empirical measure — In probability theory, an empirical measure is a random measure arising from a particular realization of a (usually finite) sequence of random variables. The precise definition is found below. Empirical measures are relevant to mathematical… … Wikipedia
Uncertainty principle — In quantum physics, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that locating a particle in a small region of space makes the momentum of the particle uncertain; and conversely, that measuring the momentum of a particle precisely makes the… … Wikipedia
thermodynamics — thermodynamicist, n. /therr moh duy nam iks/, n. (used with a sing. v.) the science concerned with the relations between heat and mechanical energy or work, and the conversion of one into the other: modern thermodynamics deals with the properties … Universalium
ECONOMIC HISTORY — This article is arranged according to the following outline: first temple period exile and restoration second temple period talmudic era muslim middle ages medieval christendom economic doctrines early modern period sephardim and ashkenazim… … Encyclopedia of Judaism