seriously disabled Posted May 30, 2010 Posted May 30, 2010 (edited) What do the underbraces in the following equations mean? Edited May 30, 2010 by Uri
Greippi Posted May 30, 2010 Posted May 30, 2010 I believe in this case it means something like "this also means/can be written as". Not entirely sure though.
the tree Posted May 30, 2010 Posted May 30, 2010 In that context, that some term is equal to what is over the underbrace. Often they are used for general notes.
seriously disabled Posted May 30, 2010 Author Posted May 30, 2010 Yeah that's what I was thinking intially but thanks for confirming it to me guys.
Dave Posted May 30, 2010 Posted May 30, 2010 Usually they're informative. For example, people will often write something like [math]\underbrace{1+1+\dots+1}_{\text{n times}}[/math] which represents [math]\sum_{k=1}^n 1[/math] I find that it's a nice way of continuing steps in a proof without having to stop the train of thought, as it allows you to elaborate on a certain point in, say, a chain of equalities as is in your case.
theoriginal169 Posted June 8, 2010 Posted June 8, 2010 it seems like Plancherel s theorem you can exchange functions if f(x)=sigma(g(x)exp(ikx)) here you can exchange f and g while changing i to -i .
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