Standard (mathematics)
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This article is about the standard in mathematics. For other uses of the term standard, please see standard (disambiguation).
In mathematics, the word standard is often used in its non-technical sense to indicate the "normally" or "most frequently" used of several options. Words with a similar, but usually more formal and more technical meaning are: normal, natural, canonical. Thus there may be, for instance,
- a "standard" symbol that is usually (but not necessarily always) used, or
- a "standard" way to write an equation that need not be considered as a normal form.
Some very common examples for the use of the word "standard" are:
- The standard basis in d-dimensional real or complex vector spaces (or, more generally, in any d-dimensional vector space Kd over a field K)
- is the basis formed by the d d-tuples
- In set theory, standard model of the natural numbers usually refers to the set constructed inductively from the empty set.
- The term standard (natural, real, complex, etc.) numbers is used to distinguish the usually used numbers from their nonstandard counterparts.
- In statistics the standard deviation is the most commonly used measure of variation.
- In mathematical physics there is a well-known standard model of particle physics.