- What is Linearity?
- It refers to the conditions ① F(v1+v2)=F(v1)+F(v2) and ② F(λv)=λF(v) being satisfied.
- I see, I kind of understand the gist.
- So, in terms of scalar functions, it would only hold for something like $f(x)=kx”? (blu3mo)
- This is about using it in operations.
- In physics, this corresponds to the Principle of Superposition (takker)
- It’s interesting that there is a corresponding concept in physics, isn’t it? (blu3mo)(blu3mo)(blu3mo)(blu3mo)
- Wave interference and electrical circuits are famous examples (takker)
- Principle of Superposition - Wikipedia
- What’s interesting is that some cases only approximate it.
- For waves, it doesn’t hold when the amplitude becomes too large and intense.
- It’s a typical example in physics where the dominant phenomenon changes when the scale changes.
- Other examples include relativistic effects and quantum effects.