Unisolvent point set: Difference between revisions

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Template:Unreferenced In approximation theory, a finite collection of points XRn is often called unisolvent for a space W if any element wW is uniquely determined by its values on X.
X is unisolvent for Πnm (polynomials in n variables of degree at most m) if there exists a unique polynomial in Πnm of lowest possible degree which interpolates the data X.

Simple examples in R would be the fact that two distinct points determine a line, three points determine a parabola, etc. It is clear that over R, any collection of k + 1 distinct points will uniquely determine a polynomial of lowest possible degree in Πk.

See also


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