Nonminimum-Phase Zeros / | |
Autor: | Hoagg, Jesse B. |
Tema(s): | |
Resumen: | Much to do about nothing. In the popular literature there is a certain fascination with the concept of zero [1]-[3]. While today the inconspicuous 0 is taken for granted, the situation was different in the distant past. For example, the Romans had no symbol for 0, a fact memorialized by the jump from 1 B.C. to 1 A.D. [4, p.91]. In contrast, the Mayans had a symbol for zero, and the first day of each Mayan month was day zero, and the first day of each Mayan month was day zero [3, p.18]. The ship in the club of numbers through Indian mathematics, although this acceptance was achieved only through a tortuous process that spanned centuries |
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Much to do about nothing. In the popular literature there is a certain fascination with the concept of zero [1]-[3]. While today the inconspicuous 0 is taken for granted, the situation was different in the distant past. For example, the Romans had no symbol for 0, a fact memorialized by the jump from 1 B.C. to 1 A.D. [4, p.91]. In contrast, the Mayans had a symbol for zero, and the first day of each Mayan month was day zero, and the first day of each Mayan month was day zero [3, p.18]. The ship in the club of numbers through Indian mathematics, although this acceptance was achieved only through a tortuous process that spanned centuries
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