Recent Articles



































Configuration space



         


In mathematics, a function space is a set of functions from a set X to a set Y, of a given kind. It is called a space because in most applications, it is a topological space or/and a vector space. Function spaces appear in various areas of mathematics:

Another related idea from physics is the configuration space. This has no single meaning, but for N particles moving in some manifold M it might be the space of positions MN - or the subspace where no two positions were equal. To take account of both position and momenta one moves to the cotangent bundle. The configurations of a curve would be a function space of some kind. In quantum mechanics one formulation emphasises 'histories' as configurations. In short, a configuration space is typically "half" of (see lagrangian distribution) a phase space that is constructed from a function space.

Configuration spaces are related to braid theory, also, since the condition on a string of not passing through itself is formulated by cutting diagonals out of function spaces.






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License