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Lattice
In everyday usage, a lattice is a structure of crossed laths with open spaces left between them. The term is used in various technical senses, all of which have some geometrical relation to the dictionary definition.
- In one mathematical usage, a lattice is a partially ordered set in which any two elements have a supremum and an infimum. The Hasse diagrams of these posets look (in some simple cases) like the aforementioned lattices. See lattice (order) for a detailed treatment.
- In another mathematical usage, a lattice is a discrete subgroup of Rn that spans Rn as a real vector space. The elements of a lattice are regularly spaced, reminiscent of the intersection points of a lath lattice. See lattice (group).
- This concept is used in materials science, in which a lattice is a 3-dimensional array of regularly spaced points coinciding with the atom or molecule positions in a crystal.
- It also occurs in computational physics, in which a lattice is an n-dimensional geometrical structure of sites, connected by bonds, which represent positions which may be occupied by atoms, molecules, electrons, spins, etc. For an article dealing with the formal representation of such structures see Lattice Geometries. Quite general lattice models are used in physics.
- In digital signal processing, lattice filters are electronic filters with a special recursive structure.
Referenced By
List of mathematical topics (J-L) | List of physics topics F-L
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