monogon
English
Pronunciation
Audio (UK) (file) - Hyphenation: mon‧o‧gon
Noun
monogon (plural monogons)
- (geometry) A one-dimensional object comprising one vertex and one (not necessarily straight) edge both of whose ends are that vertex.
- 2003, Gordon Baker, translator and editor, Ludwig Wittgenstein and Friedrich Waismann, The Voices of Wittgenstein: The Vienna Circle, Routledge, →ISBN, page 409,
- We explain to somebody what is a regular quadrilateral constructed within the circle; then a regular triangle and a regular bi-angle. Now we ask him to draw a regular monogon by analogy, and we probably think that he cannot do this. But what if he draws a point on the circle and says that it is a regular monogon?
- (geometry) A two-dimensional object comprising one vertex, one edge both of whose ends are that vertex, and one face filling in the hollow formed by that edge.
- 1987, Jonathan L. Gross, Thomas W. Tucker, Topological Graph Theory, Dover Publications, published 2001, →ISBN, page 231:
- According to Theorem 4.1.1, such a derived imbedding could be obtained from an imbedded voltage graph with one vertex, edges, and faces. Of these faces, should be 3-sided and satisfy KVL. The other face should be a monogon whose net voltage has order two.
- 2002, Tao Li, "Laminar Branched Surfaces in 3–manifolds", Geometry & Topology 6, page 158,
- There is no monogon in , ie, no disk with , where is in an interval fiber of and .
- a. 2006, Thilo Kuessner, "A survey on simplicial volume and invariants of foliations and laminations", in, Paweł Walczak, et al., editors, Foliations 2005, →ISBN, page 295,
- An end-compressing monogon for F is a monogon properly embedded in the complimentary[sic] region C which is not homotopic (rel. boundary) into .
- (optics) A single-faceted reflector.
Quotations
- To be listed under the applicable sense
- 2008, Baris Coskunuzer, Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, volume 136, number 4, pages 1427–1432:
- As nonproper embeddedness must produce monogons, one can get a contradiction by using Hass and Scott's surgery arguments for least area objects in [HS].
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