Crunode

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A crunode at the origin of the curve defined by y2x2(x+1)=0

In mathematics, a crunode (archaic) or node is a point where a curve intersects itself so that both branches of the curve have distinct tangent lines at the point of intersection. A crunode is also known as an ordinary double point.[1]

For a plane curve, defined as the locus of points f(x, y) = 0, where f(x, y) is a smooth function of variables x and y ranging over the real numbers, a crunode of the curve is a singularity of the function f, where both partial derivatives {\partial f \over \partial x} and {\partial f \over \partial y} vanish. Further the Hessian matrix of second derivatives will have both positive and negative eigenvalues.

See also

References

  1. Weisstein, Eric W. "Crunode". Mathworld. Retrieved 14 January 2014. 


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