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Definitions

invariant

[in-vair-ee-uhnt] / ɪnˈvɛər i ənt /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

They focused on an invariant manifold, termed as the DA manifold, and conducted a stability analysis.

From Science Daily

"They have learned to be invariant to these particular dimensions in the stimulus space, and it's model-specific, so other models don't have those same invariances."

From Science Daily

We get universal power laws, and the system is scale invariant: if you take a photograph of the fluid flowing through the pores and blow it up, it looks like the original.

From Scientific American

In particular, both theories were scale invariant, meaning the physics of the systems the theories described didn’t change as the systems got larger or smaller.

From Scientific American

Holding that number invariant required balancing out any population shifts within a state.

From Science Magazine