Von Neumann paradox
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Von_Neumann_paradox an entity of type: WikicatMathematicsParadoxes
En mathématiques, et plus précisément en géométrie plane, le paradoxe de von Neumann, dû à John von Neumann en 1929, est un résultat analogue au paradoxe de Banach-Tarski, montrant que l'on peut, en utilisant l'axiome du choix, décomposer un carré unité en un nombre fini d'ensembles de points, transformer ces ensembles par des transformations affines conservant les aires, et obtenir deux carrés unités.
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In mathematics, the von Neumann paradox, named after John von Neumann, is the idea that one can break a planar figure such as the unit square into sets of points and subject each set to an area-preserving affine transformation such that the result is two planar figures of the same size as the original. This was proved in 1929 by John von Neumann, assuming the axiom of choice. It is based on the earlier Banach–Tarski paradox, which is in turn based on the Hausdorff paradox.
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Paradoxe de von Neumann
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Von Neumann paradox
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20234262
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1102806974
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En mathématiques, et plus précisément en géométrie plane, le paradoxe de von Neumann, dû à John von Neumann en 1929, est un résultat analogue au paradoxe de Banach-Tarski, montrant que l'on peut, en utilisant l'axiome du choix, décomposer un carré unité en un nombre fini d'ensembles de points, transformer ces ensembles par des transformations affines conservant les aires, et obtenir deux carrés unités.
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In mathematics, the von Neumann paradox, named after John von Neumann, is the idea that one can break a planar figure such as the unit square into sets of points and subject each set to an area-preserving affine transformation such that the result is two planar figures of the same size as the original. This was proved in 1929 by John von Neumann, assuming the axiom of choice. It is based on the earlier Banach–Tarski paradox, which is in turn based on the Hausdorff paradox. Banach and Tarski had proved that, using isometric transformations, the result of taking apart and reassembling a two-dimensional figure would necessarily have the same area as the original. This would make creating two unit squares out of one impossible. But von Neumann realized that the trick of such so-called paradoxical decompositions was the use of a group of transformations that include as a subgroup a free group with two generators. The group of area-preserving transformations (whether the special linear group or the special affine group) contains such subgroups, and this opens the possibility of performing paradoxical decompositions using them.
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