Multiplicative inverse | inverse-square law | Quantum inverse scattering method | multiplicative inverse | inverse | '''Magnetization''' of a paramagnet as a function of Multiplicative inverse | Inverse synthetic aperture radar | Inverse problem | inverse problem | Inverse multiplexer | Direct–inverse language | direct–inverse language |
One acceptable weight is a constant exponent (possibly the square) of the multiplicative inverse of the duration (possibly expressed in the number of days) between the date of the generation and the generation available before it.
For field events, this was a straightforward statistical procedure; for track events, the reciprocal of the athlete's time, representing speed, was used as the independent variable.
Ratios have an inverse relationship to string length, for example stopping a string at two-thirds (2:3) its length produces a pitch one and one-half (3:2) that of the open string (not to be confused with Inversion (music)).
The factor results from the reciprocal of the normal inverse cumulative distribution function, , evaluated at probability .
By 1826, he was already using the integer reciprocals of Weiss' coefficients (the intersection of a plane with the three crystallographic axes) to describe the spatial positions of crystal surfaces, from which the British crystallographer William Hallowes Miller (1801-1880) developed the concept of Miller indices in 1839.
Close-up lenses are usually specified by their optical power, the reciprocal of the focal length in meters.