Degeneracy: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
LeaveSleaves (talk | contribs) m Reverted edits by 139.130.41.14 to last revision by Michael Hardy (HG) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
* [[Deterioration]] |
* [[Deterioration]] |
||
* [[Regeneration]] – antonym |
* [[Regeneration]] – antonym |
||
* Jedrzejczyk, Damian |
|||
{{disambig}} |
{{disambig}} |
Revision as of 03:17, 26 June 2009
Look up degeneration in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Degeneracy (for the quality; degeneration for the process; adj. and v. degenerate), from the Latin de-generare "to depart from its kind or genus, to fall from its proper or ancestral quality" can refer to:
- In science and mathematics:
- Degeneracy (mathematics), a limiting case in which a class of object changes its nature so as to belong to another, usually simpler, class
- In biology, the ability of elements that are structurally different to perform the same function or yield the same output, a well known characteristic of the genetic code and immune systems. 1
- In graph theory, the degeneracy of a graph, a graph metric;
- Degenerate matter, a very highly compressed phase of matter where all or some of the electron orbits have collapsed from pressure;
- Degenerate energy levels, different arrangements of a physical system which have the same energy;
- Medical degeneration:
- Degenerative disease, disease which causes deterioration over time;
- Degeneration in social ideology:
- Degenerate art, a term adopted by the Nazi regime in Germany to describe virtually all modern art, declaring it "un-German" or Jewish Bolshevist in nature.
See also
- Biological devolution
- Deterioration
- Regeneration – antonym