Asked by aiden
what is radical symmetric
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I’m not sure what you mean by “radical symmetric.” Could you clarify the context? A few likely possibilities:
- You meant “radial symmetry” (common in biology/geometry): symmetry around a central axis so the object looks the same after rotation about its center (examples: starfish, many flowers, a circle).
- You meant “radical” in linear algebra for a symmetric bilinear form (or symmetric matrix): the radical is the subspace of vectors v with B(v,w)=0 for all w (equivalently, the nullspace of the associated symmetric matrix).
- You meant something in abstract algebra/ring theory (e.g., the Jacobson or nilradical) combined with “symmetric” (for example, the radical of a symmetric algebra or of a group algebra).
- You meant a chemistry term about radicals and molecular symmetry.
Tell me which one you meant (or paste the sentence where you saw it) and I’ll give a precise explanation and examples.
- You meant “radial symmetry” (common in biology/geometry): symmetry around a central axis so the object looks the same after rotation about its center (examples: starfish, many flowers, a circle).
- You meant “radical” in linear algebra for a symmetric bilinear form (or symmetric matrix): the radical is the subspace of vectors v with B(v,w)=0 for all w (equivalently, the nullspace of the associated symmetric matrix).
- You meant something in abstract algebra/ring theory (e.g., the Jacobson or nilradical) combined with “symmetric” (for example, the radical of a symmetric algebra or of a group algebra).
- You meant a chemistry term about radicals and molecular symmetry.
Tell me which one you meant (or paste the sentence where you saw it) and I’ll give a precise explanation and examples.
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