Difference between revisions of "Left scattered"

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* {{PaperReference|Partial dynamic equations on time scales|2006|Billy Jackson||prev=Right dense|next=Left dense}}: Appendix
 
* {{PaperReference|Partial dynamic equations on time scales|2006|Billy Jackson||prev=Right dense|next=Left dense}}: Appendix
 
* {{PaperReference|Functional series on time scales|2008|Dorota Mozyrska|author2=Ewa Pawluszewicz|prev=Right scattered|next=Right dense}}
 
* {{PaperReference|Functional series on time scales|2008|Dorota Mozyrska|author2=Ewa Pawluszewicz|prev=Right scattered|next=Right dense}}
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[[Category:Definition]]

Latest revision as of 20:17, 22 January 2023

Let $\mathbb{T}$ be a time scale. We say that $t \in \mathbb{T}$ is left scattered provided that $\nu(t)<t$, where $\nu$ denotes the backward jump.

See also

Left dense

References