Degree of freedom

In various scientific fields, the word freedom is used to describe the limits to which physical movement or other physical processes are possible. This relates to the philosophical concept to the extent that people may be considered to have as much freedom as they are physically able to exercise. The number of independent variables or parameters for a system is described as its number of degrees of freedom. For example the movement of a vehicle along a road has two degrees of freedom; to go fast or slow, or to change direction by turning left or right. The movement of a ship sailing on the waves has four degrees of freedom since it can also pitch nose-to-tail and roll side-to-side. An aeroplane can also climb and sideslip, giving it six degrees of freedom.
Degrees of freedom in mechanics describes the number of independent motions that are allowed to a body, or, in case of a mechanism made of several bodies, the number of possible independent relative motions between the pieces of the mechanism. In the study of complex motor control, there may be so many degrees of freedom that a given action can be achieved in different ways by combining movements with different degrees of freedom. This issue is sometimes called the degrees of freedom problem.
In mathematics, this notion is formalized as the dimension of a manifold or an algebraic variety. When degrees of freedom is used instead of dimension, this usually means that the manifold or variety that models the system is only implicitly defined.
See:

Degrees of freedom (mechanics), number of independent motions that are allowed to the body or, in case of a mechanism made of several bodies, number of possible independent relative motions between the pieces of the mechanism
Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry), a term used in explaining dependence on parameters, or the dimensions of a phase space
Degrees of freedom (statistics), the number of values in the final calculation of a statistic that are free to vary
Degrees of freedom problem, the problem of controlling motor movement given abundant degrees of freedom

View More On Wikipedia.org
  • 56

    Greg Bernhardt

    A PF Singularity From USA
    • Messages
      19,447
    • Media
      227
    • Reaction score
      10,037
    • Points
      1,237
  • 1

    Alexander83

    A PF Atom
    • Messages
      35
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      31
  • 1

    Spacexplorer

    A PF Quark From Ankara/Turkey
    • Messages
      5
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      4
  • 1

    worryingchem

    A PF Electron
    • Messages
      41
    • Reaction score
      1
    • Points
      11
  • 1

    yugeci

    A PF Atom
    • Messages
      61
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      31
  • 1

    McLaren Rulez

    A PF Molecule From Singapore
    • Messages
      292
    • Reaction score
      3
    • Points
      74
  • 1

    Sanchayan Ghosh

    A PF Electron From India
    • Messages
      11
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      14
  • 1

    Frank Castle

    A PF Atom
    • Messages
      580
    • Reaction score
      23
    • Points
      28
  • 1

    lazayama

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      5
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      1
  • 1

    curiousPep

    A PF Electron
    • Messages
      17
    • Reaction score
      1
    • Points
      13
  • 1

    zonexo

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      1
    • Reaction score
      2
    • Points
      3
  • 1

    oualid chinoune

    A PF Quark
    • Messages
      0
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      1
  • 1

    shooride

    A PF Atom
    • Messages
      36
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      34
  • 1

    Benevito

    A PF Electron From Ukraine
    • Messages
      16
    • Reaction score
      0
    • Points
      10
  • Back
    Top