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Orthogonality

In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of perpendicularity.

The line segments AB and CD are orthogonal to each other.

Orthogonality is also used with various meanings that are often weakly related or not related at all with the mathematical meanings.

Etymology edit

The word comes from the Ancient Greek ὀρθός (orthós), meaning "upright",[1] and γωνία (gōnía), meaning "angle".[2]

The Ancient Greek ὀρθογώνιον (orthogṓnion) and Classical Latin orthogonium originally denoted a rectangle.[3] Later, they came to mean a right triangle. In the 12th century, the post-classical Latin word orthogonalis came to mean a right angle or something related to a right angle.[4]

Mathematics edit

In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of perpendicularity to the linear algebra of bilinear forms.

Two elements u and v of a vector space with bilinear form B are orthogonal when B(u, v) = 0. Depending on the bilinear form, the vector space may contain nonzero self-orthogonal vectors. In the case of function spaces, families of orthogonal functions are used to form an orthogonal basis.

The concept has been used in the context of orthogonal functions, orthogonal polynomials, and combinatorics.

 
Orthogonality and rotation of coordinate systems compared between left: Euclidean space through circular angle ϕ, right: in Minkowski spacetime through hyperbolic angle ϕ (red lines labelled c denote the worldlines of a light signal, a vector is orthogonal to itself if it lies on this line).[5]

Physics edit

Optics edit

In optics, polarization states are said to be orthogonal when they propagate independently of each other, as in vertical and horizontal linear polarization or right- and left-handed circular polarization.

Special relativity edit

In special relativity, a time axis determined by a rapidity of motion is hyperbolic-orthogonal to a space axis of simultaneous events, also determined by the rapidity. The theory features relativity of simultaneity.

Hyperbolic orthogonality edit

 
Euclidean orthogonality is preserved by rotation in the left diagram; hyperbolic orthogonality with respect to hyperbola (B) is preserved by hyperbolic rotation in the right diagram.
In geometry, the relation of hyperbolic orthogonality between two lines separated by the asymptotes of a hyperbola is a concept used in special relativity to define simultaneous events. Two events will be simultaneous when they are on a line hyperbolically orthogonal to a particular time line. This dependence on a certain time line is determined by velocity, and is the basis for the relativity of simultaneity.

Quantum mechanics edit

In quantum mechanics, a sufficient (but not necessary) condition that two eigenstates of a Hermitian operator,   and  , are orthogonal is that they correspond to different eigenvalues. This means, in Dirac notation, that   if   and   correspond to different eigenvalues. This follows from the fact that Schrödinger's equation is a Sturm–Liouville equation (in Schrödinger's formulation) or that observables are given by Hermitian operators (in Heisenberg's formulation).[citation needed]

Art edit

In art, the perspective (imaginary) lines pointing to the vanishing point are referred to as "orthogonal lines". The term "orthogonal line" often has a quite different meaning in the literature of modern art criticism. Many works by painters such as Piet Mondrian and Burgoyne Diller are noted for their exclusive use of "orthogonal lines" — not, however, with reference to perspective, but rather referring to lines that are straight and exclusively horizontal or vertical, forming right angles where they intersect. For example, an essay at the web site of the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum states that "Mondrian ... dedicated his entire oeuvre to the investigation of the balance between orthogonal lines and primary colours." 2009-01-31 at the Wayback Machine

Computer science edit

Orthogonality in programming language design is the ability to use various language features in arbitrary combinations with consistent results.[6] This usage was introduced by Van Wijngaarden in the design of Algol 68:

The number of independent primitive concepts has been minimized in order that the language be easy to describe, to learn, and to implement. On the other hand, these concepts have been applied “orthogonally” in order to maximize the expressive power of the language while trying to avoid deleterious superfluities.[7]

Orthogonality is a system design property which guarantees that modifying the technical effect produced by a component of a system neither creates nor propagates side effects to other components of the system. Typically this is achieved through the separation of concerns and encapsulation, and it is essential for feasible and compact designs of complex systems. The emergent behavior of a system consisting of components should be controlled strictly by formal definitions of its logic and not by side effects resulting from poor integration, i.e., non-orthogonal design of modules and interfaces. Orthogonality reduces testing and development time because it is easier to verify designs that neither cause side effects nor depend on them.

Orthogonal instruction set edit

An instruction set is said to be orthogonal if it lacks redundancy (i.e., there is only a single instruction that can be used to accomplish a given task)[8] and is designed such that instructions can use any register in any addressing mode. This terminology results from considering an instruction as a vector whose components are the instruction fields. One field identifies the registers to be operated upon and another specifies the addressing mode. An orthogonal instruction set uniquely encodes all combinations of registers and addressing modes.[9]

Telecommunications edit

In telecommunications, multiple access schemes are orthogonal when an ideal receiver can completely reject arbitrarily strong unwanted signals from the desired signal using different basis functions. One such scheme is time-division multiple access (TDMA), where the orthogonal basis functions are nonoverlapping rectangular pulses ("time slots").

Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing edit

Another scheme is orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM), which refers to the use, by a single transmitter, of a set of frequency multiplexed signals with the exact minimum frequency spacing needed to make them orthogonal so that they do not interfere with each other. Well known examples include (a, g, and n) versions of 802.11 Wi-Fi; WiMAX; ITU-T G.hn, DVB-T, the terrestrial digital TV broadcast system used in most of the world outside North America; and DMT (Discrete Multi Tone), the standard form of ADSL.

In OFDM, the subcarrier frequencies are chosen[how?] so that the subcarriers are orthogonal to each other, meaning that crosstalk between the subchannels is eliminated and intercarrier guard bands are not required. This greatly simplifies the design of both the transmitter and the receiver. In conventional FDM, a separate filter for each subchannel is required.

Statistics, econometrics, and economics edit

When performing statistical analysis, independent variables that affect a particular dependent variable are said to be orthogonal if they are uncorrelated,[10] since the covariance forms an inner product. In this case the same results are obtained for the effect of any of the independent variables upon the dependent variable, regardless of whether one models the effects of the variables individually with simple regression or simultaneously with multiple regression. If correlation is present, the factors are not orthogonal and different results are obtained by the two methods. This usage arises from the fact that if centered by subtracting the expected value (the mean), uncorrelated variables are orthogonal in the geometric sense discussed above, both as observed data (i.e., vectors) and as random variables (i.e., density functions). One econometric formalism that is alternative to the maximum likelihood framework, the Generalized Method of Moments, relies on orthogonality conditions. In particular, the Ordinary Least Squares estimator may be easily derived from an orthogonality condition between the explanatory variables and model residuals.

Taxonomy edit

In taxonomy, an orthogonal classification is one in which no item is a member of more than one group, that is, the classifications are mutually exclusive.

Chemistry and biochemistry edit

In chemistry and biochemistry, an orthogonal interaction occurs when there are two pairs of substances and each substance can interact with their respective partner, but does not interact with either substance of the other pair. For example, DNA has two orthogonal pairs: cytosine and guanine form a base-pair, and adenine and thymine form another base-pair, but other base-pair combinations are strongly disfavored. As a chemical example, tetrazine reacts with transcyclooctene and azide reacts with cyclooctyne without any cross-reaction, so these are mutually orthogonal reactions, and so, can be performed simultaneously and selectively.[11]

Organic synthesis edit

In organic synthesis, orthogonal protection is a strategy allowing the deprotection of functional groups independently of each other.

Bioorthogonal chemistry edit

The term bioorthogonal chemistry refers to any chemical reaction that can occur inside of living systems without interfering with native biochemical processes.[12][13][14] The term was coined by Carolyn R. Bertozzi in 2003.[15][16] Since its introduction, the concept of the bioorthogonal reaction has enabled the study of biomolecules such as glycans, proteins,[17] and lipids[18] in real time in living systems without cellular toxicity. A number of chemical ligation strategies have been developed that fulfill the requirements of bioorthogonality, including the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between azides and cyclooctynes (also termed copper-free click chemistry),[19] between nitrones and cyclooctynes,[20] oxime/hydrazone formation from aldehydes and ketones,[21] the tetrazine ligation,[22] the isocyanide-based click reaction,[23] and most recently, the quadricyclane ligation.[24]

Supramolecular chemistry edit

In supramolecular chemistry the notion of orthogonality refers to the possibility of two or more supramolecular, often non-covalent, interactions being compatible; reversibly forming without interference from the other.

Analytical chemistry edit

In analytical chemistry, analyses are "orthogonal" if they make a measurement or identification in completely different ways, thus increasing the reliability of the measurement. Orthogonal testing thus can be viewed as "cross-checking" of results, and the "cross" notion corresponds to the etymologic origin of orthogonality. Orthogonal testing is often required as a part of a new drug application.

System reliability edit

In the field of system reliability orthogonal redundancy is that form of redundancy where the form of backup device or method is completely different from the prone to error device or method. The failure mode of an orthogonally redundant back-up device or method does not intersect with and is completely different from the failure mode of the device or method in need of redundancy to safeguard the total system against catastrophic failure.

Neuroscience edit

In neuroscience, a sensory map in the brain which has overlapping stimulus coding (e.g. location and quality) is called an orthogonal map.

Philosophy edit

In philosophy, two topics, authors, or pieces of writing are said to be "orthogonal" to each other when they do not substantively cover what could be considered potentially overlapping or competing claims. Thus, texts in philosophy can either support and complement one another, they can offer competing explanations or systems, or they can be orthogonal to each other in cases where the scope, content, and purpose of the pieces of writing are entirely unrelated.

Gaming edit

In board games such as chess which feature a grid of squares, 'orthogonal' is used to mean "in the same row/'rank' or column/'file'". This is the counterpart to squares which are "diagonally adjacent".[25] In the ancient Chinese board game Go a player can capture the stones of an opponent by occupying all orthogonally adjacent points.

Other examples edit

Stereo vinyl records encode both the left and right stereo channels in a single groove. The V-shaped groove in the vinyl has walls that are 90 degrees to each other, with variations in each wall separately encoding one of the two analogue channels that make up the stereo signal. The cartridge senses the motion of the stylus following the groove in two orthogonal directions: 45 degrees from vertical to either side.[26] A pure horizontal motion corresponds to a mono signal, equivalent to a stereo signal in which both channels carry identical (in-phase) signals.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Liddell and Scott, A Greek–English Lexicon s.v. ὀρθός
  2. ^ Liddell and Scott, A Greek–English Lexicon s.v. γωνία
  3. ^ Liddell and Scott, A Greek–English Lexicon s.v. ὀρθογώνιον
  4. ^ "orthogonal". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2004.
  5. ^ J.A. Wheeler; C. Misner; K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. p. 58. ISBN 0-7167-0344-0.
  6. ^ Michael L. Scott, Programming Language Pragmatics, p. 228.
  7. ^ 1968, Adriaan van Wijngaarden et al., Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68, section 0.1.2, Orthogonal design
  8. ^ Null, Linda & Lobur, Julia (2006). The essentials of computer organization and architecture (2nd ed.). Jones & Bartlett Learning. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-7637-3769-6.
  9. ^ Linda Null (2010). The Essentials of Computer Organization and Architecture (PDF). Jones & Bartlett Publishers. pp. 287–288. ISBN 978-1449600068. (PDF) from the original on 2015-10-10.
  10. ^ Athanasios Papoulis; S. Unnikrishna Pillai (2002). Probability, Random Variables and Stochastic Processes. McGraw-Hill. p. 211. ISBN 0-07-366011-6.
  11. ^ Karver, Mark R.; Hilderbrand, Scott A. (2012). "Bioorthogonal Reaction Pairs Enable Simultaneous, Selective, Multi-Target Imaging". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 51 (4): 920–2. doi:10.1002/anie.201104389. PMC 3304098. PMID 22162316.
  12. ^ Sletten, Ellen M.; Bertozzi, Carolyn R. (2009). "Bioorthogonal Chemistry: Fishing for Selectivity in a Sea of Functionality". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 48 (38): 6974–98. doi:10.1002/anie.200900942. PMC 2864149. PMID 19714693.
  13. ^ Prescher, Jennifer A.; Dube, Danielle H.; Bertozzi, Carolyn R. (2004). "Chemical remodelling of cell surfaces in living animals". Nature. 430 (7002): 873–7. Bibcode:2004Natur.430..873P. doi:10.1038/nature02791. PMID 15318217. S2CID 4371934.
  14. ^ Prescher, Jennifer A; Bertozzi, Carolyn R (2005). "Chemistry in living systems". Nature Chemical Biology. 1 (1): 13–21. doi:10.1038/nchembio0605-13. PMID 16407987. S2CID 40548615.
  15. ^ Hang, Howard C.; Yu, Chong; Kato, Darryl L.; Bertozzi, Carolyn R. (2003-12-09). "A metabolic labeling approach toward proteomic analysis of mucin-type O-linked glycosylation". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 100 (25): 14846–14851. Bibcode:2003PNAS..10014846H. doi:10.1073/pnas.2335201100. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 299823. PMID 14657396.
  16. ^ Sletten, Ellen M.; Bertozzi, Carolyn R. (2011). "From Mechanism to Mouse: A Tale of Two Bioorthogonal Reactions". Accounts of Chemical Research. 44 (9): 666–676. doi:10.1021/ar200148z. PMC 3184615. PMID 21838330.
  17. ^ Plass, Tilman; Milles, Sigrid; Koehler, Christine; Schultz, Carsten; Lemke, Edward A. (2011). "Genetically Encoded Copper-Free Click Chemistry". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 50 (17): 3878–3881. doi:10.1002/anie.201008178. PMC 3210829. PMID 21433234.
  18. ^ Neef, Anne B.; Schultz, Carsten (2009). "Selective Fluorescence Labeling of Lipids in Living Cells". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 48 (8): 1498–500. doi:10.1002/anie.200805507. PMID 19145623.
  19. ^ Baskin, J. M.; Prescher, J. A.; Laughlin, S. T.; Agard, N. J.; Chang, P. V.; Miller, I. A.; Lo, A.; Codelli, J. A.; Bertozzi, C. R. (2007). "Copper-free click chemistry for dynamic in vivo imaging". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (43): 16793–7. Bibcode:2007PNAS..10416793B. doi:10.1073/pnas.0707090104. PMC 2040404. PMID 17942682.
  20. ^ Ning, Xinghai; Temming, Rinske P.; Dommerholt, Jan; Guo, Jun; Blanco-Ania, Daniel; Debets, Marjoke F.; Wolfert, Margreet A.; Boons, Geert-Jan; Van Delft, Floris L. (2010). "Protein Modification by Strain-Promoted Alkyne-Nitrone Cycloaddition". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 49 (17): 3065–8. doi:10.1002/anie.201000408. PMC 2871956. PMID 20333639.
  21. ^ Yarema, K. J.; Mahal, LK; Bruehl, RE; Rodriguez, EC; Bertozzi, CR (1998). "Metabolic Delivery of Ketone Groups to Sialic Acid Residues. Application to Cell Surface Glycoform Engineering". Journal of Biological Chemistry. 273 (47): 31168–79. doi:10.1074/jbc.273.47.31168. PMID 9813021.
  22. ^ Blackman, Melissa L.; Royzen, Maksim; Fox, Joseph M. (2008). "The Tetrazine Ligation: Fast Bioconjugation based on Inverse-electron-demand Diels-Alder Reactivity". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 130 (41): 13518–9. doi:10.1021/ja8053805. PMC 2653060. PMID 18798613.
  23. ^ Stöckmann, Henning; Neves, André A.; Stairs, Shaun; Brindle, Kevin M.; Leeper, Finian J. (2011). "Exploring isonitrile-based click chemistry for ligation with biomolecules". Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry. 9 (21): 7303–5. doi:10.1039/C1OB06424J. PMID 21915395.
  24. ^ Sletten, Ellen M.; Bertozzi, Carolyn R. (2011). "A Bioorthogonal Quadricyclane Ligation". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 133 (44): 17570–3. doi:10.1021/ja2072934. PMC 3206493. PMID 21962173.
  25. ^ "chessvariants.org chess glossary".
  26. ^ For an illustration, see YouTube.

orthogonality, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, dictionary, this, article, like, disambiguation, page, lists, different, meanings, title, which, weakly, related, cannot, tagged, disambiguation, page, entr. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is WP DICTIONARY this article is like a disambiguation page as it lists different meanings of the title which are weakly or not related but it cannot be tagged as a disambiguation page as the entries sections are too extensive and some sections do not refer to any existing article Please help improve this article if you can May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Orthogonal redirects here Not to be confused with Orthogonal book series In mathematics orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of perpendicularity The line segments AB and CD are orthogonal to each other Orthogonality is also used with various meanings that are often weakly related or not related at all with the mathematical meanings Contents 1 Etymology 2 Mathematics 3 Physics 3 1 Optics 3 2 Special relativity 3 2 1 Hyperbolic orthogonality 3 3 Quantum mechanics 4 Art 5 Computer science 5 1 Orthogonal instruction set 6 Telecommunications 6 1 Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing 7 Statistics econometrics and economics 8 Taxonomy 9 Chemistry and biochemistry 9 1 Organic synthesis 9 2 Bioorthogonal chemistry 9 3 Supramolecular chemistry 9 4 Analytical chemistry 10 System reliability 11 Neuroscience 12 Philosophy 13 Gaming 14 Other examples 15 See also 16 ReferencesEtymology editThe word comes from the Ancient Greek ὀr8os orthos meaning upright 1 and gwnia gōnia meaning angle 2 The Ancient Greek ὀr8ogwnion orthogṓnion and Classical Latin orthogonium originally denoted a rectangle 3 Later they came to mean a right triangle In the 12th century the post classical Latin word orthogonalis came to mean a right angle or something related to a right angle 4 Mathematics editThis section is an excerpt from Orthogonality mathematics edit In mathematics orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of perpendicularity to the linear algebra of bilinear forms Two elements u and v of a vector space with bilinear form B are orthogonal when B u v 0 Depending on the bilinear form the vector space may contain nonzero self orthogonal vectors In the case of function spaces families of orthogonal functions are used to form an orthogonal basis The concept has been used in the context of orthogonal functions orthogonal polynomials and combinatorics nbsp Orthogonality and rotation of coordinate systems compared between left Euclidean space through circular angle ϕ right in Minkowski spacetime through hyperbolic angle ϕ red lines labelled c denote the worldlines of a light signal a vector is orthogonal to itself if it lies on this line 5 Physics editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2022 Optics edit In optics polarization states are said to be orthogonal when they propagate independently of each other as in vertical and horizontal linear polarization or right and left handed circular polarization Special relativity edit In special relativity a time axis determined by a rapidity of motion is hyperbolic orthogonal to a space axis of simultaneous events also determined by the rapidity The theory features relativity of simultaneity Hyperbolic orthogonality edit This section is an excerpt from Hyperbolic orthogonality edit nbsp Euclidean orthogonality is preserved by rotation in the left diagram hyperbolic orthogonality with respect to hyperbola B is preserved by hyperbolic rotation in the right diagram In geometry the relation of hyperbolic orthogonality between two lines separated by the asymptotes of a hyperbola is a concept used in special relativity to define simultaneous events Two events will be simultaneous when they are on a line hyperbolically orthogonal to a particular time line This dependence on a certain time line is determined by velocity and is the basis for the relativity of simultaneity Quantum mechanics edit Main article Quantum mechanics In quantum mechanics a sufficient but not necessary condition that two eigenstates of a Hermitian operator psm displaystyle psi m nbsp and psn displaystyle psi n nbsp are orthogonal is that they correspond to different eigenvalues This means in Dirac notation that psm psn 0 displaystyle langle psi m psi n rangle 0 nbsp if psm displaystyle psi m nbsp and psn displaystyle psi n nbsp correspond to different eigenvalues This follows from the fact that Schrodinger s equation is a Sturm Liouville equation in Schrodinger s formulation or that observables are given by Hermitian operators in Heisenberg s formulation citation needed Art editIn art the perspective imaginary lines pointing to the vanishing point are referred to as orthogonal lines The term orthogonal line often has a quite different meaning in the literature of modern art criticism Many works by painters such as Piet Mondrian and Burgoyne Diller are noted for their exclusive use of orthogonal lines not however with reference to perspective but rather referring to lines that are straight and exclusively horizontal or vertical forming right angles where they intersect For example an essay at the web site of the Thyssen Bornemisza Museum states that Mondrian dedicated his entire oeuvre to the investigation of the balance between orthogonal lines and primary colours Archived 2009 01 31 at the Wayback MachineComputer science editFurther information Orthogonality programming and Orthogonal instruction set Orthogonality in programming language design is the ability to use various language features in arbitrary combinations with consistent results 6 This usage was introduced by Van Wijngaarden in the design of Algol 68 The number of independent primitive concepts has been minimized in order that the language be easy to describe to learn and to implement On the other hand these concepts have been applied orthogonally in order to maximize the expressive power of the language while trying to avoid deleterious superfluities 7 Orthogonality is a system design property which guarantees that modifying the technical effect produced by a component of a system neither creates nor propagates side effects to other components of the system Typically this is achieved through the separation of concerns and encapsulation and it is essential for feasible and compact designs of complex systems The emergent behavior of a system consisting of components should be controlled strictly by formal definitions of its logic and not by side effects resulting from poor integration i e non orthogonal design of modules and interfaces Orthogonality reduces testing and development time because it is easier to verify designs that neither cause side effects nor depend on them Orthogonal instruction set edit Main article Orthogonal instruction set An instruction set is said to be orthogonal if it lacks redundancy i e there is only a single instruction that can be used to accomplish a given task 8 and is designed such that instructions can use any register in any addressing mode This terminology results from considering an instruction as a vector whose components are the instruction fields One field identifies the registers to be operated upon and another specifies the addressing mode An orthogonal instruction set uniquely encodes all combinations of registers and addressing modes 9 Telecommunications editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In telecommunications multiple access schemes are orthogonal when an ideal receiver can completely reject arbitrarily strong unwanted signals from the desired signal using different basis functions One such scheme is time division multiple access TDMA where the orthogonal basis functions are nonoverlapping rectangular pulses time slots Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing edit Main article Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing Another scheme is orthogonal frequency division multiplexing OFDM which refers to the use by a single transmitter of a set of frequency multiplexed signals with the exact minimum frequency spacing needed to make them orthogonal so that they do not interfere with each other Well known examples include a g and n versions of 802 11 Wi Fi WiMAX ITU T G hn DVB T the terrestrial digital TV broadcast system used in most of the world outside North America and DMT Discrete Multi Tone the standard form of ADSL In OFDM the subcarrier frequencies are chosen how so that the subcarriers are orthogonal to each other meaning that crosstalk between the subchannels is eliminated and intercarrier guard bands are not required This greatly simplifies the design of both the transmitter and the receiver In conventional FDM a separate filter for each subchannel is required Statistics econometrics and economics editWhen performing statistical analysis independent variables that affect a particular dependent variable are said to be orthogonal if they are uncorrelated 10 since the covariance forms an inner product In this case the same results are obtained for the effect of any of the independent variables upon the dependent variable regardless of whether one models the effects of the variables individually with simple regression or simultaneously with multiple regression If correlation is present the factors are not orthogonal and different results are obtained by the two methods This usage arises from the fact that if centered by subtracting the expected value the mean uncorrelated variables are orthogonal in the geometric sense discussed above both as observed data i e vectors and as random variables i e density functions One econometric formalism that is alternative to the maximum likelihood framework the Generalized Method of Moments relies on orthogonality conditions In particular the Ordinary Least Squares estimator may be easily derived from an orthogonality condition between the explanatory variables and model residuals Taxonomy editIn taxonomy an orthogonal classification is one in which no item is a member of more than one group that is the classifications are mutually exclusive Chemistry and biochemistry editIn chemistry and biochemistry an orthogonal interaction occurs when there are two pairs of substances and each substance can interact with their respective partner but does not interact with either substance of the other pair For example DNA has two orthogonal pairs cytosine and guanine form a base pair and adenine and thymine form another base pair but other base pair combinations are strongly disfavored As a chemical example tetrazine reacts with transcyclooctene and azide reacts with cyclooctyne without any cross reaction so these are mutually orthogonal reactions and so can be performed simultaneously and selectively 11 Organic synthesis edit Main articles Organic synthesis and Orthogonal protection In organic synthesis orthogonal protection is a strategy allowing the deprotection of functional groups independently of each other Bioorthogonal chemistry edit This paragraph is an excerpt from Bioorthogonal chemistry edit The term bioorthogonal chemistry refers to any chemical reaction that can occur inside of living systems without interfering with native biochemical processes 12 13 14 The term was coined by Carolyn R Bertozzi in 2003 15 16 Since its introduction the concept of the bioorthogonal reaction has enabled the study of biomolecules such as glycans proteins 17 and lipids 18 in real time in living systems without cellular toxicity A number of chemical ligation strategies have been developed that fulfill the requirements of bioorthogonality including the 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition between azides and cyclooctynes also termed copper free click chemistry 19 between nitrones and cyclooctynes 20 oxime hydrazone formation from aldehydes and ketones 21 the tetrazine ligation 22 the isocyanide based click reaction 23 and most recently the quadricyclane ligation 24 Supramolecular chemistry edit Main article Supramolecular chemistry In supramolecular chemistry the notion of orthogonality refers to the possibility of two or more supramolecular often non covalent interactions being compatible reversibly forming without interference from the other Analytical chemistry edit Main article Analytical chemistry In analytical chemistry analyses are orthogonal if they make a measurement or identification in completely different ways thus increasing the reliability of the measurement Orthogonal testing thus can be viewed as cross checking of results and the cross notion corresponds to the etymologic origin of orthogonality Orthogonal testing is often required as a part of a new drug application System reliability editIn the field of system reliability orthogonal redundancy is that form of redundancy where the form of backup device or method is completely different from the prone to error device or method The failure mode of an orthogonally redundant back up device or method does not intersect with and is completely different from the failure mode of the device or method in need of redundancy to safeguard the total system against catastrophic failure Neuroscience editIn neuroscience a sensory map in the brain which has overlapping stimulus coding e g location and quality is called an orthogonal map Philosophy editIn philosophy two topics authors or pieces of writing are said to be orthogonal to each other when they do not substantively cover what could be considered potentially overlapping or competing claims Thus texts in philosophy can either support and complement one another they can offer competing explanations or systems or they can be orthogonal to each other in cases where the scope content and purpose of the pieces of writing are entirely unrelated Gaming editSee also von Neumann neighborhood In board games such as chess which feature a grid of squares orthogonal is used to mean in the same row rank or column file This is the counterpart to squares which are diagonally adjacent 25 In the ancient Chinese board game Go a player can capture the stones of an opponent by occupying all orthogonally adjacent points Other examples editStereo vinyl records encode both the left and right stereo channels in a single groove The V shaped groove in the vinyl has walls that are 90 degrees to each other with variations in each wall separately encoding one of the two analogue channels that make up the stereo signal The cartridge senses the motion of the stylus following the groove in two orthogonal directions 45 degrees from vertical to either side 26 A pure horizontal motion corresponds to a mono signal equivalent to a stereo signal in which both channels carry identical in phase signals See also edit nbsp Look up orthogonal in Wiktionary the free dictionary Orthogonal ligand protein pair Up tackReferences edit Liddell and Scott A Greek English Lexicon s v ὀr8os Liddell and Scott A Greek English Lexicon s v gwnia Liddell and Scott A Greek English Lexicon s v ὀr8ogwnion orthogonal Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford University Press September 2004 J A Wheeler C Misner K S Thorne 1973 Gravitation W H Freeman amp Co p 58 ISBN 0 7167 0344 0 Michael L Scott Programming Language Pragmatics p 228 1968 Adriaan van Wijngaarden et al Revised Report on the Algorithmic Language ALGOL 68 section 0 1 2 Orthogonal design Null Linda amp Lobur Julia 2006 The essentials of computer organization and architecture 2nd ed Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 257 ISBN 978 0 7637 3769 6 Linda Null 2010 The Essentials of Computer Organization and Architecture PDF Jones amp Bartlett Publishers pp 287 288 ISBN 978 1449600068 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 10 10 Athanasios Papoulis S Unnikrishna Pillai 2002 Probability Random Variables and Stochastic Processes McGraw Hill p 211 ISBN 0 07 366011 6 Karver Mark R Hilderbrand Scott A 2012 Bioorthogonal Reaction Pairs Enable Simultaneous Selective Multi Target Imaging Angewandte Chemie International Edition 51 4 920 2 doi 10 1002 anie 201104389 PMC 3304098 PMID 22162316 Sletten Ellen M Bertozzi Carolyn R 2009 Bioorthogonal Chemistry Fishing for Selectivity in a Sea of Functionality Angewandte Chemie International Edition 48 38 6974 98 doi 10 1002 anie 200900942 PMC 2864149 PMID 19714693 Prescher Jennifer A Dube Danielle H Bertozzi Carolyn R 2004 Chemical remodelling of cell surfaces in living animals Nature 430 7002 873 7 Bibcode 2004Natur 430 873P doi 10 1038 nature02791 PMID 15318217 S2CID 4371934 Prescher Jennifer A Bertozzi Carolyn R 2005 Chemistry in living systems Nature Chemical Biology 1 1 13 21 doi 10 1038 nchembio0605 13 PMID 16407987 S2CID 40548615 Hang Howard C Yu Chong Kato Darryl L Bertozzi Carolyn R 2003 12 09 A metabolic labeling approach toward proteomic analysis of mucin type O linked glycosylation Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100 25 14846 14851 Bibcode 2003PNAS 10014846H doi 10 1073 pnas 2335201100 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 299823 PMID 14657396 Sletten Ellen M Bertozzi Carolyn R 2011 From Mechanism to Mouse A Tale of Two Bioorthogonal Reactions Accounts of Chemical Research 44 9 666 676 doi 10 1021 ar200148z PMC 3184615 PMID 21838330 Plass Tilman Milles Sigrid Koehler Christine Schultz Carsten Lemke Edward A 2011 Genetically Encoded Copper Free Click Chemistry Angewandte Chemie International Edition 50 17 3878 3881 doi 10 1002 anie 201008178 PMC 3210829 PMID 21433234 Neef Anne B Schultz Carsten 2009 Selective Fluorescence Labeling of Lipids in Living Cells Angewandte Chemie International Edition 48 8 1498 500 doi 10 1002 anie 200805507 PMID 19145623 Baskin J M Prescher J A Laughlin S T Agard N J Chang P V Miller I A Lo A Codelli J A Bertozzi C R 2007 Copper free click chemistry for dynamic in vivo imaging Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 43 16793 7 Bibcode 2007PNAS 10416793B doi 10 1073 pnas 0707090104 PMC 2040404 PMID 17942682 Ning Xinghai 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