Noun
discretization (countable and uncountable, plural discretizations)
(mathematics, computing, cognitive science) The act of discretizing, or dividing a continuous object or spectrum into a finite number of discrete elements
Analyses all required a planar mathematical discretization of a region containing a prescribed number of cells with prescribed orientations.
BLAZE Multiphysics has many features from: discretation, temporal resolution, user modification and post processing.
Basic radiosity also has trouble resolving sudden changes in visibility (e.g. hard-edged shadows) because coarse, regular discretization into piecewise constant elements corresponds to a low-pass box filter of the spatial domain. Source: Internet
In the discretization stage, the space of signals is partitioned into equivalence classes and quantization is carried out by replacing the signal with representative signal of the corresponding equivalence class. Source: Internet
Jean Paul Van Bendegem has argued that the Tile Argument can be resolved, and that discretization can therefore remove the paradox. Source: Internet
Similarly, discretization induces a discretization error because the solution of the discrete problem does not coincide with the solution of the continuous problem. Source: Internet
The discretization should be thought of as defining what the derivative means. Source: Internet
This is therefore another consequence of discretization, in this case of the energy in the electromagnetic field in terms of photons. Source: Internet