0 present participle of wobble
1 to (cause something to) shake or move from side to side in a way that shows poor balance:
2 to be uncertain what to do or to change repeatedly between two opinions:
The government can't afford to wobble on this issue.
Needless to say, this engineering machinery was the original motivation for the development of the approach to wobbling bijections using shearings.
During the fourth major impulse, the particles interact for four times as long, and are more affected by the wobbling potential.
The composition of two wobbling mappings has the same quality, and this also holds for the inverse of a wobbling bijection.
The roughness and low-level wobbling of the disk, did not appear to have any appreciable influence on the above-mentioned phenomena.
Wobbling mappings occur in many real-world situations: rounding in numerical analysis, image processing, distortion of crystals, and earthquakes are typical examples.
Taking a closer look at the combinatorial ideas behind his approach, we consider mappings with a 'wobbling property'.
The converse statement, that wobbling paradoxicity implies doubling, is obvious.
Finally, we take a look at paradoxical situations and exhibit recursive point sets that are wobbling equivalent, but not recursively so.