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.
The wobbling distance is as follows.
We call subsets of a metric space 'equivalent' if there exists a wobbling bijection between them.
Moreover, we evaluated 2 1+t the wobbling bijection (4.12) for unit lattices of size 500 x 500 and 1000 x 1000 centred at the origin.
The vertical bars indicate the achieved wobbling distances and the reasonably good empirical convergence to (4.9) with the usual number-theoretical background noise.
Section 4.6 inspects the frenzy of the walker and random wobbling of the well.
Continued fractions will play a crucial role in the effective construction of certain wobbling bijections.
Finally, we take a look at paradoxical situations and exhibit recursive point sets that are wobbling equivalent, but not recursively so.
The converse statement, that wobbling paradoxicity implies doubling, is obvious.