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Linear combination
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== Affine, conical, and convex combinations == By restricting the coefficients used in linear combinations, one can define the related concepts of [[affine combination]], [[conical combination]], and [[convex combination]], and the associated notions of sets closed under these operations. {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;" |- ! Type of combination !! Restrictions on coefficients !! Name of set !! Model space |- | Linear combination || no restrictions || [[Vector subspace]] || <math>\mathbf{R}^n</math> |- | [[Affine combination]] || <math display="inline">\sum a_i = 1</math>|| [[Affine subspace]] || Affine [[hyperplane]] |- | [[Conical combination]] || <math>a_i \geq 0</math> || [[Convex cone]] || [[Quadrant (plane geometry)|Quadrant]], [[Octant (solid geometry)|octant]], or [[orthant]] |- | [[Convex combination]] || <math>a_i \geq 0</math> and <math display="inline">\sum a_i = 1</math>|| [[Convex set]] || [[Simplex]] |} Because these are more ''restricted'' operations, more subsets will be closed under them, so affine subsets, convex cones, and convex sets are ''generalizations'' of vector subspaces: a vector subspace is also an affine subspace, a convex cone, and a convex set, but a convex set need not be a vector subspace, affine, or a convex cone. These concepts often arise when one can take certain linear combinations of objects, but not any: for example, [[probability distribution]]s are closed under convex combination (they form a convex set), but not conical or affine combinations (or linear), and [[positive measure]]s are closed under conical combination but not affine or linear β hence one defines [[signed measure]]s as the linear closure. Linear and affine combinations can be defined over any field (or ring), but conical and convex combination require a notion of "positive", and hence can only be defined over an [[ordered field]] (or [[ordered ring]]), generally the real numbers. If one allows only [[scalar multiplication]], not addition, one obtains a (not necessarily convex) [[Cone (linear algebra)|cone]]; one often restricts the definition to only allowing multiplication by positive scalars. All of these concepts are usually defined as subsets of an ambient vector space (except for affine spaces, which are also considered as "vector spaces forgetting the origin"), rather than being axiomatized independently.
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