-
- In contrast to a variable, a constant is a numerical value that does not change
- Example: c is a constant term in the quadratic expression { ax }^{ 2 }+bx+c
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Constant" mathematics – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) |
In mathematics, the adjective constant means non-varying. The noun constant may have two different meanings. It may refer to a fixed and well-defined number or other mathematical object. The term mathematical constant (and also physical constant) is sometimes used to distinguish this meaning from the other one. A constant may also refer to a constant function or its value (it is a common usage to identify them). Such a constant is commonly represented by a variable which does not depend on the main variable(s) of the studied problem. This is the case, for example, for a constant of integration which is an arbitrary constant function (not depending on the variable of integration) added to a particular antiderivative to get all the antiderivatives of the given function.
For example, a general quadratic function is commonly written as:
where a, b and c are constants (or parameters), while x is the variable, a placeholder for the argument of the function being studied. A more explicit way to denote this function is
which makes the function-argument status of x clear, and thereby implicitly the constant status of a, b and c. In this example a, b and c are coefficients of the polynomial. Since c occurs in a term that does not involve x, it is called the constant term of the polynomial and can be thought of as the coefficient of x0; any polynomial term or expression of degree zero is a constant.