Yes, you could let H be a separable Hilbert space. Then what?
H. Minkowski has written: 'Diophantische Approximatienen' -- subject(s): Diophantine analysis, Number theory 'Briefe an David Hilbert' -- subject(s): Biography, Correspondence, Correspondence, reminiscences, Mathematicians 'Raum und Zeit' -- subject(s): Space and time
Robert H. Roussarie has written: 'Bifurcations of planar vector fields and Hilbert's sixteenth problem' -- subject(s): Bifurcation theory, Vector fields
The Hubble telescope is in space. It begins with the letter h.
Hubble telescope and hydrogen are space words. They begin with the letter h.
Hubble telescope is a space word. It begins with the letter h.
Hubble space telescope
Hubble telescope is an outer space word. It begins with the letter h.
H. H. Rosenbrock has written: 'State-space and multivariable theory'
Coin 1 H T or T H Coin 2 H T or T H 4 Combining H T T H H T T H From this table the result can be 2 x H 2 x T H T or T H
H. Haber has written: 'Man in space'
H,H/H.T/T.H/T.t
The set of all possible outcomes of an experment is called the sample space. Suppose an experiment consists of a coin 2 times. Let H represents heads and T represent tails. The sample space for this experiment is {HH,TT,HT,TH}. There are 4 elements in the sample space.