"Real Analysis" is the third volume in the Princeton Lectures in
Analysis, a series of four textbooks that aim to present, in an
integrated manner, the core areas of analysis. Here the focus is on
the development of measure and integration theory, differentiation
and integration, Hilbert spaces, and Hausdorff measure and
fractals. This book reflects the objective of the series as a
whole: to make plain the organic unity that exists between the
various parts of the subject, and to illustrate the wide
applicability of ideas of analysis to other fields of mathematics
and science.
After setting forth the basic facts of measure theory, Lebesgue
integration, and differentiation on Euclidian spaces, the authors
move to the elements of Hilbert space, via the L2 theory. They next
present basic illustrations of these concepts from Fourier
analysis, partial differential equations, and complex analysis. The
final part of the book introduces the reader to the fascinating
subject of fractional-dimensional sets, including Hausdorff
measure, self-replicating sets, space-filling curves, and
Besicovitch sets. Each chapter has a series of exercises, from the
relatively easy to the more complex, that are tied directly to the
text. A substantial number of hints encourage the reader to take on
even the more challenging exercises.
As with the other volumes in the series, "Real Analysis" is
accessible to students interested in such diverse disciplines as
mathematics, physics, engineering, and finance, at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels.
Also available, the first two volumes in the Princeton Lectures
in Analysis:
General
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