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Representations of Algebraic Groups (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Loot Price: R3,278
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Representations of Algebraic Groups (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Series: Mathematical Surveys and Monographs
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Back in print from the AMS, the first part of this book is an
introduction to the general theory of representations of algebraic
group schemes. Here, Janzten describes important basic notions:
induction functors, cohomology, quotients, Frobenius kernels, and
reduction mod $p$, among others. The second part of the book is
devoted to the representation theory of reductive algebraic groups
and includes topics such as the description of simple modules,
vanishing theorems, the Borel-Bott-Weil theorem and Weyl's
character formula, and Schubert schemes and line bundles on them.
This is a significantly revised edition of a modern classic. The
author has added nearly 150 pages of new material describing later
developments and has made major revisions to parts of the old text.
It continues to be the ultimate source of information on
representations of algebraic groups in finite characteristics. The
book is suitable for graduate students and research mathematicians
interested in algebraic groups and their representations. Algebra,
as a subdiscipline of mathematics, arguably has a history going
back some 4000 years to ancient Mesopotamia.The history, however,
of what is recognized today as high school algebra is much shorter,
extending back to the sixteenth century, while the history of what
practicing mathematicians call ""modern algebra"" is even shorter
still. The present volume provides a glimpse into the complicated
and often convoluted history of this latter conception of algebra
by juxtaposing twelve episodes in the evolution of modern algebra
from the early nineteenth-century work of Charles Babbage on
functional equations to Alexandre Grothendieck's
mid-twentieth-century metaphor of a ""rising sea"" in his
categorical approach to algebraic geometry. In addition to
considering the technical development of various aspects of
algebraic thought, the historians of modern algebra whose work is
united in this volume explore such themes as the changing aims and
organization of the subject as well as the often complex lines of
mathematical communication within and across national boundaries.
Among the specific algebraic ideas considered are the concept of
divisibility and the introduction of non-commutative algebras into
the study of number theory and the emergence of algebraic geometry
in the twentieth century.The resulting volume is essential reading
for anyone interested in the history of modern mathematics in
general and modern algebra in particular. It will be of particular
interest to mathematicians and historians of mathematics.
Information for our distributors: Co-published with the London
Mathematical Society beginning with Volume 4. Members of the LMS
may order directly from the AMS at the AMS member price. The LMS is
registered with the Charity Commissioners.
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