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This book is the first monograph wholly devoted to the
investigation of differential and difference dimension theory. The
differential dimension polynomial describes in exact terms the
degree of freedom of a dynamic system as well as the number of
arbitrary constants in the general solution of a system of
algebraic differential equations.
Difference algebra arises from the study of algebraic difference
equations and therefore bears a considerable resemblance to its
differential counterpart. Difference algebra was developed in the
same period as differential algebra and it has the same founder, J.
Ritt. It grew to a mathematical area with its own ideas and methods
mainly due to the work of R. Cohn, who raised difference algebra to
the same level as differential algebra. The relatively new science
of computer algebra has given strong impulses to the theory of
dimension polynomials, now that packages such as MAPLE enable the
solution of many problems which cannot be solved otherwise.
Applications of differential and difference dimension theory can be
found in many fields of mathematics, as well as in theoretical
physics, system theory and other areas of science.
Audience: This book will be of interest to researchers and
graduate students whose work involves differential and difference
equations, algebra and number theory, partial differential
equations, combinatorics and mathematical physics.
The role of Hilbert polynomials in commutative and homological
algebra as well as in algebraic geometry and combinatorics is well
known. A similar role in differential algebra is played by the
differential dimension polynomials. The notion of differential
dimension polynomial was introduced by E. Kolchin in 1964 [KoI64]'
but the problems and ideas that had led to this notion (and that
are reflected in this book) have essentially more long history.
Actually, one can say that the differential dimension polynomial
describes in exact terms the freedom degree of a dynamic system as
well as the number of arbitrary constants in the general solution
of a system of algebraic differential equations. The first attempts
of such description were made at the end of 19th century by Jacobi
[Ja890] who estimated the number of algebraically independent
constants in the general solution of a system of linear ordinary
differential equations. Later on, Jacobi's results were extended to
some cases of nonlinear systems, but in general case the problem of
such estimation (that is known as the problem of Jacobi's bound)
remains open. There are some generalization of the problem of
Jacobi's bound to the partial differential equations, but the
results in this area are just appearing. At the beginning of the
20th century algebraic methods in the theory of differen tial
equations were actively developed by F. Riquier [RiqlO] and M.
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