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The principal aim of the book is to give a comprehensive account of
the variety of approaches to such an important and complex concept
as Integrability. Dev- oping mathematical models, physicists often
raise the following questions: whether the model obtained is
integrable or close in some sense to an integrable one and whether
it can be studied in depth analytically. In this book we have tried
to c- ate a mathematical framework to address these issues, and we
give descriptions of methods and review results. In the
Introduction we give a historical account of the birth and
development of the theory of integrable equations, focusing on the
main issue of the book - the concept of integrability itself. A
universal de nition of Integrability is proving to be elusive
despite more than 40 years of its development. Often such notions
as "- act solvability" or "regular behaviour" of solutions are
associated with integrable systems. Unfortunately these notions do
not lead to any rigorous mathematical d- inition. A constructive
approach could be based upon the study of hidden and rich algebraic
or analytic structures associated with integrable equations. The
requi- ment of existence of elements of these structures could, in
principle, be taken as a de nition for integrability. It is
astonishing that the nal result is not sensitive to the choice of
the structure taken; eventually we arrive at the same pattern of
eq- tions.
The principal aim of the book is to give a comprehensive account of
the variety of approaches to such an important and complex concept
as Integrability. Dev- oping mathematical models, physicists often
raise the following questions: whether the model obtained is
integrable or close in some sense to an integrable one and whether
it can be studied in depth analytically. In this book we have tried
to c- ate a mathematical framework to address these issues, and we
give descriptions of methods and review results. In the
Introduction we give a historical account of the birth and
development of the theory of integrable equations, focusing on the
main issue of the book - the concept of integrability itself. A
universal de nition of Integrability is proving to be elusive
despite more than 40 years of its development. Often such notions
as "- act solvability" or "regular behaviour" of solutions are
associated with integrable systems. Unfortunately these notions do
not lead to any rigorous mathematical d- inition. A constructive
approach could be based upon the study of hidden and rich algebraic
or analytic structures associated with integrable equations. The
requi- ment of existence of elements of these structures could, in
principle, be taken as a de nition for integrability. It is
astonishing that the nal result is not sensitive to the choice of
the structure taken; eventually we arrive at the same pattern of
eq- tions.
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