|
|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book provides a concise and meticulous introduction to
functional analysis. Since the topic draws heavily on the interplay
between the algebraic structure of a linear space and the distance
structure of a metric space, functional analysis is increasingly
gaining the attention of not only mathematicians but also
scientists and engineers. The purpose of the text is to present the
basic aspects of functional analysis to this varied audience,
keeping in mind the considerations of applicability. A novelty of
this book is the inclusion of a result by Zabreiko, which states
that every countably subadditive seminorm on a Banach space is
continuous. Several major theorems in functional analysis are easy
consequences of this result. The entire book can be used as a
textbook for an introductory course in functional analysis without
having to make any specific selection from the topics presented
here. Basic notions in the setting of a metric space are defined in
terms of sequences. These include total boundedness, compactness,
continuity and uniform continuity. Offering concise and
to-the-point treatment of each topic in the framework of a normed
space and of an inner product space, the book represents a valuable
resource for advanced undergraduate students in mathematics, and
will also appeal to graduate students and faculty in the natural
sciences and engineering. The book is accessible to anyone who is
familiar with linear algebra and real analysis.
This self-contained textbook gives a thorough exposition of
multivariable calculus. The emphasis is on correlating general
concepts and results of multivariable calculus with their
counterparts in one-variable calculus. Further, the book includes
genuine analogues of basic results in one-variable calculus, such
as the mean value theorem and the fundamental theorem of calculus.
This book is distinguished from others on the subject: it examines
topics not typically covered, such as monotonicity, bimonotonicity,
and convexity, together with their relation to partial
differentiation, cubature rules for approximate evaluation of
double integrals, and conditional as well as unconditional
convergence of double series and improper double integrals. Each
chapter contains detailed proofs of relevant results, along with
numerous examples and a wide collection of exercises of varying
degrees of difficulty, making the book useful to undergraduate and
graduate students alike.
This book provides a concise and meticulous introduction to
functional analysis. Since the topic draws heavily on the interplay
between the algebraic structure of a linear space and the distance
structure of a metric space, functional analysis is increasingly
gaining the attention of not only mathematicians but also
scientists and engineers. The purpose of the text is to present the
basic aspects of functional analysis to this varied audience,
keeping in mind the considerations of applicability. A novelty of
this book is the inclusion of a result by Zabreiko, which states
that every countably subadditive seminorm on a Banach space is
continuous. Several major theorems in functional analysis are easy
consequences of this result. The entire book can be used as a
textbook for an introductory course in functional analysis without
having to make any specific selection from the topics presented
here. Basic notions in the setting of a metric space are defined in
terms of sequences. These include total boundedness, compactness,
continuity and uniform continuity. Offering concise and
to-the-point treatment of each topic in the framework of a normed
space and of an inner product space, the book represents a valuable
resource for advanced undergraduate students in mathematics, and
will also appeal to graduate students and faculty in the natural
sciences and engineering. The book is accessible to anyone who is
familiar with linear algebra and real analysis.
This book provides a self-contained and rigorous introduction to
calculus of functions of one variable, in a presentation which
emphasizes the structural development of calculus. Throughout, the
authors highlight the fact that calculus provides a firm foundation
to concepts and results that are generally encountered in high
school and accepted on faith; for example, the classical result
that the ratio of circumference to diameter is the same for all
circles. A number of topics are treated here in considerable detail
that may be inadequately covered in calculus courses and glossed
over in real analysis courses.
|
|