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The object of this book is to present the basic facts of convex
functions, standard dynamical systems, descent numerical algorithms
and some computer programs on Riemannian manifolds in a form
suitable for applied mathematicians, scientists and engineers. It
contains mathematical information on these subjects and
applications distributed in seven chapters whose topics are close
to my own areas of research: Metric properties of Riemannian
manifolds, First and second variations of the p-energy of a curve;
Convex functions on Riemannian manifolds; Geometric examples of
convex functions; Flows, convexity and energies; Semidefinite
Hessians and applications; Minimization of functions on Riemannian
manifolds. All the numerical algorithms, computer programs and the
appendices (Riemannian convexity of functions f: R R, Descent
methods on the Poincare plane, Descent methods on the sphere,
Completeness and convexity on Finsler manifolds) constitute an
attempt to make accesible to all users of this book some basic
computational techniques and implementation of geometric
structures. To further aid the readers, this book also contains a
part of the folklore about Riemannian geometry, convex functions
and dynamical systems because it is unfortunately "nowhere" to be
found in the same context; existing textbooks on convex functions
on Euclidean spaces or on dynamical systems do not mention what
happens in Riemannian geometry, while the papers dealing with
Riemannian manifolds usually avoid discussing elementary facts.
Usually a convex function on a Riemannian manifold is a real valued
function whose restriction to every geodesic arc is convex."
VARIATIONAL CALCULUS WITH ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS A comprehensive
overview of foundational variational methods for problems in
engineering Variational calculus is a field in which small
alterations in functions and functionals are used to find their
relevant maxima and minima. It is a potent tool for addressing a
range of dynamic problems with otherwise counter-intuitive
solutions, particularly ones incorporating multiple confounding
variables. Its value in engineering fields, where materials and
geometric configurations can produce highly specific problems with
unconventional or unintuitive solutions, is considerable.
Variational Calculus with Engineering Applications provides a
comprehensive survey of this toolkit and its engineering
applications. Balancing theory and practice, it offers a thorough
and accessible introduction to the field pioneered by Euler,
Lagrange and Hamilton, offering tools that can be every bit as
powerful as the better-known Newtonian mechanics. It is an
indispensable resource for those looking for engineering-oriented
overview of a subject whose capacity to provide engineering
solutions is only increasing. Variational Calculus with Engineering
Applications readers will also find: Discussion of subjects
including variational principles, levitation, geometric dynamics,
and more Examples and instructional problems in every chapter,
along with MAPLE codes for performing the simulations described in
each Engineering applications based on simple, curvilinear, and
multiple integral functionals Variational Calculus with Engineering
Applications is ideal for advanced students, researchers, and
instructors in engineering and materials science.
Geometric dynamics is a tool for developing a mathematical
representation of real world phenomena, based on the notion of a
field line described in two ways: -as the solution of any Cauchy
problem associated to a first-order autonomous differential system;
-as the solution of a certain Cauchy problem associated to a
second-order conservative prolongation of the initial system. The
basic novelty of our book is the discovery that a field line is a
geodesic of a suitable geometrical structure on a given space
(Lorentz-Udri~te world-force law). In other words, we create a
wider class of Riemann-Jacobi, Riemann-Jacobi-Lagrange, or
Finsler-Jacobi manifolds, ensuring that all trajectories of a given
vector field are geodesics. This is our contribution to an old open
problem studied by H. Poincare, S. Sasaki and others. From the
kinematic viewpoint of corpuscular intuition, a field line shows
the trajectory followed by a particle at a point of the definition
domain of a vector field, if the particle is sensitive to the
related type of field. Therefore, field lines appear in a natural
way in problems of theoretical mechanics, fluid mechanics, physics,
thermodynamics, biology, chemistry, etc.
The object of this book is to present the basic facts of convex
functions, standard dynamical systems, descent numerical algorithms
and some computer programs on Riemannian manifolds in a form
suitable for applied mathematicians, scientists and engineers. It
contains mathematical information on these subjects and
applications distributed in seven chapters whose topics are close
to my own areas of research: Metric properties of Riemannian
manifolds, First and second variations of the p-energy of a curve;
Convex functions on Riemannian manifolds; Geometric examples of
convex functions; Flows, convexity and energies; Semidefinite
Hessians and applications; Minimization of functions on Riemannian
manifolds. All the numerical algorithms, computer programs and the
appendices (Riemannian convexity of functions f: R R, Descent
methods on the Poincare plane, Descent methods on the sphere,
Completeness and convexity on Finsler manifolds) constitute an
attempt to make accesible to all users of this book some basic
computational techniques and implementation of geometric
structures. To further aid the readers, this book also contains a
part of the folklore about Riemannian geometry, convex functions
and dynamical systems because it is unfortunately "nowhere" to be
found in the same context; existing textbooks on convex functions
on Euclidean spaces or on dynamical systems do not mention what
happens in Riemannian geometry, while the papers dealing with
Riemannian manifolds usually avoid discussing elementary facts.
Usually a convex function on a Riemannian manifold is a real valued
function whose restriction to every geodesic arc is convex."
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