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The book is devoted to the study of the geometrical and topological
structure of gauge theories. It consists of the following three
building blocks:- Geometry and topology of fibre bundles,- Clifford
algebras, spin structures and Dirac operators,- Gauge
theory.Written in the style of a mathematical textbook, it combines
a comprehensive presentation of the mathematical foundations with a
discussion of a variety of advanced topics in gauge theory.The
first building block includes a number of specific topics, like
invariant connections, universal connections, H-structures and the
Postnikov approximation of classifying spaces.Given the great
importance of Dirac operators in gauge theory, a complete proof of
the Atiyah-Singer Index Theorem is presented. The gauge theory part
contains the study of Yang-Mills equations (including the theory of
instantons and the classical stability analysis), the discussion of
various models with matter fields (including magnetic monopoles,
the Seiberg-Witten model and dimensional reduction) and the
investigation of the structure of the gauge orbit space. The final
chapter is devoted to elements of quantum gauge theory including
the discussion of the Gribov problem, anomalies and the
implementation of the non-generic gauge orbit strata in the
framework of Hamiltonian lattice gauge theory.The book is addressed
both to physicists and mathematicians. It is intended to be
accessible to students starting from a graduate level.
Starting from an undergraduate level, this book systematically
develops the basics of * Calculus on manifolds, vector bundles,
vector fields and differential forms, * Lie groups and Lie group
actions, * Linear symplectic algebra and symplectic geometry, *
Hamiltonian systems, symmetries and reduction, integrable systems
and Hamilton-Jacobi theory. The topics listed under the first item
are relevant for virtually all areas of mathematical physics. The
second and third items constitute the link between abstract
calculus and the theory of Hamiltonian systems. The last item
provides an introduction to various aspects of this theory,
including Morse families, the Maslov class and caustics. The book
guides the reader from elementary differential geometry to advanced
topics in the theory of Hamiltonian systems with the aim of making
current research literature accessible. The style is that of a
mathematical textbook,with full proofs given in the text or as
exercises. The material is illustrated by numerous detailed
examples, some of which are taken up several times for
demonstrating how the methods evolve and interact.
The book is devoted to the study of the geometrical and topological
structure of gauge theories. It consists of the following three
building blocks:- Geometry and topology of fibre bundles,- Clifford
algebras, spin structures and Dirac operators,- Gauge
theory.Written in the style of a mathematical textbook, it combines
a comprehensive presentation of the mathematical foundations with a
discussion of a variety of advanced topics in gauge theory.The
first building block includes a number of specific topics, like
invariant connections, universal connections, H-structures and the
Postnikov approximation of classifying spaces.Given the great
importance of Dirac operators in gauge theory, a complete proof of
the Atiyah-Singer Index Theorem is presented. The gauge theory part
contains the study of Yang-Mills equations (including the theory of
instantons and the classical stability analysis), the discussion of
various models with matter fields (including magnetic monopoles,
the Seiberg-Witten model and dimensional reduction) and the
investigation of the structure of the gauge orbit space. The final
chapter is devoted to elements of quantum gauge theory including
the discussion of the Gribov problem, anomalies and the
implementation of the non-generic gauge orbit strata in the
framework of Hamiltonian lattice gauge theory.The book is addressed
both to physicists and mathematicians. It is intended to be
accessible to students starting from a graduate level.
Starting from an undergraduate level, this book systematically
develops the basics of * Calculus on manifolds, vector bundles,
vector fields and differential forms, * Lie groups and Lie group
actions, * Linear symplectic algebra and symplectic geometry, *
Hamiltonian systems, symmetries and reduction, integrable systems
and Hamilton-Jacobi theory. The topics listed under the first item
are relevant for virtually all areas of mathematical physics. The
second and third items constitute the link between abstract
calculus and the theory of Hamiltonian systems. The last item
provides an introduction to various aspects of this theory,
including Morse families, the Maslov class and caustics. The book
guides the reader from elementary differential geometry to advanced
topics in the theory of Hamiltonian systems with the aim of making
current research literature accessible. The style is that of a
mathematical textbook,with full proofs given in the text or as
exercises. The material is illustrated by numerous detailed
examples, some of which are taken up several times for
demonstrating how the methods evolve and interact.
This monograph presents in detail the reduction method for studying
the unification of fundamental actions. The mathematical
(differential geometrical) methods make extensive use of Lie Groups
and the concept of homogeneous spaces. The main topic of the book
is the dimensional reduction of pure Yang-Mills theories. A rather
complete analysis of the structure of the scalar field potential is
given and a general procedure for solving the equations of
spontaneous compactification within Einstein-Yang-Mills systems is
presented. The authors also discuss gravity and theories with
fermions included and they review attempts to construct realistic
models. The book presents the basic ideas and the calculations in
detail and should be of interest to researchers and graduate
students in mathematical physics.
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