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Several different models have recently been proposed to explain
High Temperature Superconductivity. This book gives an
authoritative and up-to-date review of two such proposals, namely
the Hubbard and Anyon Models. This invaluable reference is a must
for all physicists interested in the fast-paced revolutionary field
of High Temperature Superconductivity.
Several different models have recently been proposed to explain
High Temperature Superconductivity. This book gives an
authoritative and up-to-date review of two such proposals, namely
the Hubbard and Anyon Models. This invaluable reference is a must
for all physicists interested in the fast-paced revolutionary field
of High Temperature Superconductivity.
This book describes, by using elementary techniques, how some
geometrical structures widely used today in many areas of physics,
like symplectic, Poisson, Lagrangian, Hermitian, etc., emerge from
dynamics. It is assumed that what can be accessed in actual
experiences when studying a given system is just its dynamical
behavior that is described by using a family of variables
("observables" of the system). The book departs from the principle
that ''dynamics is first'' and then tries to answer in what sense
the sole dynamics determines the geometrical structures that have
proved so useful to describe the dynamics in so many important
instances. In this vein it is shown that most of the geometrical
structures that are used in the standard presentations of classical
dynamics (Jacobi, Poisson, symplectic, Hamiltonian, Lagrangian) are
determined, though in general not uniquely, by the dynamics alone.
The same program is accomplished for the geometrical structures
relevant to describe quantum dynamics. Finally, it is shown that
further properties that allow the explicit description of the
dynamics of certain dynamical systems, like integrability and super
integrability, are deeply related to the previous development and
will be covered in the last part of the book. The mathematical
framework used to present the previous program is kept to an
elementary level throughout the text, indicating where more
advanced notions will be needed to proceed further. A family of
relevant examples is discussed at length and the necessary ideas
from geometry are elaborated along the text. However no effort is
made to present an ''all-inclusive'' introduction to differential
geometry as many other books already exist on the market doing
exactly that. However, the development of the previous program,
considered as the posing and solution of a generalized inverse
problem for geometry, leads to new ways of thinking and relating
some of the most conspicuous geometrical structures appearing in
Mathematical and Theoretical Physics.
This book describes, by using elementary techniques, how some
geometrical structures widely used today in many areas of physics,
like symplectic, Poisson, Lagrangian, Hermitian, etc., emerge from
dynamics. It is assumed that what can be accessed in actual
experiences when studying a given system is just its
dynamical behavior that is described by using a family
of variables ("observables" of the system). The book departs from
the principle that ''dynamics is first'' and then tries to answer
in what sense the sole dynamics determines the geometrical
structures that have proved so useful to describe the dynamics in
so many important instances. In this vein it is shown that most of
the geometrical structures that are used in the standard
presentations of classical dynamics (Jacobi, Poisson, symplectic,
Hamiltonian, Lagrangian) are determined, though in general not
uniquely, by the dynamics alone. The same program is accomplished
for the geometrical structures relevant to describe quantum
dynamics. Finally, it is shown that further properties that allow
the explicit description of the dynamics of certain dynamical
systems, like integrability and super integrability, are deeply
related to the previous development and will be covered in
the last part of the book. The mathematical framework used to
present the previous program is kept to an elementary
level throughout the text, indicating where more
advanced notions will be needed to proceed further. A family of
relevant examples is discussed at length and the necessary ideas
from geometry are elaborated along the text. However no effort is
made to present an ''all-inclusive'' introduction to differential
geometry as many other books already exist on the market doing
exactly that. However, the development of the previous
program, considered as the posing and solution of a generalized
inverse problem for geometry, leads to new ways of thinking and
relating some of the most conspicuous geometrical structures
appearing in Mathematical and Theoretical Physics.
In solid-state physics especially topological techniques have
turned out to be extremely useful for modelling and explaining
physical properties of matter. This book illustrates various
applications of algebraic topology in classical field theory
(non-linear sigma-models) and in quantizationsin multiply connected
spaces (anyons). It treats Chern-Simon Lagrangians, Berry's phase,
the polarization of light and the fractional quantum Hall effect.
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