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In its first six chapters this 2006 text seeks to present the basic
ideas and properties of the Jacobi elliptic functions as an
historical essay, an attempt to answer the fascinating question:
'what would the treatment of elliptic functions have been like if
Abel had developed the ideas, rather than Jacobi?' Accordingly, it
is based on the idea of inverting integrals which arise in the
theory of differential equations and, in particular, the
differential equation that describes the motion of a simple
pendulum. The later chapters present a more conventional approach
to the Weierstrass functions and to elliptic integrals, and then
the reader is introduced to the richly varied applications of the
elliptic and related functions. Applications spanning arithmetic
(solution of the general quintic, the functional equation of the
Riemann zeta function), dynamics (orbits, Euler's equations,
Green's functions), and also probability and statistics, are
discussed.
In its first six chapters this 2006 text seeks to present the basic
ideas and properties of the Jacobi elliptic functions as an
historical essay, an attempt to answer the fascinating question:
'what would the treatment of elliptic functions have been like if
Abel had developed the ideas, rather than Jacobi?' Accordingly, it
is based on the idea of inverting integrals which arise in the
theory of differential equations and, in particular, the
differential equation that describes the motion of a simple
pendulum. The later chapters present a more conventional approach
to the Weierstrass functions and to elliptic integrals, and then
the reader is introduced to the richly varied applications of the
elliptic and related functions. Applications spanning arithmetic
(solution of the general quintic, the functional equation of the
Riemann zeta function), dynamics (orbits, Euler's equations,
Green's functions), and also probability and statistics, are
discussed.
For a number of years, French mathematicians have run regular
number theory conferences to which they have invited number
theorists from many countries. To repay their hospitality, the
London Mathematical Society arranged for the 1980 'Journees
Arithmeiques' to be held in Exeter. The papers published here are
either based on the main invited lectures or on selected research
talks given at the conference. They cover all branches of the
subject: combinatorial and elementary methods; analytic number
theory; transcendence theory; Galois module theory and algebraic
number theory in general; elliptic curves and modular functions;
local fields; additive number theory; Diophantine geometry, and
uniform distribution. It will be necessary reading for all those
undertaking research in number theory.
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