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During the last century, global analysis was one of the main
sources of interaction between geometry and topology. One might
argue that the core of this subject is Morse theory, according to
which the critical points of a generic smooth proper function on a
manifold $M$ determine the homology of the manifold. Morse
envisioned applying this idea to the calculus of variations,
including the theory of periodic motion in classical mechanics, by
approximating the space of loops on $M$ by a finite-dimensional
manifold of high dimension. Palais and Smale reformulated Morse's
calculus of variations in terms of infinite-dimensional manifolds,
and these infinite-dimensional manifolds were found useful for
studying a wide variety of nonlinear PDEs. This book applies
infinite-dimensional manifold theory to the Morse theory of closed
geodesics in a Riemannian manifold. It then describes the problems
encountered when extending this theory to maps from surfaces
instead of curves. It treats critical point theory for closed
parametrized minimal surfaces in a compact Riemannian manifold,
establishing Morse inequalities for perturbed versions of the
energy function on the mapping space. It studies the bubbling which
occurs when the perturbation is turned off, together with
applications to the existence of closed minimal surfaces. The
Morse-Sard theorem is used to develop transversality theory for
both closed geodesics and closed minimal surfaces. This book is
based on lecture notes for graduate courses on "Topics in
Differential Geometry", taught by the author over several years.
The reader is assumed to have taken basic graduate courses in
differential geometry and algebraic topology.
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