|
|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The series is devoted to the publication of high-level monographs
which cover the whole spectrum of current nonlinear analysis and
applications in various fields, such as optimization, control
theory, systems theory, mechanics, engineering, and other sciences.
One of its main objectives is to make available to the professional
community expositions of results and foundations of methods that
play an important role in both the theory and applications of
nonlinear analysis. Contributions which are on the borderline of
nonlinear analysis and related fields and which stimulate further
research at the crossroads of these areas are particularly welcome.
Editor-in-Chief Jurgen Appell, Wurzburg, Germany Honorary and
Advisory Editors Catherine Bandle, Basel, Switzerland Alain
Bensoussan, Richardson, Texas, USA Avner Friedman, Columbus, Ohio,
USA Umberto Mosco, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA Louis Nirenberg,
New York, USA Alfonso Vignoli, Rome, Italy Editorial Board Manuel
del Pino, Bath, UK, and Santiago, Chile Mikio Kato, Nagano, Japan
Wojciech Kryszewski, Torun, Poland Vicentiu D. Radulescu, Krakow,
Poland Simeon Reich, Haifa, Israel Please submit book proposals to
Jurgen Appell. Titles in planning include Lucio Damascelli and
Filomena Pacella, Morse Index of Solutions of Nonlinear Elliptic
Equations (2019) Tomasz W. Dlotko and Yejuan Wang, Critical
Parabolic-Type Problems (2019) Rafael Ortega, Periodic Differential
Equations in the Plane: A Topological Perspective (2019) Ireneo
Peral Alonso and Fernando Soria, Elliptic and Parabolic Equations
Involving the Hardy-Leray Potential (2020) Cyril Tintarev, Profile
Decompositions and Cocompactness: Functional-Analytic Theory of
Concentration Compactness (2020) Takashi Suzuki, Semilinear
Elliptic Equations: Classical and Modern Theories (2021)
topics. However, only a modest preliminary knowledge is needed. In
the first chapter, where we introduce an important topological
concept, the so-called topological degree for continuous maps from
subsets ofRn into Rn, you need not know anything about functional
analysis. Starting with Chapter 2, where infinite dimensions first
appear, one should be familiar with the essential step of consider
ing a sequence or a function of some sort as a point in the
corresponding vector space of all such sequences or functions,
whenever this abstraction is worthwhile. One should also work out
the things which are proved in 7 and accept certain basic
principles of linear functional analysis quoted there for easier
references, until they are applied in later chapters. In other
words, even the 'completely linear' sections which we have included
for your convenience serve only as a vehicle for progress in
nonlinearity. Another point that makes the text introductory is the
use of an essentially uniform mathematical language and way of
thinking, one which is no doubt familiar from elementary lectures
in analysis that did not worry much about its connections with
algebra and topology. Of course we shall use some elementary
topological concepts, which may be new, but in fact only a few
remarks here and there pertain to algebraic or differential
topological concepts and methods."
|
|