|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
From September 13 to 17 in 1999, the First China-Japan Seminar on
Number Theory was held in Beijing, China, which was organized by
the Institute of Mathematics, Academia Sinica jointly with
Department of Mathematics, Peking University. TE: m Japanese
Professors and eighteen Chinese Professors attended this seminar.
Professor Yuan Wang was the chairman, and Professor Chengbiao Pan
was the vice-chairman. This seminar was planned and prepared by
Professor Shigeru Kanemitsu and the first-named editor. Talks
covered various research fields including analytic number theory,
algebraic number theory, modular forms and transcendental number
theory. The Great Wall and acrobatics impressed Japanese visitors.
From November 29 to December 3 in 1999, an annual conference on
analytic number theory was held in Kyoto, Japan, as one of the
conferences supported by Research Institute of Mathematical
Sciences (RIMS), Kyoto University. The organizer was the
second-named editor. About one hundred Japanese scholars and some
foreign visitors com ing from China, France, Germany and India
attended this conference. Talks covered many branches in number
theory. The scenery in Kyoto, Arashiyama Mountain and Katsura River
impressed foreign visitors. An informal report of this conference
was published as the volume 1160 of Surikaiseki Kenkyusho Kokyuroku
(June 2000), published by RIMS, Ky oto University. The present book
is the Proceedings of these two conferences, which records mainly
some recent progress in number theory in China and Japan and
reflects the academic exchanging between China and Japan."
The contents of this book was created by the authors as a
simultaneous generalization of Witten zeta-functions,
Mordell–Tornheim multiple zeta-functions, and Euler–Zagier
multiple zeta-functions. Zeta-functions of root systems are defined
by certain multiple series, given in terms of root systems.
Therefore, they intrinsically have the action of associated Weyl
groups. The exposition begins with a brief introduction to
the theory of Lie algebras and root systems and then provides the
definition of zeta-functions of root systems, explicit examples
associated with various simple Lie algebras, meromorphic
continuation and recursive analytic structure described by Dynkin
diagrams, special values at integer points, functional relations,
and the background given by the action of Weyl groups. In
particular, an explicit form of Witten’s volume formula is
provided. It is shown that various relations among special values
of Euler–Zagier multiple zeta-functions—which usually are
called multiple zeta values (MZVs) and are quite important in
connection with Zagier’s conjecture—are just special cases of
various functional relations among zeta-functions of root systems.
The authors further provide other applications to the theory of
MZVs and also introduce generalizations with Dirichlet characters,
and with certain congruence conditions. The book concludes with a
brief description of other relevant topics.
From September 13 to 17 in 1999, the First China-Japan Seminar on
Number Theory was held in Beijing, China, which was organized by
the Institute of Mathematics, Academia Sinica jointly with
Department of Mathematics, Peking University. TE: m Japanese
Professors and eighteen Chinese Professors attended this seminar.
Professor Yuan Wang was the chairman, and Professor Chengbiao Pan
was the vice-chairman. This seminar was planned and prepared by
Professor Shigeru Kanemitsu and the first-named editor. Talks
covered various research fields including analytic number theory,
algebraic number theory, modular forms and transcendental number
theory. The Great Wall and acrobatics impressed Japanese visitors.
From November 29 to December 3 in 1999, an annual conference on
analytic number theory was held in Kyoto, Japan, as one of the
conferences supported by Research Institute of Mathematical
Sciences (RIMS), Kyoto University. The organizer was the
second-named editor. About one hundred Japanese scholars and some
foreign visitors com ing from China, France, Germany and India
attended this conference. Talks covered many branches in number
theory. The scenery in Kyoto, Arashiyama Mountain and Katsura River
impressed foreign visitors. An informal report of this conference
was published as the volume 1160 of Surikaiseki Kenkyusho Kokyuroku
(June 2000), published by RIMS, Ky oto University. The present book
is the Proceedings of these two conferences, which records mainly
some recent progress in number theory in China and Japan and
reflects the academic exchanging between China and Japan."
|
You may like...
Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R187
R167
Discovery Miles 1 670
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|