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This book is designed to serve as a textbook for courses offered to
undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in Mathematics. The
first edition of this book was published in 2015. As there is a
demand for the next edition, it is quite natural to take note of
the several suggestions received from the users of the earlier
edition over the past six years. This is the prime motivation for
bringing out a revised second edition with a thorough revision of
all the chapters. The book provides a clear understanding of the
basic concepts of differential and integral calculus starting with
the concepts of sequences and series of numbers, and also
introduces slightly advanced topics such as sequences and series of
functions, power series, and Fourier series which would be of use
for other courses in mathematics for science and engineering
programs. The salient features of the book are - precise
definitions of basic concepts; several examples for understanding
the concepts and for illustrating the results; includes proofs of
theorems; exercises within the text; a large number of problems at
the end of each chapter as home-assignments. The student-friendly
approach of the exposition of the book would be of great use not
only for students but also for the instructors. The detailed
coverage and pedagogical tools make this an ideal textbook for
students and researchers enrolled in a mathematics course.
This book introduces the fundamental concepts, techniques and
results of linear algebra that form the basis of analysis, applied
mathematics and algebra. Intended as a text for undergraduate
students of mathematics, science and engineering with a knowledge
of set theory, it discusses the concepts that are constantly used
by scientists and engineers. It also lays the foundation for the
language and framework for modern analysis and its applications.
Divided into seven chapters, it discusses vector spaces, linear
transformations, best approximation in inner product spaces,
eigenvalues and eigenvectors, block diagonalisation,
triangularisation, Jordan form, singular value decomposition, polar
decomposition, and many more topics that are relevant to
applications. The topics chosen have become well-established over
the years and are still very much in use. The approach is both
geometric and algebraic. It avoids distraction from the main theme
by deferring the exercises to the end of each section. These
exercises aim at reinforcing the learned concepts rather than as
exposing readers to the tricks involved in the computation.
Problems included at the end of each chapter are relatively
advanced and require a deep understanding and assimilation of the
topics.
Many problems in science and engineering have their mathematical
formulation as an operator equation Tx=y, where T is a linear or
nonlinear operator between certain function spaces. In practice,
such equations are solved approximately using numerical methods, as
their exact solution may not often be possible or may not be worth
looking for due to physical constraints. In such situations, it is
desirable to know how the so-called approximate solution
approximates the exact solution, and what the error involved in
such procedures would be. This book is concerned with the
investigation of the above theoretical issues related to
approximately solving linear operator equations. The main tools
used for this purpose are basic results from functional analysis
and some rudimentary ideas from numerical analysis. To make this
book more accessible to readers, no in-depth knowledge on these
disciplines is assumed for reading this book.
This book introduces the fundamental concepts, techniques and
results of linear algebra that form the basis of analysis, applied
mathematics and algebra. Intended as a text for undergraduate
students of mathematics, science and engineering with a knowledge
of set theory, it discusses the concepts that are constantly used
by scientists and engineers. It also lays the foundation for the
language and framework for modern analysis and its applications.
Divided into seven chapters, it discusses vector spaces, linear
transformations, best approximation in inner product spaces,
eigenvalues and eigenvectors, block diagonalisation,
triangularisation, Jordan form, singular value decomposition, polar
decomposition, and many more topics that are relevant to
applications. The topics chosen have become well-established over
the years and are still very much in use. The approach is both
geometric and algebraic. It avoids distraction from the main theme
by deferring the exercises to the end of each section. These
exercises aim at reinforcing the learned concepts rather than as
exposing readers to the tricks involved in the computation.
Problems included at the end of each chapter are relatively
advanced and require a deep understanding and assimilation of the
topics.
This book is designed to serve as a textbook for courses offered to
undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in Mathematics. The
first edition of this book was published in 2015. As there is a
demand for the next edition, it is quite natural to take note of
the several suggestions received from the users of the earlier
edition over the past six years. This is the prime motivation for
bringing out a revised second edition with a thorough revision of
all the chapters. The book provides a clear understanding of the
basic concepts of differential and integral calculus starting with
the concepts of sequences and series of numbers, and also
introduces slightly advanced topics such as sequences and series of
functions, power series, and Fourier series which would be of use
for other courses in mathematics for science and engineering
programs. The salient features of the book are - precise
definitions of basic concepts; several examples for understanding
the concepts and for illustrating the results; includes proofs of
theorems; exercises within the text; a large number of problems at
the end of each chapter as home-assignments. The student-friendly
approach of the exposition of the book would be of great use not
only for students but also for the instructors. The detailed
coverage and pedagogical tools make this an ideal textbook for
students and researchers enrolled in a mathematics course.
This concise text is intended as an introductory course in measure
and integration. It covers essentials of the subject, providing
ample motivation for new concepts and theorems in the form of
discussion and remarks, and with many worked-out examples. The
novelty of Measure and Integration: A First Course is in its style
of exposition of the standard material in a student-friendly
manner. New concepts are introduced progressively from less
abstract to more abstract so that the subject is felt on solid
footing. The book starts with a review of Riemann integration as a
motivation for the necessity of introducing the concepts of measure
and integration in a general setting. Then the text slowly evolves
from the concept of an outer measure of subsets of the set of real
line to the concept of Lebesgue measurable sets and Lebesgue
measure, and then to the concept of a measure, measurable function,
and integration in a more general setting. Again, integration is
first introduced with non-negative functions, and then
progressively with real and complex-valued functions. A chapter on
Fourier transform is introduced only to make the reader realize the
importance of the subject to another area of analysis that is
essential for the study of advanced courses on partial differential
equations. Key Features Numerous examples are worked out in detail.
Lebesgue measurability is introduced only after convincing the
reader of its necessity. Integrals of a non-negative measurable
function is defined after motivating its existence as limits of
integrals of simple measurable functions. Several inquisitive
questions and important conclusions are displayed prominently. A
good number of problems with liberal hints is provided at the end
of each chapter. The book is so designed that it can be used as a
text for a one-semester course during the first year of a master's
program in mathematics or at the senior undergraduate level. About
the Author M. Thamban Nair is a professor of mathematics at the
Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India. He was a
post-doctoral fellow at the University of Grenoble, France through
a French government scholarship, and also held visiting positions
at Australian National University, Canberra, University of
Kaiserslautern, Germany, University of St-Etienne, France, and Sun
Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China. The broad area of Prof.
Nair's research is in functional analysis and operator equations,
more specifically, in the operator theoretic aspects of inverse and
ill-posed problems. Prof. Nair has published more than 70 research
papers in nationally and internationally reputed journals in the
areas of spectral approximations, operator equations, and inverse
and ill-posed problems. He is also the author of three books:
Functional Analysis: A First Course (PHI-Learning, New Delhi),
Linear Operator Equations: Approximation and Regularization (World
Scientific, Singapore), and Calculus of One Variable (Ane Books
Pvt. Ltd, New Delhi), and he is also co-author of Linear Algebra
(Springer, New York).
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