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Exactly 100 years ago, in 1895, G. de Vries, under the supervision
of D.J. Korteweg, defended his thesis on what is now known as the
Korteweg-de Vries Equation. They published a joint paper in 1895 in
the "Philosophical Magazine", entitled "On the change of form of
long waves advancing in a rectangular canal, and on a new type of
long stationary wave". In the 1960s research on this and related
equations exploded. There are now some 3100 papers in mathematics
and physics that contain a mention of the phrase "Korteweg-de Vries
equation" in their title or abstract, and there are thousands more
in other areas, such as biology, chemistry, electronics, geology,
oceanology, meteorology, and so forth. And, of course, the KdV
equation is only one of what are now called (Liouville) completely
integrable systems. The KdV and its relatives continually turn up
in situations when one wishes to incorporate nonlinear and
dispersive effects into wave-type phenomena.
Accosiative rings and algebras are very interesting algebraic
structures. In a strict sense, the theory of algebras (in
particular, noncommutative algebras) originated fromasingleexample,
namelythequaternions, createdbySirWilliamR.Hamilton in1843.
Thiswasthe?rstexampleofanoncommutative"numbersystem." During
thenextfortyyearsmathematiciansintroducedotherexamplesofnoncommutative
algebras, began to bring some order into them and to single out
certain types of algebras for special attention. Thus,
low-dimensional algebras, division algebras, and commutative
algebras, were classi?ed and characterized. The ?rst complete
results in the structure theory of associative algebras over the
real and complex ?elds were obtained by T.Molien, E.Cartan and
G.Frobenius. Modern ring theory began when J.H.Wedderburn proved
his celebrated cl- si?cation theorem for ?nite dimensional
semisimple algebras over arbitrary ?elds. Twenty years later,
E.Artin proved a structure theorem for rings satisfying both the
ascending and descending chain condition which generalized
Wedderburn structure theorem. The Wedderburn-Artin theorem has
since become a corn- stone of noncommutative ring theory. The
purpose of this book is to introduce the subject of the structure
theory of associative rings. This book is addressed to a reader who
wishes to learn this topic from the beginning to research level. We
have tried to write a self-contained book which is intended to be a
modern textbook on the structure theory of associative rings and
related structures and will be accessible for independent study.
Approach your problems from the right end It isn't that they can't
see the solution. It is and begin with the answers. Then one day,
that they can't see the problem. perhaps you will find the final
question. G. K. Chesterton. The Scandal of Father 'The Hermit Clad
in Crane Feathers' in R. Brown 'The point"of a Pin'. van GuIik's
The Chinese Maze Murders. Growing specialization and
diversification have brought a host of monographs and textbooks on
increasingly specialized topics. However, the "tree" of knowledge
of mathematics and related fields does not grow only by putting
forth new branches. It also happens, quite often in fact, that
branches which were thought to be completely disparate are suddenly
seen to be related. Further, the kind and level of sophistication
of mathematics applied in various sciences has changed drastically
in recent years: measure theory is used (non trivially) in regional
and theoretical economics; algebraic geometry interacts with
physics; ihe Minkowsky lemma, coding theory and the structure of
water meet one another in packing and covering theory; quantum
fields, crystal defects and mathematical programming profit from
homotopy theory; Lie algebras .are relevant to filtering; and
prediction and electrical engineering can use Stein spaces. And in
addition to this there are such new emerging subdisciplines as
"experimental mathematics," "CFD," "completely integrable systems,"
"chaos, synergetics and large-scale order," which are almost
impossible to fit into the existing classification schemes. They
draw upon widely different sections of mathematics."
This second volume of this text covers the classical aspects of
the theory of groups and their representations. It also offers a
general introduction to the modern theory of representations
including the representations of quivers and finite partially
ordered sets and their applications to finite dimensional algebras.
It reviews key recent developments in the theory of special ring
classes including Frobenius, quasi-Frobenius, and others.
Bifurcation theory has made a very fast upswing in the last fifteen
years. Roughly speaking it generalises to dynamic systems the pos
sibility of mUltiple solutions, a possibility already recognised in
static systems - physical, chemical, social - when operating far
from their equilibrium states. It so happened that quite a few
staff members of the Erasmus University Rotterdam were thinking
along those lines about certain aspects of their disciplines. To
have a number of specialists and potential "fans" convene to
discuss various aspects of bifurcation al thinking, seemed a
natural development. The resulting papers were judged to be of
interest to a larger public, and as such are logically regrouped in
this volume, one in a series of studies resulting from the
activities of the Steering Committee on Interdisciplinary Studies
of the Erasmus University, Rotterdam. Although the volume is
perhaps multidisciplinary rather than interdisciplinary - the
interdisciplinary aspect being only "latent" -, as a "soft"
interdisciplinary exercise (the application of formal structures of
one discipline to another) it has a right to interdisciplinary
existence This book could not have been published without a
generous grant of the University Foundation of the Erasmus
University Rotterdam, which allowed the conference to be held and
the resulting papers to be published; that generosity is gratefully
acknowledged."
In the last five years or so there has been an important
renaissance in the area of (mathematical) modeling, identification
and (stochastic) control. It was the purpose of the Advanced Study
Institute of which the present volume constitutes the proceedings
to review recent developments in this area with par ticular
emphasis on identification and filtering and to do so in such a
manner that the material is accessible to a wide variety of both
embryo scientists and the various breeds of established researchers
to whom identification, filtering, etc. are important (such as
control engineers, time series analysts, econometricians,
probabilists, mathematical geologists, and various kinds of pure
and applied mathematicians; all of these were represented at the
ASI). For these proceedings we have taken particular care to see to
it that the material presented will be understandable for a quite
diverse audience. To that end we have added a fifth tutorial
section (besides the four presented at the meeting) and have also
included an extensive introduction which explains in detail the
main problem areas and themes of these proceedings and which
outlines how the various contributions fit together to form a
coherent, integrated whole. The prerequisites needed to understand
the material in this volume are modest and most graduate students
in e. g. mathematical systems theory, applied mathematics, econo
metrics or control engineering will qualify."
The theory of algebras, rings, and modules is one of the
fundamental domains of modern mathematics. General algebra, more
specifically non-commutative algebra, is poised for major advances
in the twenty-first century (together with and in interaction with
combinatorics), just as topology, analysis, and probability
experienced in the twentieth century. This is the second volume of
Algebras, Rings and Modules: Non-commutative Algebras and Rings by
M. Hazewinkel and N. Gubarenis, a continuation stressing the more
important recent results on advanced topics of the structural
theory of associative algebras, rings and modules.
The theory of algebras, rings, and modules is one of the
fundamental domains of modern mathematics. General algebra, more
specifically non-commutative algebra, is poised for major advances
in the twenty-first century (together with and in interaction with
combinatorics), just as topology, analysis, and probability
experienced in the twentieth century. This volume is a continuation
and an in-depth study, stressing the non-commutative nature of the
first two volumes of Algebras, Rings and Modules by M. Hazewinkel,
N. Gubareni, and V. V. Kirichenko. It is largely independent of the
other volumes. The relevant constructions and results from earlier
volumes have been presented in this volume.
This volume is a result of a meeting which took place in June 1986
at 'll Ciocco" in Italy entitled 'Deformation theory of algebras
and structures and applications'. It appears somewhat later than is
perhaps desirable for a volume resulting from a summer school. In
return it contains a good many results which were not yet available
at the time of the meeting. In particular it is now abundantly
clear that the Deformation theory of algebras is indeed central to
the whole philosophy of deformations/perturbations/stability. This
is one of the main results of the 254 page paper below (practically
a book in itself) by Gerstenhaber and Shack entitled "Algebraic
cohomology and defor mation theory". Two of the main
philosphical-methodological pillars on which deformation theory
rests are the fol lowing * (Pure) To study a highly complicated
object, it is fruitful to study the ways in which it can arise as a
limit of a family of simpler objects: "the unraveling of
complicated structures" . * (Applied) If a mathematical model is to
be applied to the real world there will usually be such things as
coefficients which are imperfectly known. Thus it is important to
know how the behaviour of a model changes as it is perturbed
(deformed).
This ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF MATHEMATICS aims to be a reference work for
all parts of mathematics. It is a translation with updates and
editorial comments of the Soviet Mathematical En cyclopaedia
published by 'Soviet Encyclopaedia Publishing House' in five
volumes in 1977 - 1985. The annotated translation consists of ten
volumes including a special index volume. There are three kinds of
articles in this ENCYCLOPAEDIA. First of all there are survey-type
articles dealing with the various main directions in mathematics
(where a rather fine subdivision has been used). The main
requirement for these articles has been that they should give a
reasonably complete up-to-date account of the current state of
affairs in these areas and that they should be maximally
accessible. On the whole, these articles should be understandable
to mathe matics students in their first specialization years, to
graduates from other mathematical areas and, depending on the
specific subject, to specialists in other domains of science,
engineers and teachers of mathematics. These articles treat their
material at a fairly general level and aim to give an idea of the
kind of problems, techniques and concepts involved in the area in
question. They also contain background and motivation rather than
precise statements of precise theorems with detailed definitions
and technical details on how to carry out proofs and constructions.
The second kind of article, of medium length, contains more
detailed concrete problems, results and techniques.
The theory of algebras, rings, and modules is one of the
fundamental domains of modern mathematics. General algebra, more
specifically non-commutative algebra, is poised for major advances
in the twenty-first century (together with and in interaction with
combinatorics), just as topology, analysis, and probability
experienced in the twentieth century. This volume is a continuation
and an in-depth study, stressing the non-commutative nature of the
first two volumes of Algebras, Rings and Modules by M. Hazewinkel,
N. Gubareni, and V. V. Kirichenko. It is largely independent of the
other volumes. The relevant constructions and results from earlier
volumes have been presented in this volume.
Exactly one hundred years ago, in 1895, G. de Vries, under the
supervision of D. J. Korteweg, defended his thesis on what is now
known as the Korteweg-de Vries Equation. They published a joint
paper in 1895 in the Philosophical Magazine, entitled On the change
of form of long waves advancing in a rectangular canal, and on a
new type of long stationary wave', and, for the next 60 years or
so, no other relevant work seemed to have been done. In the 1960s,
however, research on this and related equations exploded. There are
now some 3100 papers in mathematics and physics that contain a
mention of the phrase Korteweg-de Vries equation' in their title or
abstract, and there are thousands more in other areas, such as
biology, chemistry, electronics, geology, oceanology, meteorology,
etc. And, of course, the KdV equation is only one of what are now
called (Liouville) completely integrable systems. The KdV and its
relatives continually turn up in situations when one wishes to
incorporate nonlinear and dispersive effects into wave-type
phenomena. This centenary provides a unique occasion to survey as
many different aspects of the KdV and related equations. The KdV
equation has depth, subtlety, and a breadth of applications that
make it a rarity deserving special attention and exposition.
The Indispensable Source of Information for all those who use
Mathematics in Their Work... This is undoubtedly the most
comprehensive, up-to-date and authoritative mathematics
encyclopaedia available today. Translated from the Russian, edited,
annotated and updated by about 200 Western mathematicians, all
specialists in their respective fields, the 10-volume Encyclopaedia
of Mathematics contains nearly 7000 articles together with a wealth
of complementary information. Explanations of differences in
terminology are of historical interest and help to bridge the gap
between Western and Soviet approaches to mathematics. The
Encyclopaedia of Mathematics will help you: find the precise
definition of a given concept loop up and verify terminology find
the precise statement of a theorem reach the information you need
via AMS classification number and/or keywords/phrases check the
precise names of concepts and theorems find reference literature
for a given field find out about applications of a concept and its
links with other concepts
This ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF MATHEMATICS aims to be a reference work for
all parts of mathematics. It is a translation with updates and
editorial comments of the Soviet Mathematical En cyclopaedia
published by 'Soviet Encyclopaedia Publishing House' in five
volumes in 1977 - 1985. The annotated translation consists of ten
volumes including a special index volume. There are three kinds of
articles in this ENCYCLOPAEDIA. First of all there are survey-type
articles dealing with the various main directions in mathematics
(where a rather fine subdivision has been used). The main
requirement for these articles has been that they should give a
reasonably complete up-to-date account of the current state of
affairs in these areas and that they should be maximally
accessible. On the whole, these articles should be understandable
to mathe matics students in their first specialization years, to
graduates from other mathematical areas and, depending on the
specific subject, to specialists in other domains of science,
engineers and teachers of mathematics. These articles treat their
material at a fairly general level and aim to give an idea of the
kind of problems, techniques and concepts involved in the area in
question. They also contain background and motivation rather than
precise statements of precise theorems with detailed definitions
and technical details on how to carry out proofs and constructions.
The second kind of article, of medium length, contains more
detailed concrete problems, results and techniques."
This ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF MATHEMATICS aims to be a reference work for
all parts of mathe matics. It is a translation with updates and
editorial comments of the Soviet Mathematical Encyclopaedia
published by 'Soviet Encyclopaedia Publishing House' in five
volumes in 1977-1985. The annotated translation consists of ten
volumes including a special index volume. There are three kinds of
articles in this ENCYCLOPAEDIA. First of all there are survey-type
articles dealing with the various main directions in mathematics
(where a rather fine subdivi sion has been used). The main
requirement for these articles has been that they should give a
reasonably complete up-to-date account of the current state of
affairs in these areas and that they should be maximally
accessible. On the whole, these articles should be understandable
to mathematics students in their first specialization years, to
graduates from other mathematical areas and, depending on the
specific subject, to specialists in other domains of science, en
gineers and teachers of mathematics. These articles treat their
material at a fairly general level and aim to give an idea of the
kind of problems, techniques and concepts involved in the area in
question. They also contain background and motivation rather than
precise statements of precise theorems with detailed definitions
and technical details on how to carry out proofs and constructions.
The second kind of article, of medium length, contains more
detailed concrete problems, results and techniques."
Approach your problems from the right end It isn't that they can't
see the solution. It is and begin with the answers. Then one day,
that they can't see the problem. perhaps you will find the final
question. O. K. Chesterton. The Scandal of Father 'The Hermit Qad
in Crane Feathers' in R. Brown 'The point of a Pin'. van Gu ik's
The Chinese Maze Murders. Growing specialization and
diversification have brought a host of monographs and textbooks on
increasingly specialized topics. However, the "tree" of knowledge
of mathematics and related fields does not grow only by putting
forth new branches. It also happens, quite often in fact, that
branches which were thought to be completely disparate are suddenly
seen to be related. Further, the kind and level of sophistication
of mathematics applied in various sciences has changed drastically
in recent years: measure theory is used (non-trivially) in regional
and theoretical economics; algebraic geometry interacts with
physics; the Minkowsky lemma, coding theory and the structure of
water meet one another in packing and covering theory; quantum
fields, crystal defects and mathematical programming profit from
homotopy theory; Lie algebras are relevant to filtering; and
prediction and electrical engineering can use Stein spaces. And in
addition to this there are such new emerging subdisciplines as
"experimental mathematics," "CFD," "completely integrable systems,"
"chaos, synergetics and large-scale order," which are almost
impossible to fit into the existing classification schemes. They
draw upon widely different sections of mathematics.
Bifurcation theory has made a very fast upswing in the last fifteen
years. Roughly speaking it generalises to dynamic systems the pos
sibility of mUltiple solutions, a possibility already recognised in
static systems - physical, chemical, social - when operating far
from their equilibrium states. It so happened that quite a few
staff members of the Erasmus University Rotterdam were thinking
along those lines about certain aspects of their disciplines. To
have a number of specialists and potential "fans" convene to
discuss various aspects of bifurcation al thinking, seemed a
natural development. The resulting papers were judged to be of
interest to a larger public, and as such are logically regrouped in
this volume, one in a series of studies resulting from the
activities of the Steering Committee on Interdisciplinary Studies
of the Erasmus University, Rotterdam. Although the volume is
perhaps multidisciplinary rather than interdisciplinary - the
interdisciplinary aspect being only "latent" -, as a "soft"
interdisciplinary exercise (the application of formal structures of
one discipline to another) it has a right to interdisciplinary
existence This book could not have been published without a
generous grant of the University Foundation of the Erasmus
University Rotterdam, which allowed the conference to be held and
the resulting papers to be published; that generosity is gratefully
acknowledged."
Approach your problems from the right end It isn't that they can't
see the solution. It is and begin with the answers. Then one day,
that they can't see the problem. perhaps you will find the final
question. G. K. Chesterton. The Scandal of Father 'The Hermit Clad
in Crane Feathers' in R. Brown 'The point"of a Pin'. van GuIik's
The Chinese Maze Murders. Growing specialization and
diversification have brought a host of monographs and textbooks on
increasingly specialized topics. However, the "tree" of knowledge
of mathematics and related fields does not grow only by putting
forth new branches. It also happens, quite often in fact, that
branches which were thought to be completely disparate are suddenly
seen to be related. Further, the kind and level of sophistication
of mathematics applied in various sciences has changed drastically
in recent years: measure theory is used (non trivially) in regional
and theoretical economics; algebraic geometry interacts with
physics; ihe Minkowsky lemma, coding theory and the structure of
water meet one another in packing and covering theory; quantum
fields, crystal defects and mathematical programming profit from
homotopy theory; Lie algebras .are relevant to filtering; and
prediction and electrical engineering can use Stein spaces. And in
addition to this there are such new emerging subdisciplines as
"experimental mathematics," "CFD," "completely integrable systems,"
"chaos, synergetics and large-scale order," which are almost
impossible to fit into the existing classification schemes. They
draw upon widely different sections of mathematics."
This volume is a result of a meeting which took place in June 1986
at 'll Ciocco" in Italy entitled 'Deformation theory of algebras
and structures and applications'. It appears somewhat later than is
perhaps desirable for a volume resulting from a summer school. In
return it contains a good many results which were not yet available
at the time of the meeting. In particular it is now abundantly
clear that the Deformation theory of algebras is indeed central to
the whole philosophy of deformations/perturbations/stability. This
is one of the main results of the 254 page paper below (practically
a book in itself) by Gerstenhaber and Shack entitled "Algebraic
cohomology and defor mation theory". Two of the main
philosphical-methodological pillars on which deformation theory
rests are the fol lowing * (Pure) To study a highly complicated
object, it is fruitful to study the ways in which it can arise as a
limit of a family of simpler objects: "the unraveling of
complicated structures" . * (Applied) If a mathematical model is to
be applied to the real world there will usually be such things as
coefficients which are imperfectly known. Thus it is important to
know how the behaviour of a model changes as it is perturbed
(deformed).
This ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF MATHEMATICS aims to be a reference work for
all parts of mathe matics. It is a translation with updates and
editorial comments of the Soviet Mathematical Encyclopaedia
published by 'Soviet Encyclopaedia Publishing House' in five
volumes in 1977-1985. The annotated translation consists of ten
volumes including a special index volume. There are three kinds of
articles in this ENCYCLOPAEDIA. First of all there are survey-type
articles dealing with the various main directions in mathematics
(where a rather fine subdivi sion has been used). The main
requirement for these articles has been that they should give a
reasonably complete up-to-date account of the current state of
affairs in these areas and that they should be maximally
accessible. On the whole, these articles should be understandable
to mathematics students in their first specialization years, to
graduates from other mathematical areas and, depending on the
specific subject, to specialists in other domains of science, en
gineers and teachers of mathematics. These articles treat their
material at a fairly general level and aim to give an idea of the
kind of problems, techniques and concepts involved in the area in
question. They also contain background and motivation rather than
precise statements of precise theorems with detailed definitions
and technical details on how to carry out proofs and constructions.
The second kind of article, of medium length, contains more
detailed concrete problems, results and techniques."
This ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF MATHEMATICS aims to be a reference work for
all parts of mathe matics. It is a translation with updates and
editorial comments of the Soviet Mathematical Encyclopaedia
published by 'Soviet Encyclopaedia Publishing House' in five
volumes in 1977-1985. The annotated translation consists of ten
volumes including a special index volume. There are three kinds of
articles in this ENCYCLOPAEDIA. First of all there are survey-type
articles dealing with the various main directions in mathematics
(where a rather fme subdivi sion has been used). The main
requirement for these articles has been that they should give a
reasonably complete up-to-date account of the current state of
affairs in these areas and that they should be maximally
accessible. On the whole, these articles should be understandable
to mathematics students in their first specialization years, to
graduates from other mathematical areas and, depending on the
specific subject, to specialists in other domains of science, en
gineers and teachers of mathematics. These articles treat their
material at a fairly general level and aim to give an idea of the
kind of problems, techniques and concepts involved in the area in
question. They also contain background and motivation rather than
precise statements of precise theorems with detailed definitions
and technical details on how to carry out proofs and constructions.
The second kind of article, of medium length, contains more
detailed concrete problems, results and techniques."
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