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This book, intended for postgraduate students and researchers,
presents many results of historical importance on pseudocompact
spaces. In 1948, E. Hewitt introduced the concept of
pseudocompactness which generalizes a property of compact subsets
of the real line. A topological space is pseudocompact if the range
of any real-valued, continuous function defined on the space is a
bounded subset of the real line. Pseudocompact spaces constitute a
natural and fundamental class of objects in General Topology and
research into their properties has important repercussions in
diverse branches of Mathematics, such as Functional Analysis,
Dynamical Systems, Set Theory and Topological-Algebraic structures.
The collection of authors of this volume include pioneers in their
fields who have written a comprehensive explanation on this
subject. In addition, the text examines new lines of research that
have been at the forefront of mathematics. There is, as yet, no
text that systematically compiles and develops the extensive theory
of pseudocompact spaces, making this book an essential asset for
anyone in the field of topology.
This book, intended for postgraduate students and researchers,
presents many results of historical importance on pseudocompact
spaces. In 1948, E. Hewitt introduced the concept of
pseudocompactness which generalizes a property of compact subsets
of the real line. A topological space is pseudocompact if the range
of any real-valued, continuous function defined on the space is a
bounded subset of the real line. Pseudocompact spaces constitute a
natural and fundamental class of objects in General Topology and
research into their properties has important repercussions in
diverse branches of Mathematics, such as Functional Analysis,
Dynamical Systems, Set Theory and Topological-Algebraic structures.
The collection of authors of this volume include pioneers in their
fields who have written a comprehensive explanation on this
subject. In addition, the text examines new lines of research that
have been at the forefront of mathematics. There is, as yet, no
text that systematically compiles and develops the extensive theory
of pseudocompact spaces, making this book an essential asset for
anyone in the field of topology.
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