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In the last decade several international conferences on Finsler,
Lagrange and Hamilton geometries were organized in Bra ov, Romania
(1994), Seattle, USA (1995), Edmonton, Canada (1998), besides the
Seminars that periodically are held in Japan and Romania. All these
meetings produced important progress in the field and brought forth
the appearance of some reference volumes. Along this line, a new
International Conference on Finsler and Lagrange Geometry took
place August 26-31,2001 at the "Al.I.Cuza" University in Ia i,
Romania. This Conference was organized in the framework of a
Memorandum of Un derstanding (1994-2004) between the "Al.I.Cuza"
University in Ia i, Romania and the University of Alberta in
Edmonton, Canada. It was especially dedicated to Prof. Dr. Peter
Louis Antonelli, the liaison officer in the Memorandum, an untired
promoter of Finsler, Lagrange and Hamilton geometries, very close
to the Romanian School of Geometry led by Prof. Dr. Radu Miron. The
dedica tion wished to mark also the 60th birthday of Prof. Dr.
Peter Louis Antonelli. With this occasion a Diploma was given to
Professor Dr. Peter Louis Antonelli conferring the title of
Honorary Professor granted to him by the Senate of the oldest
Romanian University (140 years), the "Al.I.Cuza" University, Ia i,
Roma nia. There were almost fifty participants from Egypt, Greece,
Hungary, Japan, Romania, USA. There were scheduled 45 minutes
lectures as well as short communications."
The present book has been written by two mathematicians and one
physicist: a pure mathematician specializing in Finsler geometry
(Makoto Matsumoto), one working in mathematical biology (Peter
Antonelli), and a mathematical physicist specializing in
information thermodynamics (Roman Ingarden). The main purpose of
this book is to present the principles and methods of sprays (path
spaces) and Finsler spaces together with examples of applications
to physical and life sciences. It is our aim to write an
introductory book on Finsler geometry and its applications at a
fairly advanced level. It is intended especially for graduate
students in pure mathemat ics, science and applied mathematics, but
should be also of interest to those pure "Finslerists" who would
like to see their subject applied. After more than 70 years of
relatively slow development Finsler geometry is now a modern
subject with a large body of theorems and techniques and has math
ematical content comparable to any field of modern differential
geometry. The time has come to say this in full voice, against
those who have thought Finsler geometry, because of its
computational complexity, is only of marginal interest and with
prac tically no interesting applications. Contrary to these
outdated fossilized opinions, we believe "the world is Finslerian"
in a true sense and we will try to show this in our application in
thermodynamics, optics, ecology, evolution and developmental
biology. On the other hand, while the complexity of the subject has
not disappeared, the modern bundle theoretic approach has increased
greatly its understandability."
Since 1992 Finsler geometry, Lagrange geometry and their
applications to physics and biology, have been intensive1y studied
in the context of a 5-year program called "Memorandum
ofUnderstanding", between the University of Alberta and "AL.1.
CUZA" University in lasi, Romania. The conference, whose
proceedings appear in this collection, belongs to that program and
aims to provide a forum for an exchange of ideas and information on
recent advances in this field. Besides the Canadian and Romanian
researchers involved, the conference benefited from the
participation of many specialists from Greece, Hungary and Japan.
This proceedings is the second publication of our study group. The
first was Lagrange Geometry. Finsler spaces and Noise Applied in
Biology and Physics (1]. Lagrange geometry, which is concerned with
regular Lagrangians not necessarily homogeneous with respect to the
rate (i.e. velocities or production) variables, naturalIy extends
Finsler geometry to alIow the study of, for example, metrical
structures (i.e. energies) which are not homogeneous in these
rates. Most Lagrangians arising in physics falI into this class,
for example. Lagrange geometry and its applications in general
relativity, unified field theories and re1ativistic optics has been
developed mainly by R. Miron and his students and collaborators in
Romania, while P. Antonelli and his associates have developed
models in ecology, development and evolution and have rigorously
laid the foundations ofFinsler diffusion theory [1] .
The International Conference on Finsler and Lagrange Geometry and
its Applications: A Meeting of Minds, took place August 13-20, 1998
at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. The main
objective of this meeting was to help acquaint North American
geometers with the extensive modern literature on Finsler geometry
and Lagrange geometry of the Japanese and European schools, each
with its own venerable history, on the one hand, and to communicate
recent advances in stochastic theory and Hodge theory for Finsler
manifolds by the younger North American school, on the other. The
intent was to bring together practitioners of these schools of
thought in a Canadian venue where there would be ample opportunity
to exchange information and have cordial personal interactions. The
present set of refereed papers begins .with the Pedagogical Sec
tion I, where introductory and brief survey articles are presented,
one from the Japanese School and two from the European School
(Romania and Hungary). These have been prepared for non-experts
with the intent of explaining basic points of view. The Section III
is the main body of work. It is arranged in alphabetical order, by
author. Section II gives a brief account of each of these contribu
tions with a short reference list at the end. More extensive
references are given in the individual articles."
Finslerian Laplacians have arisen from the demands of modelling the
modern world. However, the roots of the Laplacian concept can be
traced back to the sixteenth century. Its phylogeny and history are
presented in the Prologue of this volume. The text proper begins
with a brief introduction to stochastically derived Finslerian
Laplacians, facilitated by applications in ecology, epidemiology
and evolutionary biology. The mathematical ideas are then fully
presented in section II, with generalizations to Lagrange geometry
following in section III. With section IV, the focus abruptly
shifts to the local mean-value approach to Finslerian Laplacians
and a Hodge-de Rham theory is developed for the representation on
real cohomology classes by harmonic forms on the base manifold.
Similar results are proved in sections II and IV, each from
different perspectives. Modern topics treated include nonlinear
Laplacians, Bochner and Lichnerowicz vanishing theorems,
WeitzenbAck formulas, and Finslerian spinors and Dirac operators.
The tools developed in this book will find uses in several areas of
physics and engineering, but especially in the mechanics of
inhomogeneous media, e.g. Cofferat continua. Audience: This text
will be of use to workers in stochastic processes, differential
geometry, nonlinear analysis, epidemiology, ecology and evolution,
as well as physics of the solid state and continua.
The erratic motion of pollen grains and other tiny particles
suspended in liquid is known as Brownian motion, after its
discoverer, Robert Brown, a botanist who worked in 1828, in London.
He turned over the problem of why this motion occurred to
physicists who were investigating kinetic theory and
thermodynamics; at a time when the existence of molecules had yet
to be established. In 1900, Henri Poincare lectured on this topic
to the 1900 International Congress of Physicists, in Paris [Wic95].
At this time, Louis Bachelier, a thesis student of Poincare, made a
monumental breakthrough with his Theory of Stock Market
Fluctuations, which is still studied today, [Co064]. Norbert Wiener
(1923), who was first to formulate a rigorous concept of the
Brownian path, is most often cited by mathematicians as the father
of the subject, while physicists will cite A. Einstein (1905) and
M. Smoluchowski. Both considered Markov diffusions and realized
that Brownian behaviour nd could be formulated in terms of
parabolic 2 order linear p. d. e. 'so Further more, from this
perspective, the covariance of changes in position could be allowed
to depend on the position itself, according to the invariant form
of the diffusion introduced by Kolmogorov in 1937, [KoI37]. Thus,
any time homogeneous Markov diffusion could be written in terms of
the Laplacian, intrinsically given by the symbol (covariance) of
the p. d. e. , plus a drift vec tor. The theory was further
advanced in 1949, when K.
The International Conference on Finsler and Lagrange Geometry and
its Applications: A Meeting of Minds, took place August 13-20, 1998
at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. The main
objective of this meeting was to help acquaint North American
geometers with the extensive modern literature on Finsler geometry
and Lagrange geometry of the Japanese and European schools, each
with its own venerable history, on the one hand, and to communicate
recent advances in stochastic theory and Hodge theory for Finsler
manifolds by the younger North American school, on the other. The
intent was to bring together practitioners of these schools of
thought in a Canadian venue where there would be ample opportunity
to exchange information and have cordial personal interactions. The
present set of refereed papers begins .with the Pedagogical Sec
tion I, where introductory and brief survey articles are presented,
one from the Japanese School and two from the European School
(Romania and Hungary). These have been prepared for non-experts
with the intent of explaining basic points of view. The Section III
is the main body of work. It is arranged in alphabetical order, by
author. Section II gives a brief account of each of these contribu
tions with a short reference list at the end. More extensive
references are given in the individual articles."
The erratic motion of pollen grains and other tiny particles
suspended in liquid is known as Brownian motion, after its
discoverer, Robert Brown, a botanist who worked in 1828, in London.
He turned over the problem of why this motion occurred to
physicists who were investigating kinetic theory and
thermodynamics; at a time when the existence of molecules had yet
to be established. In 1900, Henri Poincare lectured on this topic
to the 1900 International Congress of Physicists, in Paris [Wic95].
At this time, Louis Bachelier, a thesis student of Poincare, made a
monumental breakthrough with his Theory of Stock Market
Fluctuations, which is still studied today, [Co064]. Norbert Wiener
(1923), who was first to formulate a rigorous concept of the
Brownian path, is most often cited by mathematicians as the father
of the subject, while physicists will cite A. Einstein (1905) and
M. Smoluchowski. Both considered Markov diffusions and realized
that Brownian behaviour nd could be formulated in terms of
parabolic 2 order linear p. d. e. 'so Further more, from this
perspective, the covariance of changes in position could be allowed
to depend on the position itself, according to the invariant form
of the diffusion introduced by Kolmogorov in 1937, [KoI37]. Thus,
any time homogeneous Markov diffusion could be written in terms of
the Laplacian, intrinsically given by the symbol (covariance) of
the p. d. e. , plus a drift vec tor. The theory was further
advanced in 1949, when K.
Finslerian Laplacians have arisen from the demands of modelling the
modern world. However, the roots of the Laplacian concept can be
traced back to the sixteenth century. Its phylogeny and history are
presented in the Prologue of this volume. The text proper begins
with a brief introduction to stochastically derived Finslerian
Laplacians, facilitated by applications in ecology, epidemiology
and evolutionary biology. The mathematical ideas are then fully
presented in section II, with generalizations to Lagrange geometry
following in section III. With section IV, the focus abruptly
shifts to the local mean-value approach to Finslerian Laplacians
and a Hodge-de Rham theory is developed for the representation on
real cohomology classes by harmonic forms on the base manifold.
Similar results are proved in sections II and IV, each from
different perspectives. Modern topics treated include nonlinear
Laplacians, Bochner and Lichnerowicz vanishing theorems,
Weitzenbock formulas, and Finslerian spinors and Dirac operators.
The tools developed in this book will find uses in several areas of
physics and engineering, but especially in the mechanics of
inhomogeneous media, e.g. Cofferat continua. Audience: This text
will be of use to workers in stochastic processes, differential
geometry, nonlinear analysis, epidemiology, ecology and evolution,
as well as physics of the solid state and continua."
The present book has been written by two mathematicians and one
physicist: a pure mathematician specializing in Finsler geometry
(Makoto Matsumoto), one working in mathematical biology (Peter
Antonelli), and a mathematical physicist specializing in
information thermodynamics (Roman Ingarden). The main purpose of
this book is to present the principles and methods of sprays (path
spaces) and Finsler spaces together with examples of applications
to physical and life sciences. It is our aim to write an
introductory book on Finsler geometry and its applications at a
fairly advanced level. It is intended especially for graduate
students in pure mathemat ics, science and applied mathematics, but
should be also of interest to those pure "Finslerists" who would
like to see their subject applied. After more than 70 years of
relatively slow development Finsler geometry is now a modern
subject with a large body of theorems and techniques and has math
ematical content comparable to any field of modern differential
geometry. The time has come to say this in full voice, against
those who have thought Finsler geometry, because of its
computational complexity, is only of marginal interest and with
prac tically no interesting applications. Contrary to these
outdated fossilized opinions, we believe "the world is Finslerian"
in a true sense and we will try to show this in our application in
thermodynamics, optics, ecology, evolution and developmental
biology. On the other hand, while the complexity of the subject has
not disappeared, the modern bundle theoretic approach has increased
greatly its understandability."
In the last decade several international conferences on Finsler,
Lagrange and Hamilton geometries were organized in Bra ov, Romania
(1994), Seattle, USA (1995), Edmonton, Canada (1998), besides the
Seminars that periodically are held in Japan and Romania. All these
meetings produced important progress in the field and brought forth
the appearance of some reference volumes. Along this line, a new
International Conference on Finsler and Lagrange Geometry took
place August 26-31,2001 at the "Al.I.Cuza" University in Ia i,
Romania. This Conference was organized in the framework of a
Memorandum of Un derstanding (1994-2004) between the "Al.I.Cuza"
University in Ia i, Romania and the University of Alberta in
Edmonton, Canada. It was especially dedicated to Prof. Dr. Peter
Louis Antonelli, the liaison officer in the Memorandum, an untired
promoter of Finsler, Lagrange and Hamilton geometries, very close
to the Romanian School of Geometry led by Prof. Dr. Radu Miron. The
dedica tion wished to mark also the 60th birthday of Prof. Dr.
Peter Louis Antonelli. With this occasion a Diploma was given to
Professor Dr. Peter Louis Antonelli conferring the title of
Honorary Professor granted to him by the Senate of the oldest
Romanian University (140 years), the "Al.I.Cuza" University, Ia i,
Roma nia. There were almost fifty participants from Egypt, Greece,
Hungary, Japan, Romania, USA. There were scheduled 45 minutes
lectures as well as short communications."
Since 1992 Finsler geometry, Lagrange geometry and their
applications to physics and biology, have been intensive1y studied
in the context of a 5-year program called "Memorandum
ofUnderstanding", between the University of Alberta and "AL.1.
CUZA" University in lasi, Romania. The conference, whose
proceedings appear in this collection, belongs to that program and
aims to provide a forum for an exchange of ideas and information on
recent advances in this field. Besides the Canadian and Romanian
researchers involved, the conference benefited from the
participation of many specialists from Greece, Hungary and Japan.
This proceedings is the second publication of our study group. The
first was Lagrange Geometry. Finsler spaces and Noise Applied in
Biology and Physics (1]. Lagrange geometry, which is concerned with
regular Lagrangians not necessarily homogeneous with respect to the
rate (i.e. velocities or production) variables, naturalIy extends
Finsler geometry to alIow the study of, for example, metrical
structures (i.e. energies) which are not homogeneous in these
rates. Most Lagrangians arising in physics falI into this class,
for example. Lagrange geometry and its applications in general
relativity, unified field theories and re1ativistic optics has been
developed mainly by R. Miron and his students and collaborators in
Romania, while P. Antonelli and his associates have developed
models in ecology, development and evolution and have rigorously
laid the foundations ofFinsler diffusion theory [1] .
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