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This is the fourth volume of the Handbook of Geometry and Topology
of Singularities, a series that aims to provide an accessible
account of the state of the art of the subject, its frontiers, and
its interactions with other areas of research. This volume consists
of twelve chapters which provide an in-depth and reader-friendly
survey of various important aspects of singularity theory. Some of
these complement topics previously explored in volumes I to III.
Amongst the topics studied in this volume are the Nash blow up, the
space of arcs in algebraic varieties, determinantal singularities,
Lipschitz geometry, indices of vector fields and 1-forms, motivic
characteristic classes, the Hilbert-Samuel multiplicity and
comparison theorems that spring from the classical De Rham complex.
Singularities are ubiquitous in mathematics and science in general.
Singularity theory is a crucible where different types of
mathematical problems interact, surprising connections are born and
simple questions lead to ideas which resonate in other subjects.
Authored by world experts, the various contributions deal with both
classical material and modern developments, covering a wide range
of topics which are linked to each other in fundamental ways. The
book is addressed to graduate students and newcomers to the theory,
as well as to specialists who can use it as a guidebook.
This monograph lays down the foundations of the theory of complex
Kleinian groups, a newly born area of mathematics whose origin
traces back to the work of Riemann, Poincare, Picard and many
others. Kleinian groups are, classically, discrete groups of
conformal automorphisms of the Riemann sphere, and these can be
regarded too as being groups of holomorphic automorphisms of the
complex projective line CP1. When going into higher dimensions,
there is a dichotomy: Should we look at conformal automorphisms of
the n-sphere?, or should we look at holomorphic automorphisms of
higher dimensional complex projective spaces? These two theories
are different in higher dimensions. In the first case we are
talking about groups of isometries of real hyperbolic spaces, an
area of mathematics with a long-standing tradition. In the second
case we are talking about an area of mathematics that still is in
its childhood, and this is the focus of study in this monograph.
This brings together several important areas of mathematics, as for
instance classical Kleinian group actions, complex hyperbolic
geometry, chrystallographic groups and the uniformization problem
for complex manifolds. "
Many cities in the Asia-Pacific region serve as financial centres
in their respective national jurisdictions or local areas. Noting
that most were engaged in efforts to become premier international
financial centres (IFCs) in competition with one another, the Korea
National Committee for Pacific Economic Cooperation (KOPEC)
convened an international conference in Seoul, Korea in October
2007 to examine the prospects for success for seven such financial
centres (Hong Kong, Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo and
Wellington), weigh the costs and benefits of such competition for
local economies as well as the region as a whole, and derive
implications for cooperation among the regional governments. The
present volume consists of case studies and commentaries presented
at the conference as well as the synthesis report, which draws
conclusions from those papers and commentaries. One of those
conclusions is that, given the power of scale economies as well as
the lack of integration of the financial markets in the region,
none of the regional financial centres, even Hong Kong, Singapore
or Tokyo, considered alone represents a meaningful rival to London
or New York, the two existing global financial centres. The
synthesis report thus argues for regional cooperation to integrate
all those financial centres into an Asia-Pacific IFC network. It
further argues that the present global financial crisis presents a
major opportunity for regional governments to create such an IFC
network that will challenge London and New York in quality as well
as quantity of international financial business while helping the
latter two overcome the current global crisis. This would open the
path towards a stable and resilient Asia-Pacific financial
community, with the constituent regional economies no longer
vulnerable to the problems of the so-called original sin and double
mismatch.
Singularity theory stands at a cross-road of mathematics, a meeting
point where
manyareasofmathematicscometogether,suchasgeometry,topologyandalgebra,
analysis,di?erential equations and dynamical systems,
combinatoricsand number theory, to mention some of them. Thus, one
who would write a book about this
fascinatingtopicnecessarilyfacesthechallengeofhavingtochoosewhattoinclude
and,mostdi?cult,whatnottoinclude.
Acomprehensivetreatmentofsingularities would have to consist of a
collection of books, which would be beyond our present scope. Hence
this work does not pretend to be comprehensive of the subject,
neither is it a text book with a systematic approachto
singularitytheory asa core idea. Thisisrather a collectionof
essaysonselected topicsaboutthe topologyand geometry of real and
complex analytic spaces around their isolated singularities. I have
worked in the area of singularities since the late 1970s, and
during this time have had the good fortune of encountering many
gems of mathematics
concerningthetopologyofsingularitiesandrelatedtopics,masterpiecescreatedby
greatmathematicians like Riemann, Klein and Poincar' e,then Milnor,
Hirzebruch, Thom, Mumford, Brieskorn, Atiyah, Arnold, Wall, LeDung
" Tran ' g, Neumann, Looijenga, Teissier, and many more whose names
I cannot include since the list would be too long and, even that, I
would leave aside important names. My own research has always stood
on the shoulders of all of them. In taking this broad approach I
realize how di?cult it is to present an overall picture of the
myriad of outstanding contributions in this area of mathematics
during the last century, since they are scattered in very many
books and research articles.
This is the third volume of the Handbook of Geometry and Topology
of Singularities, a series which aims to provide an accessible
account of the state of the art of the subject, its frontiers, and
its interactions with other areas of research. This volume consists
of ten chapters which provide an in-depth and reader-friendly
survey of various important aspects of singularity theory. Some of
these complement topics previously explored in volumes I and II,
such as, for instance, Zariski's equisingularity, the interplay
between isolated complex surface singularities and 3-manifold
theory, stratified Morse theory, constructible sheaves, the
topology of the non-critical levels of holomorphic functions, and
intersection cohomology. Other chapters bring in new subjects, such
as the Thom-Mather theory for maps, characteristic classes for
singular varieties, mixed Hodge structures, residues in complex
analytic varieties, nearby and vanishing cycles, and more.
Singularities are ubiquitous in mathematics and science in general.
Singularity theory interacts energetically with the rest of
mathematics, acting as a crucible where different types of
mathematical problems interact, surprising connections are born and
simple questions lead to ideas which resonate in other parts of the
subject, and in other subjects. Authored by world experts, the
various contributions deal with both classical material and modern
developments, covering a wide range of topics which are linked to
each other in fundamental ways. The book is addressed to graduate
students and newcomers to the theory, as well as to specialists who
can use it as a guidebook.
This volume consists of ten articles which provide an in-depth and
reader-friendly survey of some of the foundational aspects of
singularity theory. Authored by world experts, the various
contributions deal with both classical material and modern
developments, covering a wide range of topics which are linked to
each other in fundamental ways. Singularities are ubiquitous in
mathematics and science in general. Singularity theory interacts
energetically with the rest of mathematics, acting as a crucible
where different types of mathematical problems interact, surprising
connections are born and simple questions lead to ideas which
resonate in other parts of the subject. This is the first volume in
a series which aims to provide an accessible account of the
state-of-the-art of the subject, its frontiers, and its
interactions with other areas of research. The book is addressed to
graduate students and newcomers to the theory, as well as to
specialists who can use it as a guidebook.
This is the second volume of the Handbook of the Geometry and
Topology of Singularities, a series which aims to provide an
accessible account of the state-of-the-art of the subject, its
frontiers, and its interactions with other areas of research. This
volume consists of ten chapters which provide an in-depth and
reader-friendly survey of some of the foundational aspects of
singularity theory and related topics.Singularities are ubiquitous
in mathematics and science in general. Singularity theory interacts
energetically with the rest of mathematics, acting as a crucible
where different types of mathematical problems interact, surprising
connections are born and simple questions lead to ideas which
resonate in other parts of the subject, and in other subjects.
Authored by world experts, the various contributions deal with both
classical material and modern developments, covering a wide range
of topics which are linked to each other in fundamental ways. The
book is addressed to graduate students and newcomers to the theory,
as well as to specialists who can use it as a guidebook.
This is the third volume of the Handbook of Geometry and Topology
of Singularities, a series which aims to provide an accessible
account of the state of the art of the subject, its frontiers, and
its interactions with other areas of research. This volume consists
of ten chapters which provide an in-depth and reader-friendly
survey of various important aspects of singularity theory. Some of
these complement topics previously explored in volumes I and II,
such as, for instance, Zariski’s equisingularity, the interplay
between isolated complex surface singularities and 3-manifold
theory, stratified Morse theory, constructible sheaves, the
topology of the non-critical levels of holomorphic functions, and
intersection cohomology. Other chapters bring in new subjects, such
as the Thom–Mather theory for maps, characteristic classes for
singular varieties, mixed Hodge structures, residues in complex
analytic varieties, nearby and vanishing cycles, and more.
Singularities are ubiquitous in mathematics and science in general.
Singularity theory interacts energetically with the rest of
mathematics, acting as a crucible where different types of
mathematical problems interact, surprising connections are born and
simple questions lead to ideas which resonate in other parts of the
subject, and in other subjects. Authored by world experts, the
various contributions deal with both classical material and modern
developments, covering a wide range of topics which are linked to
each other in fundamental ways. The book is addressed to graduate
students and newcomers to the theory, as well as to specialists who
can use it as a guidebook.
This monograph lays down the foundations of the theory of complex
Kleinian groups, a newly born area of mathematics whose origin
traces back to the work of Riemann, Poincare, Picard and many
others. Kleinian groups are, classically, discrete groups of
conformal automorphisms of the Riemann sphere, and these can be
regarded too as being groups of holomorphic automorphisms of the
complex projective line CP1. When going into higher dimensions,
there is a dichotomy: Should we look at conformal automorphisms of
the n-sphere?, or should we look at holomorphic automorphisms of
higher dimensional complex projective spaces? These two theories
are different in higher dimensions. In the first case we are
talking about groups of isometries of real hyperbolic spaces, an
area of mathematics with a long-standing tradition. In the second
case we are talking about an area of mathematics that still is in
its childhood, and this is the focus of study in this monograph.
This brings together several important areas of mathematics, as for
instance classical Kleinian group actions, complex hyperbolic
geometry, chrystallographic groups and the uniformization problem
for complex manifolds.
Vector?eldsonmanifoldsplaymajorrolesinmathematicsandothersciences.
In particular, the Poincar' e-Hopf index theorem and its geometric
count- part,the Gauss-Bonnettheorem, giveriseto the theoryof
Chernclasses,key invariants of manifolds in geometry and topology.
One has often to face problems where the underlying space is no
more a manifold but a singular variety. Thus it is natural to ask
what is the "good"
notionofindexofavector?eld,andofChernclasses,ifthespaceacquiress-
gularities.Thequestionwasexploredbyseveralauthorswithvariousanswers,
starting with the pioneering work of M.-H. Schwartz and R.
MacPherson. We present these notions in the framework of the
obstruction theory and the Chern-Weil theory. The interplay between
these two methods is one of the main features of the monograph.
Marseille Jean-Paul Brasselet Cuernavaca Jos' e Seade Tokyo Tatsuo
Suwa September 2009 v Acknowledgements Parts of this monograph were
written while the authors were staying at various institutions,
such as Hokkaido University and Niigata University in Japan, CIRM,
Universit' e de la Mediterran' ee and IML at Marseille, France, the
Instituto de Matem' aticas of UNAM at Cuernavaca, Mexico, ICTP at
Trieste, Italia, IMPA at Rio de Janeiro, and USP at S" ao Carlos in
Brasil, to name a few, and we would like to thank them for their
generous hospitality and support. Thanks are also due to people who
helped us in many ways, in particular our co-authors of results
quoted in the book: Marcelo Aguilar, Wolfgang Ebeling, Xavier G'
omez-Mont, Sabir Gusein-Zade, LeDung " Tran ' g, Daniel Lehmann,
David Massey, A.J. Parameswaran, Marcio Soares, Mihai Tibar,
Alberto Verjovsky,andmanyother colleagueswho helped usin
variousways.
The objective of the meeting was to have together leading
specialists in the field of Holomorphic Dynamical Systems in order
to present their current reseach in the field. The scope was to
cover iteration theory of holomorphic mappings (i.e. rational
maps), holomorphic differential equations and foliations. Many of
the conferences and articles included in the volume contain open
problems of current interest. The volume contains only research
articles.
This is the second volume of the Handbook of the Geometry and
Topology of Singularities, a series which aims to provide an
accessible account of the state-of-the-art of the subject, its
frontiers, and its interactions with other areas of research. This
volume consists of ten chapters which provide an in-depth and
reader-friendly survey of some of the foundational aspects of
singularity theory and related topics.Singularities are ubiquitous
in mathematics and science in general. Singularity theory interacts
energetically with the rest of mathematics, acting as a crucible
where different types of mathematical problems interact, surprising
connections are born and simple questions lead to ideas which
resonate in other parts of the subject, and in other subjects.
Authored by world experts, the various contributions deal with both
classical material and modern developments, covering a wide range
of topics which are linked to each other in fundamental ways. The
book is addressed to graduate students and newcomers to the theory,
as well as to specialists who can use it as a guidebook.
This volume consists of ten articles which provide an in-depth and
reader-friendly survey of some of the foundational aspects of
singularity theory. Authored by world experts, the various
contributions deal with both classical material and modern
developments, covering a wide range of topics which are linked to
each other in fundamental ways. Singularities are ubiquitous in
mathematics and science in general. Singularity theory interacts
energetically with the rest of mathematics, acting as a crucible
where different types of mathematical problems interact, surprising
connections are born and simple questions lead to ideas which
resonate in other parts of the subject. This is the first volume in
a series which aims to provide an accessible account of the
state-of-the-art of the subject, its frontiers, and its
interactions with other areas of research. The book is addressed to
graduate students and newcomers to the theory, as well as to
specialists who can use it as a guidebook.
This book develops the geometric intuition of the reader by
examining the symmetries (or rigid motions) of the space in
question. This approach introduces in turn all the classical
geometries: Euclidean, affine, elliptic, projective and hyperbolic.
The main focus is on the mathematically rich two-dimensional case,
although some aspects of 3- or $n$-dimensional geometries are
included. Basic notions of algebra and analysis are used to convey
better understanding of various concepts and results. Concepts of
geometry are presented in a very simple way, so that they become
easily accessible: the only pre-requisites are calculus, linear
algebra and basic analytic geometry.
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