|
Showing 1 - 16 of
16 matches in All Departments
Elie Cartan's book Geometry of Riemannian Manifolds (1928) was one
of the best introductions to his methods. It was based on lectures
given by the author at the Sorbonne in the academic year 1925-26. A
modernized and extensively augmented edition appeared in 1946 (2nd
printing, 1951, and 3rd printing, 1988). Cartan's lectures in
1926-27 were different -- he introduced exterior forms at the very
beginning and used extensively orthonormal frames throughout to
investigate the geometry of Riemannian manifolds. In this course he
solved a series of problems in Euclidean and non-Euclidean spaces,
as well as a series of variational problems on geodesics. The
lectures were translated into Russian in the book Riemannian
Geometry in an Orthogonal Frame (1960). This book has many
innovations, such as the notion of intrinsic normal differentiation
and the Gaussian torsion of a submanifold in a Euclidean
multidimensional space or in a space of constant curvature, an
affine connection defined in a normal fiber bundle of a
submanifold, etc. The only book of Elie Cartan that was not
available in English, it has now been translated into English by
Vladislav V Goldberg, the editor of the Russian edition.
Elie Cartan's book Geometry of Riemannian Manifolds (1928) was one
of the best introductions to his methods. It was based on lectures
given by the author at the Sorbonne in the academic year 1925-26. A
modernized and extensively augmented edition appeared in 1946 (2nd
printing, 1951, and 3rd printing, 1988). Cartan's lectures in
1926-27 were different -- he introduced exterior forms at the very
beginning and used extensively orthonormal frames throughout to
investigate the geometry of Riemannian manifolds. In this course he
solved a series of problems in Euclidean and non-Euclidean spaces,
as well as a series of variational problems on geodesics. The
lectures were translated into Russian in the book Riemannian
Geometry in an Orthogonal Frame (1960). This book has many
innovations, such as the notion of intrinsic normal differentiation
and the Gaussian torsion of a submanifold in a Euclidean
multidimensional space or in a space of constant curvature, an
affine connection defined in a normal fiber bundle of a
submanifold, etc. The only book of Elie Cartan that was not
available in English, it has now been translated into English by
Vladislav V Goldberg, the editor of the Russian edition.
This book is a translation of an authoritative introductory text
based on a lecture series delivered by the renowned differential
geometer, Professor S S Chern in Beijing University in 1980. The
original Chinese text, authored by Professor Chern and Professor
Wei-Huan Chen, was a unique contribution to the mathematics
literature, combining simplicity and economy of approach with depth
of contents. The present translation is aimed at a wide audience,
including (but not limited to) advanced undergraduate and graduate
students in mathematics, as well as physicists interested in the
diverse applications of differential geometry to physics. In
addition to a thorough treatment of the fundamentals of manifold
theory, exterior algebra, the exterior calculus, connections on
fiber bundles, Riemannian geometry, Lie groups and moving frames,
and complex manifolds (with a succinct introduction to the theory
of Chern classes), and an appendix on the relationship between
differential geometry and theoretical physics, this book includes a
new chapter on Finsler geometry and a new appendix on the history
and recent developments of differential geometry, the latter
prepared specially for this edition by Professor Chern to bring the
text into perspectives.
This book is a translation of an authoritative introductory text
based on a lecture series delivered by the renowned differential
geometer, Professor S S Chern in Beijing University in 1980. The
original Chinese text, authored by Professor Chern and Professor
Wei-Huan Chen, was a unique contribution to the mathematics
literature, combining simplicity and economy of approach with depth
of contents. The present translation is aimed at a wide audience,
including (but not limited to) advanced undergraduate and graduate
students in mathematics, as well as physicists interested in the
diverse applications of differential geometry to physics. In
addition to a thorough treatment of the fundamentals of manifold
theory, exterior algebra, the exterior calculus, connections on
fiber bundles, Riemannian geometry, Lie groups and moving frames,
and complex manifolds (with a succinct introduction to the theory
of Chern classes), and an appendix on the relationship between
differential geometry and theoretical physics, this book includes a
new chapter on Finsler geometry and a new appendix on the history
and recent developments of differential geometry, the latter
prepared specially for this edition by Professor Chern to bring the
text into perspectives.
In recognition of professor Shiing-Shen Chern's long and
distinguished service to mathematics and to the University of
California, the geometers at Berkeley held an International
Symposium in Global Analysis and Global Geometry in his honor in
June 1979. The output of this Symposium was published in a series
of three separate volumes, comprising approximately a third of
Professor Chern's total publications up to 1979. Later, a fourth
volume was published, focusing on papers written during the
Eighties. This third volume comprises selected papers written
between 1965 and 1979.
In recognition of professor Shiing-Shen Chern s long and
distinguished service to mathematics and to the University of
California, the geometers at Berkeley held an International
Symposium in Global Analysis and Global Geometry in his honor in
June 1979. The output of this Symposium was published in a series
of three separate volumes, comprising approximately a third of
Professor Chern s total publications up to 1979. Later, a fourth
volume was published, focusing on papers written during the
Eighties. This first volume comprises selected papers written
between 1932 and 1975. In making the selections, Professor Chern
gave preference to shorter and lesser-known papers."
In recognition of professor Shiing-Shen Chern's long and
distinguished service to mathematics and to the University of
California, the geometers at Berkeley held an International
Symposium in Global Analysis and Global Geometry in his honor in
June 1979. The output of this Symposium was published in a series
of three separate volumes, comprising approximately a third of
Professor Chern's total publications up to 1979. Later, this fourth
volume was published, focusing on papers written during the
Eighties.
In recognition of professor Shiing-Shen Chern s long and
distinguished service to mathematics and to the University of
California, the geometers at Berkeley held an International
Symposium in Global Analysis and Global Geometry in his honor in
June 1979. The output of this Symposium was published in a series
of three separate volumes, comprising approximately a third of
Professor Chern s total publications up to 1979. Later, a fourth
volume was published, focusing on papers written during the
Eighties. This second volume comprises selected papers written
between 1932 and 1965.
From the reviews of the second edition: "The new methods of complex manifold theory are very useful tools for investigations in algebraic geometry, complex function theory, differential operators and so on. The differential geometrical methods of this theory were developed essentially under the influence of Professor S.-S. Chern's works. The present book is a second edition... It can serve as an introduction to, and a survey of, this theory and is based on the author's lectures held at the University of California and at a summer seminar of the Canadian Mathematical Congress....The text is illustrated by many examples... The book is warmly recommended to everyone interested in complex differential geometry." #Acta Scientiarum Mathematicarum, 41, 3-4#
The volume contains a selection of papers presented at the 7th
Symposium on differential geometry and differential equations (DD7)
held at the Nankai Institute of Mathematics, Tianjin, China, in
1986. Most of the contributions are original research papers on
topics including elliptic equations, hyperbolic equations,
evolution equations, non-linear equations from differential
geometry and mechanics, micro-local analysis.
First published in 1997, this book contains six in-depth articles
on various aspects of the field of tight and taut submanifolds and
concludes with an extensive bibliography of the entire field. The
book is dedicated to the memory of Nicolaas H. Kuiper; the first
paper is an unfinished but insightful survey of the field of tight
immersions and maps written by Kuiper himself. Other papers by
leading researchers in the field treat topics such as the smooth
and polyhedral portions of the theory of tight immersions, taut,
Dupin and isoparametric submanifolds of Euclidean space, taut
submanifolds of arbitrary complete Riemannian manifolds, and real
hypersurfaces in complex space forms with special curvature
properties. Taken together these articles provide a comprehensive
survey of the field and point toward several directions for future
research.
Finsler geometry generalizes Riemannian geometry in the same sense
that Banach spaces generalize Hilbert spaces. This book presents an
expository account of seven important topics in Riemann-Finsler
geometry, ones which have recently undergone significant
development but have not had a detailed pedagogical treatment
elsewhere. Each article will open the door to an active area of
research, and is suitable for a special topics course in
graduate-level differential geometry. The contributors consider
issues related to volume, geodesics, curvature, complex
differential geometry, and parametrized jet bundles, and include a
variety of instructive examples.
Tight and taut manifolds form an important and special class of surfaces within differential geometry. This book contains in-depth articles by experts in the field as well as an extensive and comprehensive bibliography. This survey will open new avenues for further research and will be an important addition to any geometer's library.
This book presents an expository account of six important topics in
Riemann-Finsler geometry suitable for in a special topics course in
graduate level differential geometry. These topics have recently
undergone significant development, but have not had a detailed
pedagogical treatment elsewhere. Each article will open the door to
an active area of geometrical research. Rademacher gives a detailed
account of his Sphere Theorem for non-reversible Finsler metrics.
Alvarez and Thompson present an accessible discussion of the
picture which emerges from their search for a satisfactory notion
of volume on Finsler manifolds. Wong studies the geometry of
holomorphic jet bundles, and finds that Finsler metrics play an
essential role. Sabau studies protein production in cells from the
Finslerian perspective of path spaces, employing both a local
stability analysis of the first order system, and a KCC analysis of
the related second order system. Shen's article discusses Finsler
metrics whose flag curvature depends on the location and the
direction of the flag poles, but not on the remaining features of
the flags. Bao and Robles focus on Randers spaces of constant flag
curvature or constant Ric
The Wolf Prize, awarded by the Wolf Foundation in Israel, often
goes to mathematicians who are in their sixties or older. That is
to say, the Prize honours the achievements of a lifetime.This
invaluable book features bibliographies, important papers, and
speeches (for example at international congresses) of Wolf Prize
winners, such as R Bott, A P Calderon, A N Kolmogorov, M G Krein, P
Lax, H Lewy, L Lovasz, J Milnor, J Moser, I Piatetski-Shapiro, J P
Serre, C L Siegel, Y Sinai, E M Stein, J Tits, A Weil, H Whitney, A
Wiles and O Zariski. This is the first time that documents on Wolf
Prize winners have been published together. Since the work of the
Wolf laureates covers a wide spectrum, much of the mathematics of
the twentieth century comes to life in this book.
In this volume, the fractional quantum Hall effect is reviewed and
reexamined with emphasis on the fractional statistics. Possible
relevance of the anyon idea to high temperature superconductivity
is addressed both theoretically and experimentally.
|
You may like...
Gilded Glass
Kevin J. Anderson, Allyson Longueira
Hardcover
R773
R733
Discovery Miles 7 330
Decision
Barbara Hofland
Paperback
R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
|