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This volume contains selected papers authored by speakers and
participants of the 2013 Arbeitstagung, held at the Max Planck
Institute for Mathematics in Bonn, Germany, from May 22-28. The
2013 meeting (and this resulting proceedings) was dedicated to the
memory of Friedrich Hirzebruch, who passed away on May 27, 2012.
Hirzebruch organized the first Arbeitstagung in 1957 with a unique
concept that would become its most distinctive feature: the program
was not determined beforehand by the organizers, but during the
meeting by all participants in an open discussion. This ensured
that the talks would be on the latest developments in mathematics
and that many important results were presented at the conference
for the first time. Written by leading mathematicians, the papers
in this volume cover various topics from algebraic geometry,
topology, analysis, operator theory, and representation theory and
display the breadth and depth of pure mathematics that has always
been characteristic of the Arbeitstagung.
This book provides an introduction to topology, differential
topology, and differential geometry. It is based on manuscripts
refined through use in a variety of lecture courses. The first
chapter covers elementary results and concepts from point-set
topology. An exception is the Jordan Curve Theorem, which is proved
for polygonal paths and is intended to give students a first
glimpse into the nature of deeper topological problems. The second
chapter of the book introduces manifolds and Lie groups, and
examines a wide assortment of examples. Further discussion explores
tangent bundles, vector bundles, differentials, vector fields, and
Lie brackets of vector fields. This discussion is deepened and
expanded in the third chapter, which introduces the de Rham
cohomology and the oriented integral and gives proofs of the
Brouwer Fixed-Point Theorem, the Jordan-Brouwer Separation Theorem,
and Stokes's integral formula. The fourth and final chapter is
devoted to the fundamentals of differential geometry and traces the
development of ideas from curves to submanifolds of Euclidean
spaces. Along the way, the book discusses connections and
curvature--the central concepts of differential geometry. The
discussion culminates with the Gauss equations and the version of
Gauss's theorema egregium for submanifolds of arbitrary dimension
and codimension. This book is primarily aimed at advanced
undergraduates in mathematics and physics and is intended as the
template for a one- or two-semester bachelor's course.
This volume contains selected papers authored by speakers and
participants of the 2013 Arbeitstagung, held at the Max Planck
Institute for Mathematics in Bonn, Germany, from May 22-28. The
2013 meeting (and this resulting proceedings) was dedicated to the
memory of Friedrich Hirzebruch, who passed away on May 27, 2012.
Hirzebruch organized the first Arbeitstagung in 1957 with a unique
concept that would become its most distinctive feature: the program
was not determined beforehand by the organizers, but during the
meeting by all participants in an open discussion. This ensured
that the talks would be on the latest developments in mathematics
and that many important results were presented at the conference
for the first time. Written by leading mathematicians, the papers
in this volume cover various topics from algebraic geometry,
topology, analysis, operator theory, and representation theory and
display the breadth and depth of pure mathematics that has always
been characteristic of the Arbeitstagung.
This volume presents a complete and self-contained description of
new results in the theory of manifolds of nonpositive curvature. It
is based on lectures delivered by M. Gromov at the College de
France in Paris. Therefore this book may also serve as an
introduction to the subject of nonpositively curved manifolds. The
latest progress in this area is reflected in the article of W.
Ballmann describing the structure of manifolds of higher rank.
Singular spaces with upper curvature bounds and, in particular,
spaces of nonpositive curvature, have been of interest in many
fields, including geometric (and combinatorial) group theory,
topology, dynamical systems and probability theory. In the first
two chapters of the book, a concise introduction into these spaces
is given, culminating in the Hadamard-Cartan theorem and the
discussion of the ideal boundary at infinity for simply connected
complete spaces of nonpositive curvature. In the third chapter,
qualitative properties of the geodesic flow on geodesically
complete spaces of nonpositive curvature are discussed, as are
random walks on groups of isometries of nonpositively curved
spaces. The main class of spaces considered should be precisely
complementary to symmetric spaces of higher rank and Euclidean
buildings of dimension at least two (Rank Rigidity conjecture). In
the smooth case, this is known and is the content of the Rank
Rigidity theorem. An updated version of the proof of the latter
theorem (in the smooth case) is presented in Chapter IV of the
book. This chapter contains also a short introduction into the
geometry of the unit tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold and
the basic facts about the geodesic flow. In an appendix by Misha
Brin, a self-contained and short proof of the ergodicity of the
geodesic flow of a compact Riemannian manifold of negative
curvature is given. The proof is elementary and should be
accessible to the non-specialist. Some of the essential features
and problems of the ergodic theory of smooth dynamical systems are
discussed, and the appendix can serve as an introduction into this
theory.
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