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This book is a sequel to Lectures on Selected Topics in
Mathematical Physics: Introduction to Lie Theory with Applications.
This volume is devoted mostly to Lie groups. Lie algebras and
generating functions, both for standard special functions and for
solution of certain types of physical problems. It is an informal
treatment of these topics intended for physics graduate students or
others with a physics background wanting a brief and informal
introduction to the subjects addressed in a style and vocabulary
not completely unfamiliar.
This volume is a basic introduction to certain aspects of elliptic
functions and elliptic integrals. Primarily, the elliptic functions
stand out as closed solutions to a class of physical and
geometrical problems giving rise to nonlinear differential
equations. While these nonlinear equations may not be the types of
greatest interest currently, the fact that they are solvable
exactly in terms of functions about which much is known makes up
for this. The elliptic functions of Jacobi, or equivalently the
Weierstrass elliptic functions, inhabit the literature on current
problems in condensed matter and statistical physics, on solitons
and conformal representations, and all sorts of famous problems in
classical mechanics. The lectures on elliptic functions have
evolved as part of the first semester of a course on theoretical
and mathematical methods given to first and second year graduate
students in physics and chemistry at the University of North
Dakota. They are for graduate students or for researchers who want
an elementary introduction to the subject that nevertheless leaves
them with enough of the details to address real problems. The style
is supposed to be informal. The intention is to introduce the
subject as a moderate extension of ordinary trigonometry in which
the reference circle is replaced by an ellipse. This entre depends
upon fewer tools and has seemed less intimidating that other
typical introductions to the subject that depend on some knowledge
of complex variables. The first three lectures assume only
calculus, including the chain rule and elementary knowledge of
differential equations. In the later lectures, the complex analytic
properties are introduced naturally so that a more complete study
becomes possible.
This book provides an introduction to Lie Theory for first year
graduate students and professional physicists who may not have
across the theory in their studies. In particular, it is a summary
overview of the theory of finite groups, a brief description of a
manifold, and then an informal development of the theory of
one-parameter Lie groups, especially as they apply to ordinary
differential equations. The treatment is informal, but systematic
and reasonably self-contained, as it assumes a familiarity with
basic physics and applied calculus, but it does not assume
additional mathematical training. Interested readers should have a
fair chance of finding symmetries of a second order differential
equation and should be able to use it to reduce the order of the
differential equation.
This book is a sequel to Lectures on Selected Topics in
Mathematical Physics: Introduction to Lie Theory with Applications.
This volume is devoted mostly to Lie groups. Lie algebras and
generating functions, both for standard special functions and for
solution of certain types of physical problems. It is an informal
treatment of these topics intended for physics graduate students or
others with a physics background wanting a brief and informal
introduction to the subjects addressed in a style and vocabulary
not completely unfamiliar.
This volume is a basic introduction to certain aspects of elliptic
functions and elliptic integrals. Primarily, the elliptic functions
stand out as closed solutions to a class of physical and
geometrical problems giving rise to nonlinear differential
equations. While these nonlinear equations may not be the types of
greatest interest currently, the fact that they are solvable
exactly in terms of functions about which much is known makes up
for this. The elliptic functions of Jacobi, or equivalently the
Weierstrass elliptic functions, inhabit the literature on current
problems in condensed matter and statistical physics, on solitons
and conformal representations, and all sorts of famous problems in
classical mechanics. The lectures on elliptic functions have
evolved as part of the first semester of a course on theoretical
and mathematical methods given to first and second year graduate
students in physics and chemistry at the University of North
Dakota. They are for graduate students or for researchers who want
an elementary introduction to the subject that nevertheless leaves
them with enough of the details to address real problems. The style
is supposed to be informal. The intention is to introduce the
subject as a moderate extension of ordinary trigonometry in which
the reference circle is replaced by an ellipse. This entre depends
upon fewer tools and has seemed less intimidating that other
typical introductions to the subject that depend on some knowledge
of complex variables. The first three lectures assume only
calculus, including the chain rule and elementary knowledge of
differential equations. In the later lectures, the complex analytic
properties are introduced naturally so that a more complete study
becomes possible.
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