Introduction to Multivariable Analysis from Vector to Manifold e-bog
436,85 DKK
(inkl. moms 546,06 DKK)
Multivariable analysis is an important subject for mathematicians, both pure and applied. Apart from mathematicians, we expect that physicists, mechanical engi- neers, electrical engineers, systems engineers, mathematical biologists, mathemati- cal economists, and statisticians engaged in multivariate analysis will find this book extremely useful. The material presented in this work is fundamen...
E-bog
436,85 DKK
Forlag
Birkhauser
Udgivet
6 december 2012
Genrer
PBK
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781461200734
Multivariable analysis is an important subject for mathematicians, both pure and applied. Apart from mathematicians, we expect that physicists, mechanical engi- neers, electrical engineers, systems engineers, mathematical biologists, mathemati- cal economists, and statisticians engaged in multivariate analysis will find this book extremely useful. The material presented in this work is fundamental for studies in differential geometry and for analysis in N dimensions and on manifolds. It is also of interest to anyone working in the areas of general relativity, dynamical systems, fluid mechanics, electromagnetic phenomena, plasma dynamics, control theory, and optimization, to name only several. An earlier work entitled An Introduction to Analysis: from Number to Integral by Jan and Piotr Mikusinski was devoted to analyzing functions of a single variable. As indicated by the title, this present book concentrates on multivariable analysis and is completely self-contained. Our motivation and approach to this useful subject are discussed below. A careful study of analysis is difficult enough for the average student; that of multi variable analysis is an even greater challenge. Somehow the intuitions that served so well in dimension I grow weak, even useless, as one moves into the alien territory of dimension N. Worse yet, the very useful machinery of differential forms on manifolds presents particular difficulties; as one reviewer noted, it seems as though the more precisely one presents this machinery, the harder it is to understand.