<p><p>This book presents the classical theory of curves in the plane and three-dimensional space, and the classical theory of surfaces in three-dimensional space. It pays particular attention to the historical development of the theory and the preliminary approaches that support contemporary geometr
A Differential Approach to Geometry: Geometric Trilogy III
β Scribed by Francis Borceux.
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 462
- Series
- Geometric Trilogy, III
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book presents the classical theory of curves in the plane and three-dimensional space, and the classical theory of surfaces in three-dimensional space. It pays particular attention to the historical development of the theory and the preliminary approaches that support contemporary geometrical notions. It includes a chapter that lists a very wide scope of plane curves and their properties. The book approaches the threshold of algebraic topology, providing an integrated presentation fully accessible to undergraduate-level students.
At the end of the 17th century, Newton and Leibniz developed differential calculus, thus making available the very wide range of differentiable functions, not just those constructed from polynomials. During the 18th century, Euler applied these ideas to establish what is still today the classical theory of most general curves and surfaces, largely used in engineering. Enter this fascinating world through amazing theorems and a wide supply of surprising examples. Reach the doors of algebraic topology by discovering just how an integer (= the Euler-PoincarΓ© characteristics) associated with a surface gives you a lot of interesting information on the shape of the surface. And penetrate the intriguing world of Riemannian geometry, the geometry that underlies the theory of relativity.
The book is of interest to all those who teach classical differential geometry up to quite an advanced level. The chapter on Riemannian geometry is of great interest to those who have to βintuitivelyβ introduce students to the highly technical nature of this branch of mathematics, in particular when preparing students for courses on relativity.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XVI
The Genesis of Differential Methods....Pages 1-53
Plane Curves....Pages 55-138
A Museum of Curves....Pages 139-159
Skew Curves....Pages 161-180
The Local Theory of Surfaces....Pages 181-252
Towards Riemannian Geometry....Pages 253-343
Elements of the Global Theory of Surfaces....Pages 345-418
Back Matter....Pages 419-452
β¦ Subjects
Geometry; Differential Geometry; History of Mathematical Sciences
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This book presents the classical theory of curves in the plane and three-dimensional space, and the classical theory of surfaces in three-dimensional space. It pays particular attention to the historical development of the theory and the preliminary approaches that support contemporary geometr
<p><p>This book presents the classical theory of curves in the plane and three-dimensional space, and the classical theory of surfaces in three-dimensional space. It pays particular attention to the historical development of the theory and the preliminary approaches that support contemporary geometr
ΠΠ·Π΄Π°ΡΠ΅Π»ΡΡΡΠ²ΠΎ Springer, 2014, -462 pp.<br/>Geometric Trilogy I. An Axiomatic Approach to Geometry (<a class="object-link fpm" data-file-id="1440126" href="/file/1440126/">/file/1440126/</a>).<br/>Geometric Trilogy II. An Algebraic Approach to Geometry (<a class="object-link fpm" data-file-id="1440128
<p><p>Focusing methodologically on those historical aspects that are relevant to supporting intuition in axiomatic approaches to geometry, the book develops systematic and modern approaches to the three core aspects of axiomatic geometry: Euclidean, non-Euclidean and projective. Historically, axioma
<p><p>This is a unified treatment of the various algebraic approaches to geometric spaces. The study of algebraic curves in the complex projective plane is the natural link between linear geometry at an undergraduate level and algebraic geometry at a graduate level, and it is also an important topic