This text, part of the "Springer Classics of Mathematics" series, examines perturbation theory for linear operators.
A Short Introduction to Perturbation Theory for Linear Operators
β Scribed by Tosio Kato (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 171
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book is a slightly expanded reproduction of the first two chapters (plus Introduction) of my book Perturbation Theory tor Linear Operators, Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 132, Springer 1980. Ever since, or even before, the publication of the latter, there have been suggestions about separating the first two chapters into a single volume. I have now agreed to follow the suggestions, hoping that it will make the book available to a wider audience. Those two chapters were intended from the outset to be a comprehenΒ sive presentation of those parts of perturbation theory that can be treated without the topological complications of infinite-dimensional spaces. In fact, many essential and. even advanced results in the theory have nonΒ trivial contents in finite-dimensional spaces, although one should not forget that some parts of the theory, such as those pertaining to scatterΒ ing. are peculiar to infinite dimensions. I hope that this book may also be used as an introduction to linear algebra. I believe that the analytic approach based on a systematic use of complex functions, by way of the resolvent theory, must have a strong appeal to students of analysis or applied mathematics, who are usually familiar with such analytic tools.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XIII
Operator theory in finite-dimensional vector spaces....Pages 1-71
Perturbation theory in a finite-dimensional space....Pages 72-148
Back Matter....Pages 149-161
β¦ Subjects
Analysis;Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
From the reviews: "[β¦] An excellent textbook in the theory of linear operators in Banach and Hilbert spaces. It is a thoroughly worthwhile reference work both for graduate students in functional analysis as well as for researchers in perturbation, spectral, and scattering theory. [β¦] I can recommend
<p>In view of recent development in perturbation theory, supplementary notes and a supplementary bibliography are added at the end of the new edition. Little change has been made in the text except that the paraΒ graphs V-Β§ 4.5, VI-Β§ 4.3, and VIII-Β§ 1.4 have been completely rewritten, and a number o