<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
An Algebraic Approach to Geometry: Geometric Trilogy II
โ Scribed by Francis Borceux (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 440
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
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 in geometric applications, such as cryptography.
380 years ago, the work of Fermat and Descartes led us to study geometric problems using coordinates and equations. Today, this is the most popular way of handling geometrical problems. Linear algebra provides an efficient tool for studying all the first degree (lines, planes) and second degree (ellipses, hyperboloids) geometric figures, in the affine, the Euclidean, the Hermitian and the projective contexts. But recent applications of mathematics, like cryptography, need these notions not only in real or complex cases, but also in more general settings, like in spaces constructed on finite fields. And of course, why not also turn our attention to geometric figures of higher degrees? Besides all the linear aspects of geometry in their most general setting, this book also describes useful algebraic tools for studying curves of arbitrary degree and investigates results as advanced as the Bezout theorem, the Cramer paradox, topological group of a cubic, rational curves etc.
Hence the book is of interest for all those who have to teach or study linear geometry: affine, Euclidean, Hermitian, projective; it is also of great interest to those who do not want to restrict themselves to the undergraduate level of geometric figures of degree one or two.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XVII
The Birth of Analytic Geometry....Pages 1-50
Affine Geometry....Pages 51-118
More on Real Affine Spaces....Pages 119-136
Euclidean Geometry....Pages 137-180
Hermitian Spaces....Pages 181-194
Projective Geometry....Pages 195-265
Algebraic Curves....Pages 267-340
Back Matter....Pages 341-430
โฆ Subjects
Geometry; Projective Geometry; History of Mathematical Sciences
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
ะะทะดะฐัะตะปัััะฒะพ Springer, 2014, -440 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>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