Based on an introductory, graduate-level course given by Swartz at New Mexico State U., this textbook, written for students with a moderate knowledge of point set topology and integration theory, explains the principles and theories of functional analysis and their applications, showing the interpla
An Introduction to Functional Analysis
β Scribed by Charles Swartz
- Publisher
- CRC Press
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 614
- Series
- Chapman & Hall CRC Pure and Applied Mathematics
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Based on an introductory, graduate-level course given by Swartz at New Mexico State U., this textbook, written for students with a moderate knowledge of point set topology and integration theory, explains the principles and theories of functional analysis and their applications, showing the interpla
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Based on an introductory, graduate-level course given by Swartz at New Mexico State U., this textbook, written for students with a moderate knowledge of point set topology and integration theory, explains the principles and theories of functional analysis and their applications, showing the interpla
Based on an introductory, graduate-level course given by Swartz at New Mexico State U., this textbook, written for students with a moderate knowledge of point set topology and integration theory, explains the principles and theories of functional analysis and their applications, showing the interpla
This textbook emphasizes those topics relevant and necessary to the study of analysis and probability theory. The first five chapters deal with abstract measurement and integration. Chapter 6, on differentiation, includes a treatment of changes of variables in Rd
<span>This accessible text covers key results in functional analysis that are essential for further study in the calculus of variations, analysis, dynamical systems, and the theory of partial differential equations. The treatment of Hilbert spaces covers the topics required to prove the HilbertβSchm