<p><p>This volume collects lecture notes from courses offered at several conferences and workshops, and provides the first exposition in book form of the basic theory of the Kähler-Ricci flow and its current state-of-the-art. While several excellent books on Kähler-Einstein geometry are available, t
An Introduction to the Kähler-Ricci Flow
✍ Scribed by Sébastien Boucksom, Philippe Eyssidieux (auth.), Sebastien Boucksom, Philippe Eyssidieux, Vincent Guedj (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer International Publishing
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 342
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Mathematics 2086
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This volume collects lecture notes from courses offered at several conferences and workshops, and provides the first exposition in book form of the basic theory of the Kähler-Ricci flow and its current state-of-the-art. While several excellent books on Kähler-Einstein geometry are available, there have been no such works on the Kähler-Ricci flow. The book will serve as a valuable resource for graduate students and researchers in complex differential geometry, complex algebraic geometry and Riemannian geometry, and will hopefully foster further developments in this fascinating area of research.
The Ricci flow was first introduced by R. Hamilton in the early 1980s, and is central in G. Perelman’s celebrated proof of the Poincaré conjecture. When specialized for Kähler manifolds, it becomes the Kähler-Ricci flow, and reduces to a scalar PDE (parabolic complex Monge-Ampère equation).
As a spin-off of his breakthrough, G. Perelman proved the convergence of the Kähler-Ricci flow on Kähler-Einstein manifolds of positive scalar curvature (Fano manifolds). Shortly after, G. Tian and J. Song discovered a complex analogue of Perelman’s ideas: the Kähler-Ricci flow is a metric embodiment of the Minimal Model Program of the underlying manifold, and flips and divisorial contractions assume the role of Perelman’s surgeries.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
Introduction....Pages 1-6
An Introduction to Fully Nonlinear Parabolic Equations....Pages 7-88
An Introduction to the Kähler–Ricci Flow....Pages 89-188
Regularizing Properties of the Kähler–Ricci Flow....Pages 189-237
The Kähler–Ricci Flow on Fano Manifolds....Pages 239-297
Convergence of the Kähler–Ricci Flow on a Kähler–Einstein Fano Manifold....Pages 299-333
Back Matter....Pages 335-336
✦ Subjects
Several Complex Variables and Analytic Spaces; Partial Differential Equations; Differential Geometry
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The Ricci flow is a powerful technique that integrates geometry, topology, and analysis. Intuitively, the idea is to set up a PDE that evolves a metric according to its Ricci curvature. The resulting equation has much in common with the heat equation, which tends to "flow" a given function to ever n
The Ricci flow is a powerful technique that integrates geometry, topology, and analysis. Intuitively, the idea is to set up a PDE that evolves a metric according to its Ricci curvature. The resulting equation has much in common with the heat equation, which tends to "flow" a given function to ever n
This is quite simply the best book on the Ricci Flow that I have ever encountered. This is the only book on the Ricci Flow that I have ever encountered. I believe that its value to the development and application of geometric analysis for the study of manifolds is incalculable (no pun intended). I m