Two central aspects of Cartan's approach to differential geometry are the theory of exterior differential systems (EDS) and the method of moving frames. This book presents thorough and modern treatments of both subjects, including their applications to both classic and contemporary problems in geome
Cartan for Beginners: Differential Geometry Via Moving Frames and Exterior Differential Systems
โ Scribed by Ivey Th. A., Landsberg J. M.
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 392
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book is an introduction to Cartan's approach to differential geometry. Two central methods in Cartan's geometry are the theory of exterior, differential systems and the method of moving frames. The book presents thorough and modern treatments of both subjects, including their applications to classic and contemporary problems.The book begins with the classical geometry of surfaces and basic Riemannian geometry in the language of moving frames, along with an elementary introduction to exterior differential systems. Key concepts are developed incrementally, with motivating examples leading to definitions, theorems and proofs.Once the basics of the methods are established, applications and advanced topics are developed. One particularly notable application is to complex algebraic geometry, where important results from projective differential geometry are expanded and updated. The book features an introduction to G-structures and a treatment of the theory of connections. The Cartan machinery is also applied to obtain explicit solutions of PDEs, via Darboux's method, the method of characteristics, and Cartan's method of equivalence.This text is suitable for a one-year graduate course in differential geometry. It has numerous exercises and examples throughout. The book will also be of use to experts in such areas as PDEs and algebraic geometry who want to learn how moving frames and exterior differential systems apply to their fields.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is a book that the author wishes had been available to him when he was student. It reflects his interest in knowing (like expert mathematicians) the most relevant mathematics for theoretical physics, but in the style of physicists. This means that one is not facing the study of a collection of
This is a book that the author wishes had been available to him when he was student. It reflects his interest in knowing (like expert mathematicians) the most relevant mathematics for theoretical physics, but in the style of physicists. This means that one is not facing the study of a collection of