Geometric methods have been used in complex analysis since the 1930s. Since that time they have become a central part of the research activities of complex analysis. However, these important techniques have never found their way into a text accessible to a broad audience. Steven G. Krantz, a leadi
Complex Analysis: The Geometric Viewpoint, Second Edition
β Scribed by Steven G. Krantz
- Publisher
- Mathematical Assoc. of America
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 238
- Series
- The Carus mathematical monographs 23
- Edition
- 2ed.
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In this second edition of a Carus Monograph Classic, Steven G. Krantz, a leading worker in complex analysis and a winner of the Chauvenet Prize for outstanding mathematical exposition, develops material on classical non-Euclidean geometry. He shows how it can be developed in a natural way from the invariant geometry of the complex disk. He also introduces the Bergmann kernel and metric and provides profound applications, some of which have never appeared in print before. In general, the new edition represents a considerable polishing and re-thinking of the original successful volume. A minimum of geometric formalism is used to gain a maximum of geometric and analytic insight. The climax of the book is an introduction to several complex variables from the geometric viewpoint. PoincarΓ©'s theorem, that the ball and bidisc are biholomorphically inequivalent, is discussed and proved
β¦ Table of Contents
Content: Principal ideas of classical function theory --
Basic notions of differential geometry --
Curvature and applications --
Some new invariant metrics --
Introduction to the Bergman Theory --
A glimpse of several complex variables.
β¦ Subjects
Geometry, Differential;Functions of complex variables;Functions of complex variables;Geometry, Differential
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this second edition of a Carus Monograph Classic, Steven G. Krantz, a leading worker in complex analysis and a winner of the Chauvenet Prize for outstanding mathematical exposition, develops material on classical non-Euclidean geometry. He shows how it can be developed in a natural way from the i
In this second edition of a Carus Monograph Classic, Steven G. Krantz, a leading worker in complex analysis and a winner of the Chauvenet Prize for outstanding mathematical exposition, develops material on classical non-Euclidean geometry. He shows how it can be developed in a natural way from the i
Geometric methods have been used in complex analysis since the 1930s. Since that time they have become a central part of the research activities of complex analysis. However, these important techniques have never found their way into a text accessible to a broad audience. Steven G. Krantz, a leadi