The book is recomendable but it has got several errors. For example, the hint of the exercise 4.7 is not such "hint". Anymore found this or other errors?Anyway, the exposition is clear and ordered and you will get a great insight on Fourier analyisis.
Fourier and wavelet analysis
β Scribed by George Bachmann, Lawrence Narici, Edward Beckenstein
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 514
- Series
- Universitext
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book is intended as an introduction to classical Fourier analysis, Fourier series, and the Fourier transform. The topics are developed slowly for the reader who has never seen them before, with a preference for clarity of exposition in stating and proving results. More recent developments, such as the discrete and fast Fourier transforms and wavelets, are covered in the last two chapters. The first three, short, chapters present requisite background material, and these could be read as a short course in functional analysis. The text includes many historical notes to place the material in a cultural and mathematical context; from the fact that Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier was the nineteenth, but not the last, child in his family to the impact that Fourier series have had on the evolution of the concept of the integral.
β¦ Subjects
ΠΡΠΈΠ±ΠΎΡΠΎΡΡΡΠΎΠ΅Π½ΠΈΠ΅;ΠΠ±ΡΠ°Π±ΠΎΡΠΊΠ° ΡΠΈΠ³Π½Π°Π»ΠΎΠ²;ΠΠ΅ΠΉΠ²Π»Π΅Ρ-Π°Π½Π°Π»ΠΈΠ·;
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This book is intended as an introduction to classical Fourier analysis, Fourier series, and the Fourier transform. The topics are developed slowly for the reader who has never seen them before, with a preference for clarity of exposition in stating and proving results. More recent developments, such
<p>globalized Fejer's theorem; he showed that the Fourier series for any f E Ld-7I", 7I"] converges (C, 1) to f (t) a.e. The desire to do this was part of the reason that Lebesgue invented his integral; the theorem mentioned above was one of the first uses he made of it (Sec. 4.18). Denjoy, with the
This book is intended as an introduction to classical Fourier analysis, Fourier series, and the Fourier transform. The topics are developed slowly for the reader who has never seen them before, with a preference for clarity of exposition in stating and proving results. More recent developments, such