A rigorous and lively introduction . . . careful and lucid . . .
Lectures on advanced ordinary differential equations
β Scribed by K. O. Friedrichs
- Book ID
- 127419571
- Publisher
- Gordon and Breach
- Year
- 1965
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1 MB
- Series
- Notes on mathematics and its applications
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
- City
- New York
- ISBN-13
- 9780677009650
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A large number of mathematical books begin as lecture notes; but. since mathematicians are busy, and since the labor required to bring lecture notes up to the level of perfection which authors and the public demand of formally published books is very considerable, it follows that an even larger number of lecture notes make the transition to book form only after great delay or not at all. The present lecture note series aims to till the resulting gap. It will consist of reprinted lecture notes, edited at least to a satisfactory level of completeness and intelligibility, though not necessarily to the perfection which is expected of a book. In addition to lecture notes, the series will include volumes of collected reprints of journal articles as current developments indicate, and mixed volumes including both notes and reprints.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The paper deals with ODEs with an advanced argument, in particular, with such equations as y (t) = (y(ΓΏt)) 1=ΓΏ , the simplest example is y (t) = y(2t). The corresponding initial-value problem with y(0) = y0 ΒΏ 0 has three types of solutions: (a) a unique analytic solution, (b) solutions of subexponen
This handbook is the fourth volume in a series of volumes devoted to self-contained and up-to-date surveys in the theory of ordinary differential equations, with an additional effort to achieve readability for mathematicians and scientists from other related fields so that the chapters have been mad
Although there is no lack of other books on this subject, even with the same title, the appearance of this new one is fully justified on at least two grounds: its approach makes full use of modern mathematical concepts and terminology of considerable sophistication and abstraction, going well beyond