<p>During the academic year 1916-1917 I had the good fortune to be a student of the great mathematician and distinguished teacher Adolf Hurwitz, and to attend his lectures on the Theory of Functions at the Polytechnic Institute of Zurich. After his death in 1919 there fell into my hands a set of not
Lectures on Number Theory
β Scribed by P. G. L. Dirichlet, R. Dedekind
- Publisher
- American Mathematical Society, London Mathematical Society
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 297
- Series
- History of Mathematics Source Series, V. 16
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This volume is a translation of Dirichlet's Vorlesungen ΓΌber Zahlentheorie which includes nine supplements by Dedekind and an introduction by John Stillwell, who translated the volume.
Lectures on Number Theory is the first of its kind on the subject matter. It covers most of the topics that are standard in a modern first course on number theory, but also includes Dirichlet's famous results on class numbers and primes in arithmetic progressions.
The book is suitable as a textbook, yet it also offers a fascinating historical perspective that links Gauss with modern number theory. The legendary story is told how Dirichlet kept a copy of Gauss's Disquisitiones Arithmeticae with him at all times and how Dirichlet strove to clarify and simplify Gauss's results. Dedekind's footnotes document what material Dirichlet took from Gauss, allowing insight into how Dirichlet transformed the ideas into essentially modern form.
Also shown is how Gauss built on a long tradition in number theory--going back to Diophantus--and how it set the agenda for Dirichlet's work. This important book combines historical perspective with transcendent mathematical insight. The material is still fresh and presented in a very readable fashion.
This volume is one of an informal sequence of works within the History of Mathematics series. Volumes in this subset, "Sources", are classical mathematical works that served as cornerstones for modern mathematical thought. (For another historical translation by Professor Stillwell, see Sources of Hyperbolic Geometry, Volume 10 in the History of Mathematics series.)
β¦ Table of Contents
Content: On the divisibility of numbers On the congruence of numbers On quadratic residues On quadratic forms Determination of the class number of binary quadratic forms Some theorems from Gauss's theory of circle division On the limiting value of an infinite series A geometric theorem Genera of quadratic forms Power residues for composite moduli Primes in arithmetic progressions Some theorems from the theory of circle division On the Pell equation Convergence and continuity of some infinite series Index.
β¦ Subjects
Number theory.;TeoriΜa de los nuΜmeros.;NuΜmeros, TeoriΜa de.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
1. Basic Concepts and Propositions -- 1. The Principle of Descent -- 2. Divisibility and the Division Algorithm -- 3. Prime Numbers -- 4. Analysis of a Composite Number into a Product of Primes -- 5. Divisors of a Natural Number n, Perfect Numbers -- 6. Common Divisors and Common Multiples of two or
This volume is a translation of Dirichlet's Vorlesungen ΓΌber Zahlentheorie which includes nine supplements by Dedekind and an introduction by John Stillwell, who translated the volume. <P>Lectures on Number Theory is the first of its kind on the subject matter. It covers most of the topics that are
Using a background of analysis and algebra, the reader is led to the fundamental theorems of number theory; the uniqueness of prime number factorization and the reciprocity law of quadratic residues. Cyclotomy is treated in some detail because of its own significance and as a framework for the e