I'm using this book as an undergraduate, so my rating is clearly skewed, as evidenced by the huge "Graduate Texts in Mathematics" on the cover. We've only covered the first five chapters so far, and while the overarching ideas are quite clear, I find the notation confusing. No (even small) reviews
Linear representations of finite groups
β Scribed by Serre J.-P.
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 179
- Series
- Graduate texts in mathematics 042
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book consists of three parts, rather different in level and purpose. The first part was originally written for quantum chemists. It describes the correspondence, due to Frobenius, between linear representations and characters. The second part is a course given in 1966 to second-year students of lβEcole Normale. It completes in a certain sense the first part. The third part is an introduction to Brauer Theory.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This book consists of three parts, rather different in level and purpose: The first part was originally written for quantum chemists. It describes the correspondence, due to Frobenius, between linear representations and characΒ ters. This is a fundamental result, of constant use in mathematics as
This book consists of three parts, rather different in level and purpose. The first part was originally written for quantum chemists. It describes the correspondence, due to Frobenius, between linear representations and characters. This is a fundamental result of constant use in mathematics as well