Methods of nonlinear analysis
โ Scribed by Bellman R.
- Publisher
- AP
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 277
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This is the second of two volumes written to introduce the reader to some of the theories and methods which enable us to penetrate carefully and timorously into the nonlinear domain. Fortunately, we have no choice: the only direction is forward. In Volume I we focused on the basic concepts of stability and variational analysis and the analytic techniques required for their use such as linear differential equations and matrix analysis. In this volume we wish to describe some newer approaches such as duality techniques, differential inequalities, quasilinearization, dynamic programming, and invariant imbedding as well as some older methods which have become operational, and thus of greater analytic interest, as a consequence of the development of the digital computer: iteration, infinite systems of differential equations, and differential and integral quadrature. Using these theories we shall be able to present a more satisfactory explanation of various phenomena noted in Volume I, and indicate some promising new techniques.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The demands of modern science inexorably force the mathematician to explore the nonlinear world. That it is a difficult and often humbling journey with painfully crude maps and rather primitive direction-finders cannot be gainsaid, but in return it can be asserted that it is richly rewarding. The fe
The methods we deal with in the present book originated long ago. They date back to Kronecker, Poincare, Brouwer, and Hopf who developed the topological theory of continuous mappings in finite dimensional spaces. A second stream of ideas originated from the investigations of Birkhoff and Kellogg