Regular solids and isolated singularities
β Scribed by Klaus Lamotke
- Publisher
- Vieweg+Teubner Verlag
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 232
- Series
- Advanced lectures in mathematics
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The last book XIII of Euclid's Elements deals with the regular solids which therefore are sometimes considered as crown of classical geometry. More than two thousand years later around 1850 Schl~fli extended the classification of regular solids to four and more dimensions. A few decades later, thanks to the invention of group and invariant theory the old threeΒ dimensional regular solid were involved in the development of new mathematical ideas: F. Klein (Lectures on the IcosaΒ hedron and the Resolution of Equations of Degree Five, 1884) emphasized the relation of the regular solids to the finite rotation groups. He introduced complex coordinates and by means of invariant theory associated polynomial equations with these groups. These equations in turn describe isolated singularities of complex surfaces. The structure of the singularities is investigated by methods of commutative algebra, algebraic and complex analytic geometry, differential and algebraic topology. A paper by DuVal from 1934 (see the References), in which resolutions play an important rele, marked an early stage of these investigations. Around 1970 Klein's polynomials were again related to new mathematical ideas: V. I. Arnold established a hierarchy of critical points of functions in several variables according to growing comΒ plexity. In this hierarchy Kleinls polynomials describe the ''simple'' critical points
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Ulpijan (Gnaeus Domitius Annius Ulpianus), oko 200 g. iz Tira, Fenicija (Phoenicia) danas Libanon, jedan je od poslijednjih velikih rimskih pravnika klasiΔnog doba. Napisao je oko 280 knjiga. Glavno djelo su mu Regule (Regulae) u 7 knjiga pravila i institucija β od kojih jedna De officio proc
<p>From December 1985 through March 1986 the text of this book formed the basis of an in-hours course taught by the author at Harry Diamond LaboratoΒ ries. Considerable assistance in revising and organizing the first draft was given by John Bruno. The original draft of these notes was based on a col
The aim of these lecture notes is to give an essentially self-contained introduction to the basic regularity theory for energy minimizing maps, including recent developments concerning the structure of the singular set and asymptotics on approach to the singular set. Specialized knowledge in partial